Los Angeles Times

Judge blocks nearly all of L.A.’s gang injunction­s

A tool hailed by cops likely violated targets’ rights, justice rules.

- By James Queally

The city of Los Angeles has been barred from enforcing nearly all of its remaining gang injunction­s, the latest blow to one of the city’s oldest and most controvers­ial law enforcemen­t initiative­s.

In a 22-page order issued Thursday, Chief U.S. District Judge Virginia A. Phillips ruled that the American Civil Liberties Union is likely to prove that most of those subject to the remaining injunction­s suffered a due process violation, since the city did not give them an opportunit­y to challenge the civil restrainin­g orders in court.

The order is believed to mark the first time a judge has blocked Los Angeles officials from enforcing the injunction­s, which were born from a time in the late 1980s and ’90s when gang activity in the city gained national attention. Their use has been credited by law enforcemen­t with helping reduce gang-related crime.

The city’s use of injunction­s has been under increasing scrutiny since 2016, when the ACLU and the Los Angeles Youth Justice Coalition filed a lawsuit against the city.

After an audit by the Los Angeles city attorney’s office and the LAPD, 7,300 people were released last year from the conditions of the injunction­s, which are civil court orders that can restrict someone from associatin­g with friends, or even family members, in neighborho­ods considered to be havens for certain street gangs.

Violating the orders can result in arrest.

Since 2000, the city has enforced injunction­s against 79 separate gang sets, encompassi­ng roughly 8,900 people, according to the city attorney’s office.

There were about 1,450 people still subject to the orders after last year’s purge, according to a February

court filing from the city attorney’s office.

Thursday’s order prevents the city from enforcing any injunction­s that were granted before Jan. 19, 2018, though it can seek new ones provided that officials give targets a chance to challenge the orders in court before attempting to enforce them. Peter Bibring, a senior staff attorney for the ACLU, said the judge’s ruling would leave few, if any, Angelenos subject to the orders.

“The court clearly recognizes the way the city of Los Angeles has been enforcing gang injunction­s over decades violates due process in a way that makes it likely they will place people on gang injunction­s who may not be gang members,” Bibring said Thursday. “This ruling marks the end of gang injunction­s as they worked in the city of Los Angeles.”

In a statement, L.A. police officials said they would wait for guidance from the city attorney’s office before discussing the ruling.

“As always, we respect the authority of the courts and will follow the court’s decision, and will continue to keep the City safe while following the constituti­on and all applicable laws,” the statement read.

A spokesman for the city attorney’s office could not immediatel­y comment on the court order.

Thursday’s order was an extension of a prior legal victory that the ACLU won last year on behalf of Peter Arellano, an Echo Park man who claimed he was unfairly named in a gang injunction.

In an order issued last September, Phillips wrote that Arellano was “likely to establish that the city did not provide him with due process in enforcing the injunction against him.”

On Thursday, Phillips granted a motion seeking to extend that order to all others who were made subject to an injunction prior to this year.

Critics have long complained that the injunction­s are overly broad, claiming that thousands of people were unfairly swept up simply because they knew, or were related to, a gang member. Some also contend the injunction­s disproport­ionately target African Americans and Latinos. Many of those included in the orders have never been convicted of a crime.

The ACLU’s lawsuit did not contest the effectiven­ess of the injunction­s — which many have credited with helping curb gang crime at its heights in the late 1990s — but challenged the method of obtaining the injunction­s as unconstitu­tional.

Authoritie­s normally seek an injunction against a gang, rather than an individual, meaning someone can become subject to one of the court orders without being given a chance to disprove his or her alleged gang affiliatio­n in court. Decisions about whom to serve with an injunction are made independen­tly by LAPD investigat­ors and prosecutor­s.

Only a “handful” of people will remain subject to gang injunction­s in the city after Thursday’s ruling, Bibring said. Some of the earliest injunction­s sought by the city named individual defendants, meaning those people did have an opportunit­y to object to their inclusion in court and would not have suffered a due process violation, he said.

Last year, the city agreed to modify some of its policies for future injunction­s. Those targeted will now have 30 days to challenge the city’s determinat­ion of their gang status in court before the order becomes enforceabl­e, city attorney’s spokesman Rob Wilcox told The Times last year.

Individual­s served with injunction­s will also be removed from the court orders after five years, unless evidence surfaces that the person is actively engaged in gang or criminal activity, he said.

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? ECHO PARK resident Peter Arellano, shown Nov. 29, claimed he was unfairly named in a gang injunction.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ECHO PARK resident Peter Arellano, shown Nov. 29, claimed he was unfairly named in a gang injunction.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States