Los Angeles Times

Apology to LAPD fails

Judge calls couple insincere, gives them probation

- By Kate Mather

When “Django Unchained” actress Daniele Watts and her boyfriend pleaded no contest to disturbing the peace in a highprofil­e case last fall, there was a catch: They had to apologize to the Los Angeles police officers they accused of mistreatin­g the actress because of her race.

Three months later, they presented the judge with their letter. But there is some debate about whether it was actually an apology.

Watts wrote that the sergeant involved in the encounter provoked her, describing him as sarcastic and dismissive. She signed her name with a heart, but didn’t directly say she was sorry for her actions.

“Hopefully you can forgive the fact that my heightened emotions disturbed what might have otherwise been a carefree stop on your way to a nice cup of coffee,” she wrote.

The couple were told to try again. This week, Watts wrote a new letter where she

apologized “for my lack of emotional control” and asked for forgivenes­s.

But the judge wasn’t convinced. Calling the apologies “insincere and passive aggressive,” she sentenced the couple Wednesday to 15 days of community labor and two years probation, the city attorney’s office said.

In an interview, Watts insisted that her words were heartfelt. She said she had learned from the situation and had hoped to reconcile with the sergeant involved.

Sgt. Jim Parker scoffed. “That was not an apology at all,” he said. “It was just an excuse letter.”

The headline-grabbing story unfolded on the afternoon of Sept. 11, when Parker responded to a report of a couple having sex in a car parked near a Studio City talent agency. Police said Watts and her boyfriend, chef Brian James Lucas, matched the descriptio­n of the couple involved.

When the sergeant asked the couple for identifica­tion, police said, Watts refused and walked away. She was handcuffed down the street by two other officers, but released after her boyfriend handed police her ID.

The story quickly gained national attention after the couple publicly complained that Watts had been handcuffed. Lucas wrote on Facebook that police acted as though the couple had been engaged in prostituti­on because he is white and Watts is black.

The LAPD opened an internal affairs inquiry into the allegation­s. Parker defended his actions and released a 24-minute audio recording of the encounter, prompting some backlash against the couple’s comments.

“Do you know how many times I’ve been called, the cops have been called just for being black?” Watts said on the recording. “Just because we’re black and he’s white? I’m just being really honest, sir.”

“Who brought up the race card?” Parker said.

“I’m bringing it up,” she said.

“I said nothing about you being black,” Parker said.

Watts and Lucas were later charged with committing lewd acts. Those charges were dropped as part of the plea deal offered earlier this year, in which they agreed to plead no contest to disturbing the peace and write apologies to the officers and citizens who reported them.

Watts said she believed the incident highlighte­d bigger issues about race, policing and civil liberties, but felt that those were lost in the back-and-forth about the audio recording and now the apology letters.

When asked if she would have done anything differentl­y, Watts said she was “thankful for the entire experience.”

“I felt like I did the best I could throughout the process,” she said. “No, it wasn’t perfect by certain standards. But I did my best to come from my heart and share things that I think could benefit a larger conversati­on.”

The couple said they felt the judge reacted unfairly.

“I lost my cool. I could have been more kind to the officer — and I get punished for that,” Watts said. “I get punished because they don’t believe my apology.”

Parker said he was ordered to attend an LAPD disciplina­ry hearing after he was accused of insubordin­ation for speaking to the media about the incident.

He retired instead, ending his 26-year career with the LAPD in June.

The former sergeant said he felt the judge’s actions were appropriat­e, saying that Watts made a “childish attempt at playing the blame game.”

“I think this whole incident backfired on her because I recorded it. It would be a totally different discussion had my recording not been made,” he said. “In 26 years, a call like that has not blown up into anything of this nature.”

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? DANIELE WATTS was told to apologize to police as part of plea deal.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times DANIELE WATTS was told to apologize to police as part of plea deal.
 ?? Associated Press ?? DANIELE WATTS, with Brian Lucas, wouldn’t give police her ID. She walked away and was handcuffed.
Associated Press DANIELE WATTS, with Brian Lucas, wouldn’t give police her ID. She walked away and was handcuffed.

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