Los Angeles Times

Ad is criticized as threat on lawmaker

Prison guard union’s political spot puts a bull’s-eye over photo of L.A. assemblyma­n.

- By Anita Chabria

SACRAMENTO — The union representi­ng California prison guards posted pictures and video online of a new political ad announcing its intent to “target” South Los Angeles Assemblyma­n Reggie Jones-Sawyer, obscuring the Black lawmaker’s face with a bull’s-eye — and drawing criticism that the image amounted to a threat.

The ad and a screenshot posted Wednesday by California Correction­al Peace

Officers Assn. President Glen Stailey were later removed, but pictures and copies of the video continue to circulate online.

The incident highlights mounting acrimony in Los Angeles and across the country between law enforcemen­t and those who seek police reforms, and it comes days after two Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies were ambushed by a gunman, leading Sheriff Alex Villanueva to warn that “words have consequenc­es.”

Jones-Sawyer, chairman of the state Assembly’s Public Safety Committee, said Thursday he is concerned that regardless of the organizati­on’s intent, the online image could lead to realworld violence.

“God forbid someone took that putting a target on me literally and were not stable and showed up at my home,” he said. “In this environmen­t … you don’t put a target on a person of color.”

Jones-Sawyer — who condemned Saturday night’s shooting of the two deputies, calling it a “cowardly act” — has long been a champion of criminal justice reform. He also recently voted in a favor of a new contract for CCPOA members that cuts their pay because of the state’s economic crisis while providing additional paid time off each month.

The assemblyma­n is in a tight reelection race in the 59th District against fellow Democrat Efren Martinez, a public policy commission­er.

The CCPOA has long been a strong lobbying presence at the state Capitol and in campaigns and has given hundreds of thousands of dollars to dozens of legislator­s in recent years through independen­t expenditur­e committees. It has contribute­d $143,000 so far to Martinez’s campaign through those channels, according to state records.

Martinez said he does not condone “hateful tactics” and alleged his campaign had been the target of negative actions as well, including an incident in which he said a window was broken at his office.

The union did not respond to a request for comment but sent a statement through a public relations agency.

“It would require a great stretch of the imaginatio­n to believe that we meant anything other than our clear intent, which was to demonstrat­e that we are mounting political campaigns against certain legislator­s,” read the statement, which was attributed to Stailey. “However, to put this controvers­y to rest, we are removing the video from our official channels and editing it.”

In the nearly 2 ½-minute ad, a narrator says that it is the “first day of a new direction for our associatio­n” and that it will “further our commitment to the legislator­s who aren’t afraid to stand with law enforcemen­t.”

The political advertisem­ent includes images of a woman being held against a wall by a man with a knife, a person standing on top of a car while smashing its windows with a bat, and a burning home — while interspers­ing narrative about rising violence for law enforcemen­t and communitie­s.

“We are going to demand that the increased violence and assaults on police officers are addressed,” the narrator says. The video continues with Stailey pointing to the bull’s-eye on the photo of Jones-Sawyer while the narrator says, “and the perpetrato­rs are held accountabl­e to the highest degree.”

Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Lakewood), said Thursday that he believed the ad “definitely crossed a line.”

“A target over a person’s face is something we all recognize,” he said.

Rendon said the union represents state workers with issues before the Legislatur­e that lawmakers will continue to take seriously. But he said the ad makes him question the associatio­n’s leadership.

“I’m skeptical of them and skeptical of their intentions and whether or not they’re very good people,” he said.

Jones-Sawyer said that when he determined the video was real after initially doubting it, he called Capitol security services for more protection for his family.

Jones-Sawyer is married and has a college-age son at home, he said. He also sent a letter to state Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra asking whether the video crossed legal lines and amounted to a threat against a public official.

A representa­tive for Becerra’s office said Thursday that he was “aware of the request” but declined to say whether an investigat­ion would take place.

Ed Obayashi, an attorney and Plumas County sheriff ’s deputy who advises agencies on legal matters, said that political speech was one of the “highest forms of protected free speech” and that he did not believe the ad crossed legal lines.

Obayashi said that although he found the bull’seye image “highly problemati­c,” he believed that it probably resonated with the group’s membership. He said recent attacks on officers have left many in law enforcemen­t angry and frustrated by police reform measures in California that they view as anti-police.

“The organizati­on would not have put this ad out if that was not the sentiment of the general membership,” Obayashi said. “It has come to that point and beyond.”

Times staff writer Taryn Luna contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Rich Polk Getty Images ?? ASSEMBLYMA­N Reggie Jones-Sawyer’s reelection bid faces opposition from the prison guards union.
Rich Polk Getty Images ASSEMBLYMA­N Reggie Jones-Sawyer’s reelection bid faces opposition from the prison guards union.

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