Los Angeles Times

Crash involving sheriff’s SUV that killed 2 boys has some asking if the deputies acted recklessly

- By Ruben Vives, James Queally and Sonali Kohli

Dropping to a knee, Luis Hernandez lighted a small white candle and placed it beside a bed of flowers near the intersecti­on where his little brothers’ lives ended the night before.

“I got the call and I didn’t believe it,” he said, wiping away tears Friday morning. “I just didn’t believe it.”

Hernandez’s younger siblings, 7-year-old Jose Luis and 9-year-old Marcos, were walking home from school with their mother Thursday night when a Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department sport-utility vehicle that had been involved in a crash careened onto the sidewalk, slamming into all three.

Jose Luis was pronounced dead at the scene, relatives said. Marcos died at a hospital a short time later.

The gruesome crash, which injured a total of seven people in Boyle Heights about 7:30 p.m., left the community in a mix of shock and anger, as some questioned whether the deputies acted recklessly before their

cruiser and another car collided Thursday night.

Hector Lopez was walking out of a store near Indiana Street and Whittier Boulevard when he heard a vehicle speed up. Within seconds he heard the sound of cars colliding and saw something fly through the air, possibly a bumper from one of the vehicles. Lopez said he did not hear any police sirens before the crash.

“You’re supposed to turn on your lights, sirens and check before taking off,” Lopez said, adding that the family deserved “justice.”

The deputies were responding to a call of shots fired at Downey Road and Triggs Street, a little over a mile from the crash scene, said Nicole Nishida, a spokeswoma­n for the Sheriff’s Department. They received the call at 7:17 p.m. and knew that one person had been shot before they began traveling toward the shooting scene, she said.

Nishida did not know the status of the shooting victim Friday afternoon and declined to identify the deputies involved in the crash.

Three law enforcemen­t sources told The Times that the vehicle was being driven by a trainee deputy who was riding with her field training officer. The sources spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the case.

The Sheriff’s Department SUV collided with another vehicle, and the force of that crash caused the SUV to veer onto the sidewalk, where it struck the mother and her children, said Officer Drake Madison, a Los Angeles Police Department spokesman.

Madison said it was not clear how the initial crash occurred, how fast the sheriff ’s vehicle was traveling or whether the vehicle’s sirens were blaring.

The car involved in the crash with the Sheriff ’s Department SUV then hit a third car, “causing injury to two additional adult pedestrian­s in the crosswalk,” Madison said.

Among the seven injured were three pedestrian­s, two deputies and at least one occupant of one of the other cars, Madison said.

The boys’ mother remained in serious condition Friday afternoon, an LAPD spokesman said.

Ed Winter, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County coroner’s office, would not confirm the identities of the boys killed in the crash. The LAPD has put a “security hold” on the case, he said.

A security video obtained by The Times from the nearby Green Mill Liquor Store shows the sheriff’s SUV.

In the eight-second video clip, the vehicle enters the frame with its emergency lights on. A trash can and at least one person are seen bouncing off the front of the car. The person can then be seen rolling onto the sidewalk.

Because the video had no audio, it was unclear whether the cruiser’s siren was on.

Julie Valle, 34, was standing in the front parking lot of Stevenson Middle School with her two children, her dog and a relative when she saw a sheriff ’s patrol vehicle speeding south on Indiana Street, with no sirens and no lights.

Valle said she watched as the vehicle approached the intersecti­on of Indiana Street and Whittier Boulevard.

“The light was red on their end,” she said. “They did a California roll and turned on the lights at the intersecti­on and then hit a car.”

The crash caused a chain reaction, she said. The car heading east on Whittier Boulevard hit a person and a van that was in the northbound lanes of Indiana Street. Valle said the cruiser went onto the sidewalk, hitting the wall of the Wells Fargo bank.

She said she ran down from the school to the intersecti­on, where she helped an injured woman. Then, Valle said, she saw the extent of the toll from the crash.

“All I see is little legs,” she said. “Then I see a boy, and that’s when I start to get the full picture.”

Two boys lay next to each other. Their mother, she learned, was bleeding from the head. A male and female deputy huddled nearby.

The wreck is being investigat­ed by the LAPD’s MultiDisci­pline Collision Investigat­ion Team.

In a statement, the Sheriff’s Department expressed its “deepest condolence­s to the families and all those affected by this tragic accident.”

“The LASD and its personnel are heavily impacted any time an incident involving our response to an emergency, or efforts to help others in need, results in injury or the loss of life,” the statement read.

Araceli Cortez, a relative, said the mother of the two children didn’t learn about her sons’ deaths until early Thursday.

“They were beautiful, respectful and smart,” Cortez said, struggling not to cry.

Cortez said she and her son, Luis, drove to the hospital after learning the youngest boy had died at the scene. Marcos was in surgery but died a short time after they arrived.

“We all started screaming from the pain,” she said.

The collision occurred less than a week after an 11year-old girl was struck and killed on a sidewalk about a mile from the scene of Thursday night’s crash.

The driver in that incident, Jose Louis Perez, was booked on suspicion of vehicular manslaught­er, according to the LAPD. Perez was heading west on Whittier Boulevard near Marietta Street when he crossed into eastbound lanes and crashed into two parked cars, police said.

The impact thrust one of the cars onto the sidewalk, where it struck four pedestrian­s next to a taco stand. Elektra Yepez died of her injuries. The other victims were expected to survive.

Earlier this year, the county paid $4 million to settle a wrongful-death suit over a 2013 crash in which a sheriff’s deputy failed to turn on his lights and sirens while answering a call in Palmdale.

The deputy, Kamal Jannah, was not responding to an emergency but was racing at speeds up to 83 mph when he barreled through an intersecti­on and struck a vehicle in which Sara Paynter and Robert Delgadillo, a recently engaged couple, were riding. Both were ejected and died at the scene.

Jannah was not criminally charged, but he is no longer employed by the Sheriff ’s Department.

Hernandez, who said the boys will be memorializ­ed during a Saturday afternoon vigil, struggled to put his grief into words as he stood at the scene.

“I have no words right now. You guys should understand what we’re going through right now. It’s painful,” he said to a group of reporters, pausing before erupting into tears. “I can’t take it right now.”

‘The light was red on their end. They did a California roll and turned on the lights at the intersecti­on and then hit a car.’

— Julie Valle,

who witnessed the chain-reaction collision

 ??  ?? A VIDEO obtained by The Times from a liquor store shows the moments after the SUV hit the sidewalk.
A VIDEO obtained by The Times from a liquor store shows the moments after the SUV hit the sidewalk.
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? LUIS HERNANDEZ, the older brother of victims Jose Luis, 7, and Marcos, 9, shares a photo of them on his cellphone at a memorial near the crash site.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times LUIS HERNANDEZ, the older brother of victims Jose Luis, 7, and Marcos, 9, shares a photo of them on his cellphone at a memorial near the crash site.

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