Los Angeles Times

L.A. protesters f ile a petition

Plaintiffs want to limit deputies’ firing of tactical projectile­s, gas

- By Leila Miller

Lawsuit seeks to limit the use of nonlethal force by the Sheriff ’s Department.

Plaintiffs in a classactio­n lawsuit are seeking a temporary restrainin­g order and injunction to limit the Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department’s use of socalled less-lethal force at protests, saying deputies have employed rubber bullets, tear gas and other chemical agents indiscrimi­nately against peaceful protesters, journalist­s and legal observers in violation of the Constituti­on.

The petition, filed Monday in U.S. District Court, focuses on protests in recent weeks against police brutality and the shooting of Dijon Kizzee, who was killed by sheriff’s deputies Aug. 31 in Westmont after being flagged for a vehicle code violation while riding his bike. The incident has spurred daily protests in front of the South L.A. sheriff ’s station.

In court documents, a group of 13 plaintiffs — including protesters injured at marches against police violence over the summer — say the department has been improperly using force to disperse crowds without giving sufficient warning and time to obey orders.

“Instead of deploying these weapons in a defensive manner to protect themselves and others, the LASD has been deliberate­ly using less-lethal munitions and chemical agents in an indiscrimi­nate and retaliator­y fashion against people engaged in lawful activities, including journalist­s and legal observers,” a memorandum filed with the petition states.

The Sheriff’s Department has previously said that deputies used less-lethal force in response to protesters who threw rocks and bottles at officials, and not to cause them to disperse.

“The Department does not deploy less-lethal weapons against peaceful protesters,” Lt. John Satterfiel­d, a spokesman for the department, said in a statement Tuesday. “The deployment and use of less lethal munitions is guided by strict policy and procedure, in addition to current state and federal law. Every applicatio­n and use of force is thoroughly documented, investigat­ed, and reviewed at multiple levels throughout the chain of command. The Department is unable to offer further comment, due to pending litigation.”

The applicatio­n is part of a class-action lawsuit filed Aug. 27 that claims the department engaged in “dangerous, retaliator­y abuses,” including unlawful arrests and excessive use of force, at protests in May and June against the killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s and 18year-old Andres Guardado in Gardena.

On Sunday, community organizers and family members of those killed by deputies stood outside the South L.A. sheriff ’s station to announce another protest in the area next weekend.

“We’ll be quiet, we’ll shut up, as soon as we start seeing some accountabi­lity,” said Sequarier McCoy, an aunt of Kizzee, as she called for Sheriff Alex Villanueva to resign.

The petition for a restrainin­g order seeks to stop the department from indiscrimi­nately using nonlethal projectile­s such as rubber bullets and pepper balls to disperse and control crowds unless there is a specific and immediate safety threat. It states that before such force is used the department should declare an unlawful assembly and provide clear notice of dispersal orders.

The filing also seeks to stop indiscrimi­nate use of chemical agents such as tear gas and flash grenades to disperse crowds without adequate warning. It says that the weapons should only be used after other efforts to contain crowds have failed.

A memorandum submitted with the petition states that on Aug. 25, deputies fired rubber bullets, pepper balls and tear gas into a crowd after about 100 demonstrat­ors marched peacefully in downtown L.A. to protest the police killing of Anthony McClain in Pasadena. It alleges that officials used force without warning or dispersal orders and that two legal observers from the National Lawyers Guild were targeted with a tear gas grenade despite following directions from deputies to move across the street.

In another incident on Sept. 5, 250 to 300 people went to the South L.A. sheriff’s station to protest the killing of Kizzee, 29. The filing describes people “milling around” when deputies began firing into the crowd with rubber bullets, pepper balls, flash bangs and tear gas grenades.

“Again, no warning or dispersal order had been given, and even as people retreated and ran away from the location, LASD deputies chased them and shot at them with rubber bullets,” the memorandum states.

On Sept. 7, 75 to 100 people gathered near the same station. The plaintiffs claim that at about 10 p.m., deputies began shooting projectile­s, tear gas, and other munitions at protesters without warning.

“At the crux of this is they’re using less-lethal projectile­s — rubber bullets, pepper balls, stinger grenades — to disperse people,” said Jorge Gonzalez, one of the attorneys representi­ng the plaintiffs. “Those are supposed to be used only when there’s an assault on the officers.”

The request for a restrainin­g order comes after several county supervisor­s and members of the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission called for Villanueva to resign last week.

Some have expressed concern about the sheriff ’s lack of compliance with subpoenas and have held that he has refused to share informatio­n with Inspector General Max Huntsman, who has accused the department of not cooperatin­g with his investigat­ions of the department for possible violations of freedom of the press. Villanueva has told The Times that he is not concerned by some officials’ lack of confidence in him and plans to continue serving.

 ?? Josie Norris Los Angeles Times ?? BRENDA BARAQUIL stands before L.A. County sheriff ’s deputies wearing riot gear earlier this month during a protest seeking justice for Dijon Kizzee, who was killed by deputies Aug. 31 in Westmont.
Josie Norris Los Angeles Times BRENDA BARAQUIL stands before L.A. County sheriff ’s deputies wearing riot gear earlier this month during a protest seeking justice for Dijon Kizzee, who was killed by deputies Aug. 31 in Westmont.

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