Albuquerque Journal

1 officer killed, 1 injured in California shootout

Incident blamed on state’s faster release of criminals

- BY TONY BARBOZA AND RICHARD WINTON

WHITTIER, Calif. — It began as a routine police call to a rear-end collision, the sort of traffic accident that happens every day in Southern California.

It ended in tragedy, with one Whittier police officer dead and another wounded.

The officers didn’t know when they approached the accident scene about 8 a.m. Monday that one of the drivers — a 26-year-old man, released on parole less than two weeks ago — was in a stolen car and suspected of killing another man hours earlier in East Los Angeles, authoritie­s said.

As the man got out of the silver car and officers moved to pat him down, he pulled a semiautoma­tic handgun from his waistband and shot them at close range.

The officers, both wearing bulletproo­f vests, returned fire. But Keith Boyer, 53, a 27-year department veteran, was killed. Patrick Hazell, a young officer hired three years ago, was wounded and hospitaliz­ed in stable condition.

Whittier Police Chief Jeff Piper broke down in tears as he paid tribute to Boyer, who became the first officer from the department to be killed in the line of duty in 37 years. Piper said Boyer was a close friend and beloved officer who was close to retirement.

“He was the best of the best,” Piper said.

Alongside the outpouring of grief, however, was a display of anger, as Piper and other law enforcemen­t officials blamed the slaying on new laws designed to reduce incarcerat­ions in California.

“We need to wake up. Enough is enough,” Piper said. “This is a senseless, senseless tragedy that did not need to be.”

Police said the suspect, whose name has not been made public, was released from custody early, but they did not provide details on his criminal history or why he was released.

Los Angeles County Sheriff Jim McDonnell pointed to three measures enacted in the last seven years — Propositio­ns 47 and 57, and Assembly Bill 109 — that he said have led to the release of too many criminals without creating a proper safety net of mental health, drug rehabilita­tion and other services.

“We’re putting people back on the street that aren’t ready to be back on the street,” McDonnell said. He said the county jail system he runs, the largest in the nation, has become a “default state prison.”

Sheriff’s officials have long criticized Propositio­n 47, which was approved by voters in 2014 and downgraded some drug and property crimes from felonies to misdemeano­rs. They say AB 109 — which moved state prisoners to local lockups — has pushed lower-level offenders out of custody onto the streets, giving them little deterrent against committing new crimes.

Propositio­n 57, which passed last year, changed California’s “three strikes” rule and made sentencing more flexible, allowing some prisoners who wouldn’t normally have been eligible for early parole to be considered for release.

Authoritie­s described the suspect in Monday’s shooting as a known Los Angeles gang member. Hours before his run-in with Whittier police, he is suspected of fatally shooting a man who may have been a relative and stealing his car in East Los Angeles. Further details of that killing were not released.

When three officers arrived at the accident scene, they believed they were helping an injured motorist. Instead, McDonnell said, “they end up in a gunfight for their lives.”

Police did not release many details of the firefight, but a police vehicle was seen with its windows shot out.

 ?? KATIE FALKENBERG/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Authoritie­s investigat­e the scene after a deadly shooting in Whittier, Calif., on Monday. One police officer was killed and another wounded.
KATIE FALKENBERG/LOS ANGELES TIMES Authoritie­s investigat­e the scene after a deadly shooting in Whittier, Calif., on Monday. One police officer was killed and another wounded.
 ??  ?? Officer Keith Boyer
Officer Keith Boyer

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