Los Angeles Times

Ex-deputies say Baca gave orders

Two testify that they believed instructio­ns to hide informant came from the top.

- By Victoria Kim victoria.kim@latimes.com

Two ex-Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies who have been convicted of obstructin­g an FBI civil rights investigat­ion into the county jails told a federal jury on Friday that they believed they were following orders from then-Sheriff Lee Baca.

The witnesses said they were directed to guard an inmate informant who had been cooperatin­g with the federal government. Prosecutor­s allege that the Sheriff ’s Department hid the inmate from the FBI as part of a conspiracy to obstruct the agency’s investigat­ion into allegation­s of corruption and abuse by jail deputies.

Jurors will soon have to decide whether Baca, 74, was also involved in the conspiracy and committed obstructio­n of justice, charges that could send him to prison for years if he is convicted.

Ex-Deputy Mickey Manzo, who is scheduled to begin serving a two-year sentence next month, testified about the steps he took to remove inmate Anthony Brown from a scheduled custody transfer to state prison, keeping him instead in Men’s Central Jail in downtown Los Angeles. Deputies were tasked with guarding Brown after discoverin­g him with a cellphone that had been smuggled in by FBI agents as part of an undercover sting.

“Why did you keep him?” Assistant U.S. Atty. Brandon Fox asked.

“We were ordered to,” Manzo said. “By whom?” “The sheriff.” Manzo recalled that during a briefing about the inmate and the FBI investigat­ion, Baca and his second in command, then-Undersheri­ff Paul Tanaka, stepped out to have a private conversati­on. Tanaka came back into the room and said he had never seen the sheriff so upset, Manzo told jurors.

“We know what he wants done, and we’re going to do it for him,” he quoted Tanaka as saying.

Under cross-examinatio­n, Manzo said Tanaka was furious in briefings about the inmate. Baca, he said, had a calmer reaction when he found out that FBI agents had been allowed to interview Brown in the jail.

Manzo was followed on the witness stand by former Deputy James Sexton, who has served four months of an 18-month sentence at a federal prison in Alabama.

Sexton said his fellow deputies repeatedly told him that orders about how to handle Brown came “all the way from the top.”

“Who did you understand that to mean?” Fox asked.

“Deputy [Gerard] Smith and Deputy Manzo said they had briefed Sheriff Baca and Undersheri­ff Tanaka,” he said.

Defense attorney Tinos Diamantato­s pressed Sexton about whether he had told the FBI in prior interviews that it was Tanaka, not Baca, who was giving the orders.

“Was it your understand­ing that Mr. Tanaka was running the show?” the lawyer asked.

“That’s a myopic perspectiv­e,” Sexton replied. “No, sir.”

Jurors also heard from Cecil Rhambo, a retired assistant sheriff who said he walked into Baca’s office one evening when the sheriff was working late. Baca, he recalled, seemed dismayed by the federal investigat­ion.

“They committed a crime by bringing in this phone. Why couldn’t they just talk to me?” Rhambo quoted Baca as saying.

“Don’t F around with the feds,” Rhambo said he warned Baca. “They’re not going to cooperate with us. We’re the suspects.”

Rhambo was not accused of obstructin­g the FBI.

Testimony in Baca’s trial is to resume Tuesday.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? FORMER SHERIFF Lee Baca arrives at federal court this week f lanked by wife Carol Chiang, right, and attorney Nathan J. Hochman. Testimony in the conspiracy trial of Baca, 74, is expected to resume Tuesday.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times FORMER SHERIFF Lee Baca arrives at federal court this week f lanked by wife Carol Chiang, right, and attorney Nathan J. Hochman. Testimony in the conspiracy trial of Baca, 74, is expected to resume Tuesday.

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