Los Angeles Times

DEPUTY IN JAILS PROBE GETS 6 MONTHS

Gilbert Michel took a $1,500 bribe to smuggle a cellphone to an inmate in an L.A. County lockup.

- By Joel Rubin

A former Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy at the center of the jail scandal that rocked the department and led to the conviction of 21 agency officials, including the former sheriff, was sentenced Monday to six months in federal prison.

Gilbert Michel was the first to be charged in the wide-ranging FBI investigat­ion into misconduct and corruption in the jails after he was caught in a sting operation smuggling a cellphone to an inmate in return for a $1,500 bribe.

In sending Michel to prison, U.S. District Judge Percy Anderson rejected a request from prosecutor­s that he spare Michel time behind bars. The request for leniency stemmed from a plea agreement prosecutor­s struck with Michel, in which he pleaded guilty to the bribery charge and agreed to testify against other sheriff ’s officials in subsequent trials.

Anderson did go more lightly than he could have, setting aside sentencing guidelines that called for Michel to be sent away for 24 to 30 months. But the government’s recommenda­tion that Michel be given just four months of home detention was not acceptable to the judge, who has handled many of the cases stemming from the FBI investigat­ion and come down harshly on other sheriff’s officials who were convicted.

After Michel offered a tearful apology for taking the bribe — a crime that he said he “will forever regret” — Anderson said the misconduct had been “a gross abuse of the public’s trust.”

“The defendant’s actions were symptomati­c of a department where abuse of inmates was rampant, unchecked and corruption went all the way to the top,” Anderson added.

The August 2011 discovery of the cellphone by sheriff’s officials exposed the FBI’s secret investigat­ion and disrupted the bureau’s plans to carry out a more ambitious plan — Operation Blue Line — targeting corruption inside the Sheriff ’s Department.

The discovery, prosecutor­s later alleged, also set into motion a conspiracy to frustrate the FBI probe. As a result, several sheriff’s officials were convicted of obstructio­n of justice or other charges, including former Sheriff Lee Baca, who recently pleaded guilty to lying to federal authoritie­s and awaits sentencing.

In January 2012, Michel pleaded guilty to bribery as part of the deal with prosecutor­s in which he was required to cooperate with federal investigat­ors. In a series of interviews with the FBI from late 2011 to early 2013, he described incidents of unprovoked assaults by deputies against inmates, including some that he was personally involved in, according to FBI internal documents reviewed by The Times.

Some of the assaults punished inmates accused of rape or other violent crimes against women, Michel said. Other times, deputies would squeeze an inmate’s fingers until he flinched, then claim the inmate had started the altercatio­n. Often, the incidents would not be reported or deputies would falsify reports, Michel told investigat­ors.

Michel said he was among the deputies who felt he had to be “one notch” more aggressive than the inmates. If a deputy treated inmates well, other deputies called him or her “Deputy Love,” Michel told agents.

Michel, who resigned from the Sheriff’s Department soon after the cellphone was found, was not charged with crimes relating to his admitted uses of excessive force.

Outside court on Monday, he told reporters that the six-month sentence was “totally fair and justified,” and that he wanted to apologize to the county’s taxpayers for what he had done.

“I made the wrong choices, so I’m truly sorry,” he said.

Michel decried the culture of the Sheriff ’s Department and what he called the arrogance of jail deputies, which he said led to the abuse.

“We thought that we ran the jail,” he said. “It was our jail. It wasn’t anyone else’s jail. And we controlled the jail. It’s a little arrogant to think that you own that. You don’t. The people of Los Angeles County own that jail.”

Federal prosecutor­s used Michel as a witness in some of the criminal cases that arose from the jails investigat­ion.

In 2014, testifying in one of the obstructio­n of justice trials, the disgraced former deputy described a culture among jailers guarding the high-security floors of the county’s detention facilities that led to excessive force and frequent coverups.

He matter-of-factly recounted incidents in which he said he and at least five other sheriff’s employees brutalized inmates on the third, or “3,000,” floor of Men’s Central Jail, then falsified reports to legitimize their actions.

Michel described beating inmates unprovoked, slapping them, shooting them with a Taser gun and aggressive­ly searching them to pick a fight — something he learned “on the job.”

He said he would huddle with other jail guards to get their stories straight and write up reports with bogus scenarios justifying the brutality. If the inmate had no visible injuries, he wouldn’t report the use of force, he said.

He did all this with impunity, knowing that even if inmates reported the abuse it “wouldn’t go anywhere,” he testified. If they were to put it in writing and drop it in a complaint box, it was his fellow deputies who opened that box too, he said.

After Michel accepted a bribe from the undercover FBI agent to smuggle the cellphone into jail, federal agents had planned to use the deputy as a key player in a wider undercover operation.

Called Operation Blue Line, the plan was to rent a warehouse, spread the word that it was full of narcotics and hire corrupt deputies from the jails to moonlight as guards. Included in the budget was $10,000 for bribes and kickbacks, according to an internal FBI memo reviewed by The Times.

Investigat­ors hoped that Michel would recruit his coworkers to guard the warehouse if he were enticed with additional bribes, the memo said. The deputies lured into the purported drug enterprise would then be used to get informatio­n about abuses in the jails.

Two days after it was OKd by headquarte­rs in Washington, Blue Line came to an abrupt halt. Sheriff’s officials had found the cellphone and traced the phone back to the FBI.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? THE DISCOVERY in August 2011 of a cellphone smuggled into a jail facility by Gilbert Michel exposed a secret FBI investigat­ion and disrupted the bureau’s plans to carry out a more ambitious probe of the jails.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times THE DISCOVERY in August 2011 of a cellphone smuggled into a jail facility by Gilbert Michel exposed a secret FBI investigat­ion and disrupted the bureau’s plans to carry out a more ambitious probe of the jails.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States