Ellsworth Fortman crash: A timeline of how the LAFD official dodged discipline

Los Angeles, CA - January 15: Los Angeles Fire Assistant Fire Chief Ellsworth Fortman administers as COVID-19 vaccine as mass-vaccination of healthcare workers starts at Dodger Stadium on Friday, Jan. 15, 2021 in Los Angeles, CA. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
Ellsworth Fortman administers as COVID-19 vaccine as mass-vaccination of healthcare workers starts at Dodger Stadium on Friday, Jan. 15, 2021. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

January 2020

After leaving a bar, Los Angeles Fire Department Assistant Chief Ellsworth Fortman crashes his pickup truck into a parked car and a street light, drives home and does not cooperate with sheriff’s deputies who arrive to question him.

March 2022

Fortman admits to LAFD investigators that he left the scene of the crash but denies being drunk.

March 2020

Facing potential criminal charges and an internal investigation, Fortman begins earning overtime from a new assignment helping to manage the city’s COVID-19 testing and vaccination program.

Two men stand in Union Station
Ellsworth Fortman, left, and Mayor Eric Garcetti at the inauguration of a COVID-19 vaccination site at Union Station on Tuesday, June 8, 2021. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

May 2020

Prosecutors charge Fortman with hit-and-run and driving without a valid driver's license, but he remains on duty.

November 2020

LAFD investigators recommend Fortman be brought before a disciplinary hearing on four charges stemming from the crash.

December 2020

Fortman faces a Board of Rights review to determine culpability and punishment. The hearing is never scheduled.

May 2021

In exchange for the dismissal of the criminal charges, Fortman enters a court-supervised diversion program. He remains on duty and attached to the COVID-19 initiative.

August 2021

State regulators fine Fortman $2,500 for violating codes related to his duties as a paramedic.

March 2022

After queries from The Times, Fire Department officials move to schedule a Board of Rights hearing. Within days, Fortman retires with no punishment after collecting $354,000 in overtime from the COVID-19 assignment.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.