Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Policing reform in Antelope Valley still lags

Sheriff ’s Department agreed years ago to fix tactics, but urgency is lacking, monitors say.

- By Leila Miller

For months, Myesha Lopez said she was kept in the dark about whether the L.A. County sheriff ’s deputy who shot and killed her father in June was still patrolling Lancaster’s streets.

“I plead for months and to no avail,” Lopez said, adding, “I haven’t received condolence­s.”

The silence convinced Lopez that her father’s death was a “senseless act of hate.” Officials say Michael Thomas, a disabled 61-yearold Black man, was fatally shot as he grabbed a deputy’s gun during a struggle at his home, a claim his family disputes. The Sheriff ’s Department announced recently that the deputy who shot Thomas has been taken off patrol assignment­s pending the outcome of an investigat­ion into the killing.

It’s been almost six years since the Sheriff’s Department agreed to implement sweeping measures to improve policing in the Antelope Valley, after a federal investigat­ion found a pattern of unreasonab­le force, intimidati­on, and unlawful stops and searches among Black and Latino residents. But according to monitors overseeing the settlement agreement, progress has been slow, with crucial reforms in areas such as useof-force policy, community engagement and the handling of public complaints languishin­g for years.

The Antelope Valley stations, they wrote in their last report, have not adopted a crime prevention strategy based on data and community input. And the department, the monitors added, has failed for years to properly track public complaints that arise during use-offorce investigat­ions, reflecting “ongoing lack of management accountabi­lity.”

“It’s not being treated with a sense of urgency that’s required to move this ahead aggressive­ly,” Joseph Brann, one of two court-appointed monitors and former police chief of Hayward, Calif., told The Times.

The slow pace of change has spurred a campaign led by a coalition of advocacy groups that calls for Lancaster and Palmdale to end their contracts with the Sheriff ’s Department and to divert those funds to social services. Organizers of the campaign, which began Thursday, have not articulate­d how the region might be policed if the Sheriff ’s Department is jettisoned.

Last summer, hundreds demanded transparen­cy from the Sheriff’s Department after the deaths of Thomas and Robert Fuller, a Black man who was found hanging from a tree in neighborin­g Palmdale in an incident deemed a suicide.

A 2020 settlement-mandated community survey is indicative of the work ahead. When about 5,800 residents were asked whether deputies in the Antelope Valley treat different groups fairly, 65% of Black respondent­s said no, compared with 35% of Latino respondent­s and 22% of white respondent­s.

Lancaster is the city with the biggest contract with the Sheriff’s Department, paying $28.9 million, while Palmdale has the second biggest, at $27.9 million. The 2015 settlement stems from an investigat­ion in which, among other discrimina­tory practices, federal officials accused sheriff’s deputies of accompanyi­ng county housing agency workers on in

spections of Section 8 housing and harassing and facilitati­ng the terminatio­n of Black voucher holders from the program.

V. Jesse Smith, co-founder of the Community Action League, which filed a 2011 lawsuit with the NAACP about the abuses, recalled how young Black men would describe being stopped and threatened by deputies.

“Officers would say, if you don’t tell us the truth, we know your parents are in Section 8 and we can get their Section 8 vouchers revoked,” said Smith. “It was a wild, wild West in the Antelope Valley at the time.”

The Sheriff’s Department and the county Housing Authority ultimately agreed to pay altogether more than $2 million to compensate aggrieved residents.

The settlement, expected to last from 2015 until 2019, required the department to develop policies and training and meet requiremen­ts in areas including stops, seizures and searches, biasfree policing, use of force and data collection.

Brann said there was a “loss of momentum” after Alex Villanueva became sheriff in 2018, resulting in a letter the monitors sent him in July that said the department had “yet to produce some of the most significan­t work required by the [settlement agreement], largely because of a lack of attention and, indeed, a bottleneck of productivi­ty at the executive level.”

The monitors are now more hopeful. Their last progress report recognized the department has moved forward in revising its useof-force policy and commended it for safeguardi­ng against the type of Section 8 raids that led to the agreement.

“Sheriff Villanueva and the involved Department executives acknowledg­e there is still much to be accomplish­ed in the course of this Settlement Agreement,” department spokesman Lt. John Satterfiel­d said in a statement. “Sheriff Villanueva is completely committed to the needed reform to the Department and to enhancing the community engagement activities in order to better serve the community in the Antelope Valley.”

The captains of the Lancaster and Palmdale stations did not respond to interview requests.

Among the monitors’ greatest concerns is that the department does not effectivel­y use community input and data to guide policing practices.

A mandated study last fall that analyzed stop data in the Antelope Valley from the first six months of 2019 found that 30.3% of Black people who were stopped were searched, compared with 26.3% of whites and 26% of Latinos. The authors said the disparitie­s are largely due to Black people tending to be stopped by deputies who frequently conduct searches during their stops,

regardless of race.

Monitors warned that enforcemen­t disparitie­s affect community trust. David Muhammad, executive director of the National Institute for Criminal Justice Reform and part of a team that supports the monitors, said that while the department has improved its outreach, with events such as “Coffee With a Cop,” it hasn’t adopted a policing strategy that responds to community concerns.

The monitors also f lagged lags in improving the handling of personnel complaints and indicated the department has no protocol for investigat­ing racial profiling complaints. They held that the department does not know how many excessive force complaints have been made against its employees.

In a statement, Palmdale Mayor Steve Hofbauer said that areas requiring progress should be addressed, but that he was pleased by improved community engagement.

Lancaster Mayor R. Rex Parris said that he had been opposed to the settlement from the start, calling it “far too excessive,” but noted that deputies should use better criteria to conduct stops.

“I don’t think our problem is necessaril­y intrinsic racism as it is the failure to recognize the value of people feeling comfortabl­e with police,” he said.

Some community leaders generally agree that the department has improved its engagement with residents but can do more, such as holding sessions in which deputies discuss implicit bias with residents of color.

Jacob Johnson, vice president of the NAACP’s Antelope Valley branch, said the stations’ captains or their liaisons attend monthly meetings with the National Assn. for the Advancemen­t of Colored People. Kamal Al-Khatib, president of the American Islamic Institute of Antelope Valley

and member of the Palmdale station’s community advisory committee, commended captains for quickly alerting the committee to serious incidents.

For Brian Johnson, a pastor on Lancaster station’s advisory committee, a pressing concern is transparen­cy around the shooting of Michael Thomas.

The department has said that it responded to Thomas’ home on June 11 after his girlfriend called 911. Officials said she never spoke to the operator, and that arguing and fighting could be heard over the phone.

Officials said when deputies arrived, Thomas refused to open a screen door and that as his girlfriend walked toward the deputies, he assaulted her. Deputies then entered the home and attempted to detain Thomas. During a scuffle, officials said, Thomas grabbed a deputy’s firearm, prompting another to open fire.

Thomas’ six daughters in February filed a wrongfulde­ath

lawsuit against L.A. County and Lancaster. It alleges that the 911 call was “accidental,” that deputies entered Thomas’ home without probable cause that a crime had been committed and states that, within seconds, they began to assault Thomas, placing him in a headlock and twisting his arm when the shooting occurred. Lopez says her father had a disabled hand and that she “can’t see him being someone who can’t be detained.”

The lawsuit holds the city liable for contractin­g with the Sheriff ’s Department after the Department of Justice investigat­ion that led to the settlement agreement. The Sheriff’s Department said it could not comment on the litigation. Lancaster did not return a request for comment.

Satterfiel­d told The Times that the deputy who fatally shot Thomas has been reassigned to non-field duties pending the outcome of criminal and internal investigat­ions.

He did not comment on why residents said they had been told the informatio­n was confidenti­al.

Lopez belongs to a group of activists who want Lancaster and Palmdale to end their contracts with the department, which both mayors told The Times is not in the cards.

Ayinde Love, 29, recalled being stopped by deputies five years ago after pulling out of his Lancaster home with two friends — on their way to take photograph­s around town. He said they were given no reason for the stop and that the deputies handcuffed and placed them in the back of a patrol vehicle as they searched his car.

Love said a deputy had asked him whether he could have afforded to buy it himself. After about 30 minutes, they were let go.

The activist never filed a complaint.

“At that moment, I didn’t want anything to do with the police,” he said.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? MYESHA LOPEZ holds a portrait of her father, Michael Thomas, who was fatally shot by an L.A. County sheriff’s deputy in Lancaster in June. Reforms in areas such as use-of-force policy have languished for years, say monitors of a settlement with the Sheriff’s Department.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times MYESHA LOPEZ holds a portrait of her father, Michael Thomas, who was fatally shot by an L.A. County sheriff’s deputy in Lancaster in June. Reforms in areas such as use-of-force policy have languished for years, say monitors of a settlement with the Sheriff’s Department.

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