Los Angeles Times

Deal limits L. A. gang injunction­s

Villanueva to comply with subpoena and speak before a civilian watchdog group.

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an

Police and prosecutor­s must narrow their efforts and no longer blanket large areas under a court settlement.

A Los Angeles County Superior Court judge Thursday canceled a contempt hearing that had been set for next month over Sheriff Alex Villanueva’s refusal to comply with a subpoena to testify before a civilian oversight panel.

Lawyers representi­ng L. A. County dropped the case against Villanueva after he showed up voluntaril­y to this month’s meeting of the Civilian Oversight Commission for the f irst time since July of last year — and agreed to appear again next month to discuss his department’s response to the coronaviru­s crisis in jails.

The legal battle was a litmus test of the commission’s newly minted power to issue subpoenas as a tool to keep the sheriff in check. The county Board of Supervisor­s gave the commission the authority in January, and voters reaffirmed it when they approved Measure R in March. In September, Gov. Gavin Newsom gave the right to subpoena to oversight bodies statewide when he signed Assembly Bill 1185 into law.

Last month, Judge Holly J. Fujie ruled that the commission, a watchdog group appointed by the Board of Supervisor­s, was well within its power when it directed the county’s inspector general in May to subpoena the sheriff to testify about how the department was responding to the COVID- 19 pandemic inside the nation’s largest jail system.

Villanueva had chal

lenged the legality of the subpoena, describing it at a news conference as a “public shaming endeavor.” His attorney had argued that the subpoena was an abuse of power and that Villanueva had met his obligation to the Civilian Oversight Commis

sion by sending to the meeting an assistant sheriff who was knowledgea­ble about the issue.

In a statement Thursday, the Sheriff ’s Department said the “constituti­onal issue as to whether the COC has the legal authority to subpoena a duly elected sheriff is still uncertain. In the spirit of cooperatio­n, the sheriff looks forward to working in good faith with members of the COC and Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s concerning any future COC subpoena compelling his personal appearance.”

Inspector General Max Huntsman said he was troubled by the sheriff ’ s claim about the legality of the subpoena.

“Judge Fujie confirmed the authority of the COC to subpoena the sheriff in her first written ruling. This continued anti- transparen­cy rhetoric is deeply disturbing when lives are at stake,” Huntsman said.

Since the start of the pandemic, 3,873 Los Angeles County inmates have tested positive for the coronaviru­s, and nine have died of COVID- 19, according to the Sheriff ’s Department.

 ?? Josie Norris Los Angeles Times ?? L. A. COUNTY Sheriff Alex Villanueva, who faced contempt charges for not complying with a subpoena, said he will testify next month before a civilian panel.
Josie Norris Los Angeles Times L. A. COUNTY Sheriff Alex Villanueva, who faced contempt charges for not complying with a subpoena, said he will testify next month before a civilian panel.

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