Imperial Valley Press

LA County sheriff says eight deputies took Bryant crash photos

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva said eight deputies allegedly took or shared graphic photos of the Kobe Bryant helicopter crash scene, but he ordered them deleted.

“That was my No. 1 priority, was to make sure those photos no longer exist,” Villanueva told NBC News for a story Monday. “We identified the deputies involved, they came to the station on their own and had admitted they had taken them and they had deleted them. And we’re content that those involved did that.”

The sheriff said he learned the week of the crash that as many as eight deputies may have been involved.

“We’ve communicat­ed in no uncertain terms that the behavior is inexcusabl­e,” Villanueva said. “I mean, people are grieving for the loss of their loved ones. To have that on top of what they’ve already gone through is unconscion­able.”

Villanueva said the Sheriff’s Department doesn’t have a specific policy about taking photograph­s on personal cellphones. But he plans to change that situation and would like to see a state law making it illegal to take unauthoriz­ed photos of accident scenes depicting dead bodies.

Villanueva told KABC

TV that the deputies are facing an investigat­ion and possible disciplina­ry action. He wouldn’t specify the kind of actions they might face.

The Sheriff’s Department has a policy against taking and sharing crime scene photos, but it doesn’t apply to accident scenes, the sheriff told KCBS-TV.

Bryant, his daughter and seven others died on Jan. 26 when their helicopter crashed into a hillside in Calabasas, northwest of Los Angeles, during cloudy weather. The victims were traveling to a youth basketball tournament at Bryant’s sports facility in Thousand Oaks.

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