Los Angeles Times

‘Blue Lives Matter’:

Police and supporters hold a rally in Hollywood.

- By Louis Sahagun

Waving American flags and holding up signs that said, “Blue Lives Matter,” about 100 Los Angeles police officers joined members of the community at a rally in Hollywood on Saturday intended to show support for the department at a time when crime is rising and the ambush killings of police officers in cities elsewhere have left authoritie­s across the nation feeling under siege.

The demonstrat­ors gathered first in front of the CNN building on Sunset Boulevard and later at the nearby Hollywood Community Police Station. Motorists, including patrol officers and firefighte­rs, expressed their appreciati­on by honking horns and sounding sirens.

Among the demonstrat­ors was Annie Bergin, 34, of Los Angeles, who held up a poster that said, “Police Lives Matter.”

“There’s something weird and scary going on right now — police are being assassinat­ed,” she said. “I’m here to show that I strongly support the LAPD and law enforcemen­t officers everywhere who risk their lives each day to keep us safe.”

The event was organized by the Los Angeles Police Protective League as part of an effort to counter demonstrat­ions nationwide in the aftermath of several high-profile police killings of unarmed civilians, and to decry the fatal “ambush” shooting of an officer in Houston a month ago, and the similar killings of two New York City officers in 2014. LAPD Chief Charlie Beck made a brief appearance at the rally.

“This is just the beginning of a nationwide campaign,” said Jerretta Sandoz, vice president of the 10,000member Police Protective League. “We’ve reached out to police unions in New York, Chicago, Atlanta, Houston and many other cities, and they are all on board.”

“Now, we’re searching for a unifying catchphras­e and symbol that send this message: Enough is enough,” she said. “There’s just too much negativity throughout the country related to police work.”

John Redican, a patrol officer with the LAPD’s Newton Division, agreed.

“Police are being marginaliz­ed and demonized by a small segment of society with views that are magnified by the media,” Redican said. “This event is an attempt to mitigate that perception by showing that a majority of people understand that we are out there trying to keep the wolves away from our doors.”

August was the deadliest month in Los Angeles in six years.

Speaking at an emotional news conference Friday, Mayor Eric Garcetti appealed for patience with his administra­tion’s 5-month-old police strategy intended to suppress growing violence, saying it would take time to show full results.

That approach, which involves deploying hundreds of additional elite police officers in troubled neighborho­ods and increasing funding for gang-interventi­on programs, has prevented an even sharper rise in violence, Garcetti said.

louis.sahagun@latimes.com

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