Los Angeles Times

Oversight bodies say sheriff isn’t cooperatin­g

Inspector general and civilian commission complain department is stonewalli­ng.

- BY ALENE TCHEKMEDYI­AN

The independen­t monitors for the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department were brought in for moments like these.

The law enforcemen­t agency is facing outrage from the community and questions about back-toback shootings that left two men dead as well as its handling of the death of Robert Fuller, 24, who was found hanging from a tree near Palmdale City Hall.

But the two institutio­ns tasked with overseeing investigat­ions of deputies’ use of force — the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission and its investigat­ive arm, the Office of Inspector General — say they are running into roadblocks.

Inspector General Max Huntsman said his office on Monday asked the Sheriff ’s Department for reports, documents and video relating to the shooting death of 18-year-old Andres Guardado, who was killed by a deputy near an auto body shop in Gardena. Huntsman said he hasn’t received a response.

The office also requested the report that detailed events surroundin­g the death of Fuller’s halfbrothe­r, Terron Boone, who was killed in a shootout with

undercover detectives, to “analyze the underlying reason for the manner in which the arrest was conducted,” Huntsman said. “But they refused to give it to us.”

The watchdogs’ functions were centerpiec­es of reforms enacted at the Sheriff ’s Department in the wake of a corruption and brutality scandal in the jails that led to indictment­s of several sheriff’s deputies and high-ranking commanders, including former Sheriff Lee Baca. But the agencies have increasing­ly complained that the administra­tion of Sheriff Alex Villanueva is refusing to share informatio­n and stonewalli­ng efforts to provide true oversight.

And it is set against the backdrop of a national movement stemming from the death in Minneapoli­s police custody of George Floyd that is demanding greater transparen­cy and a radical change of course in policing to combat police brutality and other systemic racial injustices.

“We can’t make recommenda­tions if we don’t get informatio­n from them. So our work can be stymied when there’s not cooperatio­n and collabora tion,” said Patti Giggans, chair of the oversight commission. “We need a willing partner in the sheriff.”

The dispute over access to sheriff ’s records prompted the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s in January to grant the Civilian Oversight Commission subpoena power at a time of heightened tensions between the law enforcemen­t agency and those who oversee it. The oversight agencies said they were not given access to informatio­n about the agency’s internal discipline system and hiring process, as well as documents related to secret deputy cliques with matching tattoos that have been accused of misconduct.

The Sheriff’s Department said at the time that increasing the inspector general’s power could harm investigat­ions and would pit county department­s against one another.

On Wednesday, Villanueva declined to discuss the Guardado shooting, saying he would supply informatio­n when he could.

“We’re not gonna piecemeal it,” he said.

He did not answer a question about whether the deputies involved in the Gardena incident have been in terviewed yet by investigat­ors. Villanueva said ongoing witness interviews prompted the Sheriff ’s Department to place a “security hold” on the results of Guardado’s autopsy, but he did not identify the witnesses.

“If you’re still interviewi­ng witnesses, you don’t release informatio­n that’s gonna prejudice the testimony of the witness,” he said.

The tight-lipped responses come as Villanueva reached a tentative agreement this week with local law enforcemen­t leaders to have all police killings investigat­ed by a special task force. Members would be prohibited from investigat­ing officers or deputies from their own agencies.

The Sheriff’s Department has said little about what led up to the Gardena shooting, which has sparked large protests and widespread demands for answers. Villanueva asked Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra to monitor the investigat­ions of Guardado and Fuller, citing the public outcry.

“The current nationwide political climate, lends itself to a public demand for police accountabi­lity, and the propensity of antagonist­s to assemble large amounts of people in a short amount of time in protest to any perception of impropriet­y,” he wrote in a letter to Becerra.

The attorney general’s office has taken on an oversight role in Fuller’s case, but has not said whether it would accept Villanueva’s request to review the Guardado shooting.

“Our office is aware of the matters you reference. However, to protect its integrity, we are unable to comment on a potential or ongoing investigat­ion,” the attorney general’s office said in a statement.

Guardado was speaking with someone in a car that was blocking the entrance to an auto body shop when deputies from the Compton sheriff ’s station pulled up at about 6 p.m. on June 18, said Capt. Kent Wegener of the homicide bureau.

Guardado “produced a handgun” and ran away, and two deputies chased him on foot, Wegener said. When the deputies caught up, one of them fired six rounds at Guardado, killing him, the department said.

Authoritie­s said they did not know whether Guardado pointed his weapon at the deputy, and said they “don’t believe” Guardado fired any shots.

Guardado’s family said he had worked as a security guard for Street Dynamic Auto Body, close to where he was shot.

 ?? FRANCINE ORR Los Angeles Times ?? JONATHAN ABARCA, left, and Celina Abarca, both cousins of Andres Guardado, the man shot by a sheriff ’s deputy last week, attend a rally Wednesday at the Hall of Justice in downtown L.A.
FRANCINE ORR Los Angeles Times JONATHAN ABARCA, left, and Celina Abarca, both cousins of Andres Guardado, the man shot by a sheriff ’s deputy last week, attend a rally Wednesday at the Hall of Justice in downtown L.A.
 ?? JASON ARMOND Los Angeles Times ?? PROTESTERS rally in Gardena over the shooting death of Andres Guardado by a sheriff ’s deputy last week. The department has not fully explained the shooting.
JASON ARMOND Los Angeles Times PROTESTERS rally in Gardena over the shooting death of Andres Guardado by a sheriff ’s deputy last week. The department has not fully explained the shooting.

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