Los Angeles Times

The value of civilian oversight

- s ballots were still

Abeing counted Thursday in the very close race for Los Angeles County sheriff, the county’s inspector general stood before the civilian commission that oversees the Sheriff’s Department and delivered a startling report on a controvers­ial operation to stop and search cars on the Grapevine on Interstate 5, which The Times first brought to light Oct. 7. It was followed by an equally disturbing report on alleged secret societies in the department. There are some key points to take from the morning’s discussion.

First, we don’t yet know whether the four deputies who stopped a disproport­ionate number of Latino drivers did so because of improper racial profiling, implicit bias, or some other scheme or system based on ethnicity. Inspector General Max Huntsman’s investigat­ion will take several months.

But what we do know now is bad enough, at least according to Huntsman: Federal court rulings and settlement­s have previously found that deputies violated the constituti­onal rights of drivers by detaining them for unreasonab­le periods of time without evidence of wrongdoing. In fact, complaints against deputies in Antelope Valley and in the Grapevine operation itself, which has been in progress since 2012, have led to several such findings and one court settlement in recent years. That means that as the behavior continued in the Grapevine, there was either a conscious tolerance among department leaders of continuing misconduct, or a failure to adequately supervise the operation.

Law enforcemen­t officers are permitted to stop drivers and to detain them for a brief amount of time, but not as a pretext to conduct an otherwise unlawful search.

Next, patrol cars involved in the Grapevine operation were equipped with dashboard cameras, and at some point they were live. We know that because some of the footage was used in federal court to challenge the deputies’ version of events in at least one of the stops. We also know that at some point the dashcams were shut off, and no more footage was available. The department should explain why.

From a later discussion at the commission Thursday, we know that the county counsel, the inspector general and the commission are investigat­ing whether there remain in the department deputy “cliques” — or gangs, or secret societies — with their own shadow training, rules, hierarchie­s and subculture­s, operating outside of and contrary to the orders of the elected sheriff and the chain of command. This supplement­s the inquiry that Sheriff Jim McDonnell promised the commission in August, in the wake of a Times story reporting a deputy’s admission that he got a tattoo as part of a ritual in the sheriff ’s Compton station.

In some sense, though, these revelation­s are beside the point. The core issue comes into focus only when we imagine what might have happened if these matters had come up just two years ago, before the Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Civilian Oversight Commission was created and the first appointees seated. If The Times had reported then on the Grapevine operation, or the gang-like tattoos, who would have followed up?

There were monitors and advisors in place, one of whom reported to the sheriff, another to the Board of Supervisor­s. But there was no public body focused specifical­ly on sheriff’s oversight, no place at which the sheriff was pressured to send a representa­tive or show up in person to answer questions, no forum for an inspector general to publicly detail preliminar­y findings and freely offer his own opinion on what the department was doing right — or wrong.

The chief takeaway from Thursday’s meeting, and the host of meetings that came before, is that the civilian oversight commission is a valuable asset that, for all its quirks and lack of enforcemen­t authority, has become an indispensa­ble part of the county structure.

That brings us back to the election, in which challenger Alex Villanueva’s current lead may hold, or McDonnell may somehow pull out a reelection victory. The days in which an incumbent sheriff can run the department outside public scrutiny and with assurance of easy reelection are over. That’s welcome news, no matter who serves as sheriff for the next four years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States