A man in a suit speaks into a microphone at a podium
Tam Truong, a candidate for the District 8 San Jose City Council seat, speaks during the January 2023 appointment hearings. File photo.

A San Jose police sergeant and City Council candidate, Tam Truong, has been placed on administrative leave amid allegations of mortgage fraud. He said he plans to continue his campaign for elected office.

Truong, who’s worked in law enforcement for two decades and is running against incumbent Domingo Candelas for the District 8 San Jose City Council seat in November, was sued last year for allegedly defrauding an escrow officer with the Orange Coast Title Company, which allowed him to ditch his mortgage and collect nearly $540,000 from the sale of a home.

“The employee has been placed on administrative leave for a personnel matter,” a spokesperson for the department told San José Spotlight.

Truong said the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office filed a complaint against him.

“This single-count complaint filed by the district attorney’s office represents nothing more than an allegation. It is based on a misunderstanding of all the facts in this case,” Truong told San José Spotlight. “This matter has been settled through a civil proceeding, which is the appropriate venue. There is no evidence that I intended to mislead anyone. What we have here is a rush to judgment and an effort to criminalize innocent conduct without a full understanding of the facts. The district attorney’s office filed this charge against me on the eve of the election, depriving me of sufficient time to clear my name through the judicial process before voting begins.”

Truong said he has an “impeccable record of public service.”

“As someone who immigrated to this county from Vietnam at a young age, I believe in the rule of law and in our justice system. I am grateful for the overwhelming support from colleagues and members of the community who know me for my integrity and the strength of my character,” he said.

He said he trusts the justice system to clear his name.

“I have not committed a crime, and I plan to continue with my campaign,” he told San José Spotlight.

Sean Webby, spokesperson for the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office, declined to comment on a potential criminal complaint. Officials with the Santa Clara County Superior Court didn’t respond to requests for comment.

The insurance company’s lawsuit claimed Truong “used his position of trust and authority as a SJPD Police Officer to fraudulently convince” an escrow officer that a lien on his property could be removed from a preliminary title document, according to court documents from last year.

The complaint filed against Truong in Santa Clara County Superior Court in September 2022 said he showed the escrow officer documents from his 2015 Chapter 7 bankruptcy to help convince her the lien was eliminated from his home on Plumstead Way in San Jose. After defrauding the escrow officer in January 2021, the complaint alleges Truong conspired with two others to sell the Plumstead home in July 2021.

Troung’s actions resulted in the sale going through as if he owned the title of the home outright, without any liens, the complaint said. Rather than pay back his mortgage with the money from the sale, he is alleged to have pocketed the cash and later reinvested it in another home.

 San José Spotlight last year also reported that Truong at one point owed more than $30,000 to a former employee of his private security company, Training and Protective Services, which he started in 2012 to offer private patrols for neighborhoods just as the city’s police force was hemorrhaging officers due to Measure B, a 2012 ballot measure that slashed retirement benefits for police officers. Truong supported the controversial measure in his 2012 council run.

In a wage theft case filed with the state labor commissioner in 2014, one of Truong’s employees, Kevin Halverson, claimed he worked nearly 1,700 hours in the first half of 2013, but was paid for only a little more than 500 hours.

Following a hearing and testimony from Halverson and some of his coworkers in early 2015, the labor commissioner ordered Truong to pay Halverson $34,071 in wages, damages, interest and penalties. Truong’s company dissolved a short time later.

In early 2015, the San Jose Police Department suspended Truong’s department-issued outside work permit, which the department uses to monitor officers’ business interests separate from police work, while police leaders considered whether it was a conflict for him to profit from the department’s short staffing problems.

Truong is once again running for the same seat he sought through an appointment process in 2023. 

Candelas, who was ahead of Troung in the March primaries, said he’s reserving judgment on his November challenger.

“I’m going to let the process run its course. My focus as councilmember for District 8 remains the same: keeping our community safe, cleaning our streets and parks and creating stronger neighborhoods,” he told San José Spotlight.

Contact Brandon Pho at [email protected] or @brandonphooo on X, formerly known as Twitter.

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