California took vacation time from a prison doctor. Now it has to pay him $1.8M

A jury last week awarded nearly $2 million to a  former California prison psychiatrist who claimed the state retaliated against him when officials began raising questions about how he earned high incomes from two government agencies.

A decade ago, Anthony Coppola held a senior position at a former state prison in Tracy and a part-time assignment as a psychiatrist at Alameda County’s Santa Rita Jail.

He also kept a massive bank of unused personal leave from his state job, totaling over 1,000 hours. Court records show he took two personal days a week to draw down that balance and used the time to work for Alameda County.

It added up to a combined income of about $550,000 a year , with about $300,000 from the state and about $250,000 from the county, according to public records at the website Transparent California .

The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation opened an internal investigation into whether he was misusing leave — “double-dipping,” as one official put it —  and that contributed to a chain of events that Coppola argued drove him into early retirement.

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