Los Angeles Times

Lawmakers seek probe into ‘gangs’ of sheriff ’s deputies

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an

A congressio­nal subcommitt­ee has requested that the Department of Justice investigat­e allegation­s of systemic abuses by “criminal gangs” that employ aggressive policing tactics within the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

“The allegation­s of abusive behavior by these criminal gangs within the LASD are deeply disturbing,” Reps. Jimmy Gomez (D-Los Angeles) and Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) wrote Thursday in a letter to Assistant Atty. Gen. Eric S. Dreiband of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “If true, they represent egregious violations of the civil rights of the residents of the communitie­s subjected to their violence and to the deputies who oppose these heinous practices.”

The Justice Department did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

A Sheriff’s Department spokesman said that the let

ter is “filled with unsubstant­iated allegation­s and inflammato­ry rhetoric” and that the FBI and attorney general were already asked to monitor certain ongoing investigat­ions within the agency.

“So this request by Mr. Raskin and Mr. Gomez was already placed into motion by Sheriff [Alex] Villanueva months ago,” Lt. John Satterfiel­d said.

He also said the department “is taking aggressive action in disciplini­ng those employees that use their associatio­n in cliques to engage in misconduct against others, inside or outside the organizati­on.”

Citing reporting by The Times, the letter says that deputy gangs have plagued the Sheriff’s Department for decades, since 1971, and that settlement­s related to “gang-affiliated deputies” have cost Los Angeles County taxpayers roughly $55 million.

“Not surprising­ly, gang members have been implicated in heinous acts of brutality against Black people,” wrote Gomez and Raskin, who serve on the House Oversight and Reform subcommitt­ee on civil rights and civil liberties.

The allegation­s have come up in recent excessive force and wrongful death claims and lawsuits, including one filed this week by the family of Andres Guardado, 18, who was shot and killed in June by a deputy in Gardena in an incident that sparked weeks of protests.

Villanueva has denied the existence of gangs within the department, saying trial attorneys are exaggerati­ng the problem to get the best deals for their clients.

“I’m not buying it,” Villanueva said during a live broadcast Wednesday. “They don’t care that the product they’re selling doesn’t really hold weight, doesn’t have the facts to support it.”

A whistleblo­wer deputy, who has filed a retaliatio­n claim against the department, said under oath recently that the two deputies involved in Guardado’s shooting were prospectiv­e members of a deputy gang called the Executione­rs entrenched at the Compton sheriff ’s station, claims their lawyers have denied.

The whistleblo­wer, Austrebert­o Gonzalez, testified that 15 to 20 deputies are Executione­rs, who mark themselves with distinctiv­e tattoos, and that at least a handful more are prospectiv­e members who are “chasing ink” by trying to prove they’re worthy of a tattoo. He said that it was his understand­ing that only two deputies are inked each year and that women and Black people aren’t allowed to join. A vast majority of members and prospects, he said, have been involved in high-profile shootings or beatings.

Villanueva said he has implemente­d — and is vigorously enforcing — a new policy that prohibits membership in illicit groups.

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