Los Angeles Times

County to pay $3 million in teen’s death

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an

Armando Garcia was spending time with friends in Palmdale one summer morning when Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies showed up in response to a complaint over loud music.

During the 2017 encounter, officials said, a pit bull charged at the deputies and they opened fire. A bullet ricocheted off the ground or a hard object and fatally struck the 17-year-old Garcia in the chest.

Now Los Angeles County will pay $3 million to Garcia’s family as part of a settlement in a wrongful-death lawsuit Garcia’s mother, Roberta Alcantar, filed after the shooting.

“It was a tremendous loss to the family,” said Brian Panish, an attorney representi­ng the family. “We’re glad that the county has stepped up and accepted responsibi­lity and the family will not have to endure this lawsuit any longer, although the loss will continue with them the rest of their lives.”

The county said it would avoid further litigation costs with the settlement. The deputies have denied the allegation­s that they fired recklessly and contend their actions were reasonable. The L.A. County Board of Supervisor­s approved the agreement on Tuesday.

In the lawsuit, Alcantar alleged that when deputies arrived about 3:40 a.m. on June 22, 2017, they instructed the boys to turn off the music and restrain the dog in the backyard. Garcia attempted to do so, but it became agitated when deputies shined flashlight­s and cameras toward it, the lawsuit said.

The dog then escaped from Garcia’s arms and the deputies fired at it multiple times “without warning or legal justificat­ion,” the lawsuit said.

County records say that, before the shooting, the dog had attacked deputies, biting one of them in the left knee. It then lunged toward another deputy and the authoritie­s ordered the group of friends to secure the dog.

A sergeant arrived at the complex soon after and as he was trying to send the injured deputy to the hospital, the pit bull broke free, county records said. It ran up and attacked a deputy, Victor Ekanem, who pulled out his gun and fired four times. The pit bull then ran toward the sergeant, James Dillard, who fired twice.

Garcia was struck in the chest by a ricochetin­g bullet. He died of his injuries in a hospital. The dog was later euthanized.

In November, the L.A. County district attorney’s office concluded that the shooting of Garcia was an accident. Prosecutor­s said that the use of force by deputies to defend themselves against a charging 73-pound pit bull was reasonable and necessary. The report included a photo of a bite mark on a deputy’s knee.

Under the department’s use-of-force policy, deputies are allowed to fire at animals if they “reasonably believe” that they’re about to be killed or seriously injured by the animal.

Garcia was about to enter his senior year at R. Rex Parris High School in Palmdale. The eldest of four siblings, he loved dogs and aspired to go into constructi­on, Alcantar has told The Times.

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