Los Angeles Times

Sheriff’s advisor reassigned after posts about shooting

Villanueva’s chief of staff said 18-year-old killed by a deputy ‘chose his fate.’

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an

Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva’s chief of staff is being reassigned after facing criticism for recent social media posts in which he said Andres Guardado, the 18-year-old who was fatally shot in the back by a deputy in Gardena last month, “chose his fate.”

Capt. John Burcher, one of Villanueva’s closest advisors, will be removed as chief of staff and transferre­d to the agency’s East Patrol Division, effective Sunday, according to an internal L.A. County Sheriff’s Department announceme­nt.

When reached by phone Wednesday, Burcher declined to comment on the social media posts or the new assignment.

Screenshot­s of the posts show that Burcher also hurled insults at other Facebook users. In one post, he called someone an idiot and a moron. In a second he called someone a “racist” and used an expletive.

“Sorry, your life does not matter more than mine does, you racist…” the post said.

A Sheriff’s Department spokesman said in a statement Wednesday that the agency has initiated an administra­tive investigat­ion and that Burcher had been reassigned. He declined to comment further.

Attorneys representi­ng Guardado’s family said Burcher’s comments show that the Sheriff’s Department is incapable of conducting an independen­t investigat­ion into the shooting, which has generated large protests and widespread calls for an outside inquiry.

“It is deeply troubling that on the same day Sheriff Villanueva issues a statement that the Sheriff ’s Department would not be providing any commentary on the Andres Guardado case until the investigat­ion has completed, the sheriff ’s own chief of staff took to social media and did exactly just that,” attorney Nicholas Yoka said in a statement. “Not only did Capt. Burcher personally vilify a young man who was shot and killed by one of his own deputies, he did so in a public forum and in the middle of a homicide investigat­ion conducted by his own department.”

Burcher’s statements indicate the results of the department’s investigat­ion are predetermi­ned, Yoka contended.

The Sheriff’s Department has been tight-lipped about the shooting investigat­ion.

Investigat­ors have said that Guardado was shot and killed about 6 p.m. on June 18, after two deputies saw him speaking to someone in a car blocking the entrance to a body shop on West Redondo Beach Boulevard. Investigat­ors said Guardado “produced a handgun” and ran away and that deputies chased him. When deputies reached him, one fired. They said a firearm was recovered from the scene.

The deputy who fired, Miguel Vega, was not interviewe­d until Monday, nearly a month after Guardado’s death. His attorney, Adam Marangell, said that Guardado reached for his gun while face down on the ground and that the shooting was justified.

“During this interview he made clear that he did everything possible that night to avoid firing his weapon, including repeated commands to ‘not reach for the gun,’ ” Marangell said in a statement. “Deputy Vega went to work that day to protect the citizens of the community and, unfortunat­ely, was forced to take action which resulted in a loss of life.”

 ?? Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? PROTESTERS MARCH in Gardena last month after the killing of Andres Guardado, 18, who was shot five times in the back by an L.A. County deputy. The shooting is under investigat­ion by the Sheriff ’s Department.
Jason Armond Los Angeles Times PROTESTERS MARCH in Gardena last month after the killing of Andres Guardado, 18, who was shot five times in the back by an L.A. County deputy. The shooting is under investigat­ion by the Sheriff ’s Department.

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