Los Angeles Times

‘Cowboy sheriff ’ is dead at 90

FLOYD TIDWELL, 1930 - 2020

- By Steve Marble

Floyd Tidwell, a colorful, folksy figure, led the San Bernardino County agency for nearly a decade.

Floyd Tidwell, the colorful San Bernardino County sheriff who shepherded the department from a small force of deputies who roamed Southern California’s outback to a modern law enforcemen­t agency, has died at a medical center in the high desert.

Tidwell died Tuesday, the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department announced on its Faceboook page. He was 90. No cause of death was specified.

Hard to miss with his turquoise jewelry, cowboy boots and a cheek full of chewing tobacco, Tidwell led the department for nearly a decade, overseeing the creation of an aviation division, a gang task force and sophistica­ted communicat­ions systems. He retired in 1991, saying he wanted to spend more time with his grandchild­ren and on the rodeo circuit.

But his career was flecked with controvers­y, and in 2004 — long retired — he pleaded guilty to four felony counts of concealing stolen property after investigat­ors said he had taken more than 500 guns from department evidence rooms. At sentencing, the charges were reduced to misdemeano­rs and he was fined $10,000. He never spent a day in jail.

“Incarcerat­ion was never an option,” the district attorney said at the time. “He’s 74. He did serve the people well in many respects for many years.”

Witnesses said Tidwell was an avid gun collector and gave many of the weapons to family members or displayed them in his home in Phelan in the Mojave Desert.

One sergeant said the sheriff was fond of Old Weststyle weapons and would prowl evidence rooms “as if shopping.”

Tidwell said he ultimately took a plea deal to spare his ailing wife the stress of a trial.

“Forty years of service for this,” he muttered before entering his plea.

The son of a cattle rancher, Tidwell began his life in uniform as a deputy assigned to the department’s Big Bear Lake substation and quickly moved up the ranks, He was elected sheriff in 1982 and reelected four years later in a landslide, earning nearly 80% of the vote. During his tenure he oversaw the design and constructi­on of a new department headquarte­rs and constructi­on of a detention center.

A fan of blue — the only color ink he would use when writing reports, Tidwell dressed up the agency’s fleet of squad cars with blue stripes.

Popular in the community and among the rank-andfile, Tidwell was dubbed “the cowboy sheriff ” for his attire and folksy approach to police work.

His reputation took a hit, however, when five Latino men won $745,000 in federal court after claiming they’d been beaten by deputies.

Though video evidence introduced in court appeared to show deputies using batons and their fists on men who offered little if any resistance, Tidwell stood by his officers and insisted they had used a “proper” level of force. Tidwell was accused of condoning brutality.

As the years passed, though, activists said Tidwell appeared to have reflected on the lessons of the so-called Victorvill­e Five episode and drew praise for taking steps to improve relations between the department and minority communitie­s.

“I believe his consciousn­ess was raised,” longtime activist and author Armando Navarro said at the time.

 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? San Bernardino County Sheriff Floyd Tidwell holds confiscate­d bottles of perfume in 1988. TOP LAWMAN FOR A DECADE
Los Angeles Times San Bernardino County Sheriff Floyd Tidwell holds confiscate­d bottles of perfume in 1988. TOP LAWMAN FOR A DECADE

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