After returning to Inglewood, Butts began campaigning for mayor. His primary platform was a promise to reduce crime. Inglewood has a high crime rate, and its former mayor pleaded guilty to public corruption charges. He was elected as the mayor of Inglewood, California, on January 27, 2011. He won against incumbent Danny Tabor by a vote of 3,776 to 3,000. The
Los Angeles Sentinel described it as a "tumultuous year of elections" for the city, with a close race between the two candidates. His first State of the City address focused on public safety, finances and city leadership. According to the
Los Angeles Business Journal, the city's biggest budgeting problem at the time was unfunded liabilities. The city had an agreement with local unions that required the city to pay benefits for the rest of an employee's life, even if the employee had worked for the city for only a few years. Butts negotiated with six unions to reduce this to 15 years with benefits that scale down over time. Butts and the City Council initiated a series of infrastructure repair and renovation projects. $1.18 million was spent on sewer projects compared to $140,000 the prior year. Under Butts, the city has re-paved more street lanes, miles of roadway, and fixed linear feet of sidewalk than under any previous administration. Major corridors, including Century Boulevard, Florence Avenue, and Imperial Highway, some of which had not undergone significant reconstruction for approximately two decades, were also rebuilt. According to the
Los Angeles Sentinel, Butts was the "driving force" behind a renovation of Inglewood's entertainment venue,
The Forum, which was approved by the Inglewood City Council in May 2012. As a police officer, Butts worked at
Lakers and
Kings games at the Forum for almost two decades. The Forum was re-launched in 2014 with a $100 million renovation. He was elected to the board of the
Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority in December 2014, succeeding Santa Monica Mayor
Pam O'Connor. In August 2015, the city of Inglewood initiated a widely criticized copyright infringement lawsuit against a citizen who was posting negative videos about Butts on YouTube using footage from city council meetings. A federal judge dismissed the lawsuit, as California law bars cities from claiming ownership of council videos, criticized the city officials for the apparent attempt to restrict Teixeira’s political speech and ordered the city to pay more than $117,000 for Teixeira's legal fees. In 2016, Inglewood's former budget and accounting manager Barbara Ohno sued Butts and the city, claiming she was fired for blowing the whistle on accounting irregularities when the city was pursuing the NFL deal. She alleged Butts and his administration engaged in faulty accounting practices, fraudulent regulatory reporting, and reclassification of costs to depict a false financial picture. The city denied the claim and the lawsuit was settled in 2017. According to
USA Today, Butts has been "flattered by supporters" and "irritated by skeptics" on the deal.
Ethics investigations In 2018, an investigation by the
California Fair Political Practices Commission, the
Los Angeles County District Attorney, and the FBI began into the award of a 2012 trash hauling pact contract. Butts was also found to have loaned $150,000 to the election campaigns of longtime Inglewood Councilman George Dotson and was accused of failing to disclose the status of repayments.
Madison Square Garden Co. lawsuit In March 2018, the
Madison Square Garden Co., which owns
The Forum in Inglewood, filed a lawsuit against Butts and other city agencies for fraud and breach of contract. MSG alleged that Butts tricked them into terminating their lease of city-owned land by saying the city was going to use it to develop a technology park. Once MSG gave up the lease, they allege that Butts and the city of Inglewood engaged in secret talks with the
Los Angeles Clippers to develop
Intuit Dome on that land. The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office concluded in 2019 that the City of Inglewood violated state disclosure law during negotiations with the Clippers to build an arena. Butts disputed the DA office's letter detailing its conclusion. The officer suffered from broken ribs, nervous system damage, and permanent physical disability, and he and his wife filed a lawsuit against Butts and the city of Inglewood. The driver of the other vehicle also filed a lawsuit against the city for injuries suffered by her and her 4-year-old son. A third lawsuit was filed by the city of Los Angeles against the city of Inglewood for $290,000 in damages, to cover the LAPD officer's workers' compensation and damage to city property.
Relationship with employee and lawsuit In 2010, Butts began a romantic relationship with Melanie McDade-Dickens, who worked on his mayoral campaign. After his election, he hired McDade-Dickens as his executive assistant and she was later promoted to aide to the city manager, with a salary of more than $300,000, yet Butts never disclosed their relationship. McDade-Dickens alleged that during the relationship, Butts insisted that she perform sexual acts with him in his office at City Hall; performed hypnosis on her; and made her massage his feet up to four times a day. In July 2018, McDade-Dickens was escorted out of Inglewood City Hall by a security guard and placed on administrative leave; the city of Inglewood then fired her in January 2020. In January 2021, McDade-Dickens sued Butts and the city of Inglewood for wrongful termination, sexual harassment and retaliation. In August 2021, she filed a second lawsuit alleging that Butts continued to stalk and harass her and intimidate her clients, in order to destroy her business and interfere with her ability to earn a living. An attorney for the city said Butts "denies any and all allegations of coercion or harassment." He claimed Brown was misleading people about the city's fiscal stability and later removed her from City Council meeting agendas and barred her from council chambers. The City Council later stripped Brown, a breast cancer patient who served in the role for 32 years, of many of her duties and cut her annual salary by 83% to $16,850. In August 2021, Brown filed a lawsuit against Butts and the city for defamation, retaliation and emotional distress, seeking lost wages, lost retirement benefits and attorney's fees. A
Los Angeles County Superior Court judge dismissed the defamation portion of the lawsuit in September 2022, but allowed the retaliation allegations to move forward. In October 2024, Inglewood's District 1 Councilwoman, Gloria Gray, filed a complaint against Butts, accusing him of creating a hostile work environment and engaging in intimidating and retaliatory behavior. She alleged that he withheld support for District 1 initiatives affecting her constituents and requested an independent investigation. == Personal life ==