Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

New questions on Lacey’s delay in Ed Buck case

- By Michael Finnegan and James Queally

Judge says deputies acted properly in seizing evidence from the donor’s home, yet D.A. initially declined to charge him.

A federal judge has ruled that Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies acted properly when they seized drugs and other evidence from the West Hollywood home of Democratic donor Ed Buck after a man was found dead there in 2017.

The ruling raises new questions about why L.A. County prosecutor­s initially declined to charge Buck with a crime and then belatedly did so two years later after federal prosecutor­s built a case against him.

Buck, who is awaiting trial on federal drug charges stemming in part from the man’s drug overdose, asked U.S. District Judge Christina A. Snyder to bar prosecutor­s from using as evidence syringes, drug parapherna­lia and nearly two grams of methamphet­amine deputies discovered in what Buck called an illegal search of his apartment.

Snyder denied the request. In a ruling Wednesday, she wrote that Buck effectivel­y invited law enforcemen­t into his home when he called 911 to report the overdose of 26-year-old Gemmel Moore during a “party and play” sexual encounter. The deputies’ presence was lawful and the drug evidence was “in plain view,” she found, so prosecutor­s are free to use it in their case against Buck.

“The evidence they ultimately saw and seized was mere feet from Moore’s body,” Snyder wrote.

The judge’s decision was a victory for federal prosecutor­s, who allege that Buck, 66, provided the meth that resulted in Moore’s death.

They say Buck systematic­ally targeted often destitute Black men, luring them to his home for sex and drugs, in some cases injecting them with meth when they were unconsciou­s.

Seventeen months after Moore’s death, another man died of a meth overdose in Buck’s apartment.

Snyder’s ruling undercut the finding of Jackie Lacey, when she was L.A. County district attorney, that the drug evidence could not be used to file charges against Buck in Moore’s death.

Lacey argued that sheriff’s deputies had no legal right to pick up the meth and parapherna­lia that they saw in Buck’s apartment as emergency workers were trying to resuscitat­e Moore.

In a brief 2018 memo declining to prosecute Buck for Moore’s overdose, county prosecutor­s noted an “inadmissib­le search and seizure” had taken place but did not elaborate.

In 2019, Lacey told Spectrum News that sheriff’s deputies in Buck’s apartment “saw that Mr. Moore was dead, but they investigat­ed it sort of like an overdose.”

“They found some things, but we contend that it’s illegal how they searched for it,” she said. “They needed a warrant in order to get that stuff.”

Lacey also defended her rationale at a gathering of the Stonewall Democratic Club, telling the LGBTQ group that deputies and a coroner’s office investigat­or improperly searched a red tool chest containing drugs inside Buck’s home.

By then, federal prosecutor­s had filed drug charges against Buck. He faces a nine-count indictment that includes charges of distributi­ng drugs leading to death and enticement to travel across state lines to engage in prostituti­on.

In a March 2 hearing held over Zoom, Snyder heard testimony on the tool chest from Buck, who was in jail, and Sheriff’s Deputy Grehtel Barraza.

Barraza said she noticed a bulbous pipe and a plastic bag with white crystallin­e residue in drawers of the tool chest that were open, along with drugs on the kitchen table. Buck testified that he was “ninety-nine and fortyfour one-hundredths” percent sure the drawers were closed, because the tool chest could tip over if they were left open.

But prosecutor­s showed the judge a video from Buck’s computer that appeared to show Moore smoking something with the tool chest just behind him and its drawers open. Snyder said she found the deputy’s testimony more credible than Buck’s.

Legal experts said there should be no difference in how state or federal prosecutor­s evaluate whether police have violated the constituti­onal ban on “unreasonab­le searches and seizures.”

“The 4th Amendment standard is the same whether it is in federal court or state court,” said Erwin Chemerinsk­y, dean of the UC Berkeley law school.

Laurie Levenson, a Loyola Law School professor and former federal prosecutor, said it was “not a good reflection on the D.A.’s office that Judge Snyder pretty quickly found evidence admissible that the D.A. didn’t see as admissible for prosecutio­n.”

Levenson said Buck could have at least been charged with drug offenses. It’s a concern, she added, that Buck was allegedly able to keep engaging in behavior that led to another man’s death months after Lacey declined to prosecute him for Moore’s overdose.

Both Lacey and a spokesman for current Dist. Atty. George Gascón declined requests for comment on the ruling or how it might affect any future state prosecutio­n of Buck. He faces a maximum penalty of life in prison without parole if convicted at his federal trial, which is set to start July 21.

Two days before Buck was charged with federal drug crimes in September 2019, L.A. County prosecutor­s charged him with operating a drug den and battery after a third man overdosed on meth in his apartment but survived. That case is on hold.

Buck’s lawyer, Ludlow B. Creary II, said he was disappoint­ed in Snyder’s ruling.

“We’ll see what the jury thinks of the deputy’s assertion that she could easily see these things in plain view,” he said.

Until Moore’s overdose, Buck was a fixture of Democratic politics in West Hollywood. A former member of the Stonewall Democratic Club’s steering committee, he made frequent donations to Democratic candidates for local, state and federal office.

Lacey, who was ousted by Gascón in the November election, raised other concerns about hurdles to prosecutin­g Buck.

The statements of other men who made claims of misconduct by Buck in their own “party and play” encounters could not be corroborat­ed, she argued.

Nonetheles­s, federal prosecutor­s plan to rely on the men’s testimony to establish a pattern of behavior similar to what they say led to the fatal overdoses of Moore and, 17 months later, 55-year-old Timothy Dean of West Hollywood.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? ED BUCK, once a figure in Democratic politics, may get life in prison if convicted of federal drug charges.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times ED BUCK, once a figure in Democratic politics, may get life in prison if convicted of federal drug charges.

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