Los Angeles Times

Trailblazi­ng former sheriff of O. C. dies at 65

- By Richard Winton

Sandra Hutchens, who had battled breast cancer, took over at a time of turmoil and resigned amid her own scandals.

Sandra Hutchens, who rose through the ranks of law enforcemen­t when it was considered a “boys club” and served as Orange County sheriff for a decade, died Monday.

Hutchens, 65, had battled breast cancer for part of her Orange County tenure and used her health crisis to help educate the public. She squeezed in treatments between meetings, donned a wig and pledged that the disease would not affect her work.

“I have always been one to lean forward into the wind,” she once said of her health battle and climb to the top of law enforcemen­t.

Hutchens was considered a trailblaze­r for women in police management and a role model to many, though her tenure as sheriff was not without controvers­y and several high- profile scandals. Among them were serious allegation­s of abuse in jails and improper handling of jailhouse informants.

Hutchens was a top official at the Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department when Orange County

supervisor­s hired her in 2008 as a “change agent.” Her predecesso­r, Michael S. Carona, had been indicted on federal corruption charges, and the agency was tainted by cronyism, sex scandals and allegation­s of rampant abuse in jails.

Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes said Hutchens took office at a difficult time.

“The public’s trust had been broken by the previous sheriff. Upon taking office, she immediatel­y took action to put one of the nation’s largest law enforcemen­t agencies back on track,” Barnes said.

He added: “Hemingway described courage as ‘ grace under pressure.’ There is no one who embodied that descriptio­n more than Sandra Hutchens.”

For years, Hutchens, the f irst woman to lead the agency, was a popular figure in county politics. Voters reelected her in 2014, and she received credit for bringing stability despite cutbacks in the wake of the recession.

But her stock took a hit when allegation­s of a jailhouse informant network surfaced in the case of Scott Dekraai, who was convicted of killing eight people at a Seal Beach salon in 2011. Dekraai’s attorney argued that an informant had been placed in proximity to his client to extract a confession.

An Orange County Superior Court judge ruled that key informatio­n about the informant was not turned over to the defense as required, and jailhouse logs revealed a scheme to place informants near suspects. The scandal caused conviction­s to be tossed out and led to negative publicity for the Sheriff ’s Department and the district attorney’s office.

In 2017, Hutchens announced her decision to retire after the American Civil Liberties Union released a scathing report alleging inhumane treatment in the jails under her watch, and about a week before her long- awaited testimony on the use of a jailhouse informant in a killer’s case.

“I have faced storms before, and you know I don’t back down from a challenge,” she said, noting that criticism came with the job.

An admirer of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and President Lincoln, she adorned her office with images of them as a reminder to be strong and do the right thing, even amid severe criticism.

Barnes said Hutchens was his mentor and never sought the spotlight.

“I will continue to be inspired by her commitment always to do the right thing, regardless of the consequenc­es, and serve with the department’s and community’s interests f irst without need for self- recognitio­n.”

Born in 1955 in Monterey Park and raised in Long Beach, Hutchens had a middle- class suburban childhood. Her father was a constructi­on worker, her mother an assembly- line worker.

There were signs at an early age that Hutchens was fiercely independen­t. At 5 and in the first grade, she insisted on making the 10- minute walk to school by herself, her mother, Marilyn Mitchell, told The Times in 2008.

She graduated from the L. A. County Sheriff ’s Academy in 1978, worked as a deputy at the Sybil Brand Institute women’s jail and transferre­d to work patrol in Lynwood, one of the department’s most dangerous assignment­s.

Carrie Braun, communicat­ions director for the Sheriff ’s Department, said Hutchens once told her that when she started working patrol, one of her male partners would open the patrol car door for her. After a shift, Hutchens — in her blunt, witty style — told her colleague to, essentiall­y, not do that anymore.

It was in Lynwood on New Year’s Eve 1980 that Hutchens and a colleague were on patrol when they heard a gunshot and she saw a man outside a garage who appeared to have a gun in his hand. Before she could confront him, another man pointed a weapon, and she shot him three times, killing him, she said. The weapon the man had was unloaded.

Hutchens retired to a ranch in Riverside County, where she continued to advise others on counterter­rorism while furthering her love of Italian cooking from her mother’s ancestry. She is survived by her husband, Larry Hutchens, a retired assistant chief with Los Angeles Unified School District Police Department.

“She was patient, calm and had a calming inf luence,” retired L. A. County Sheriff ’s Cmdr. Mike Parker said. “She was wise ... she was a great leader.”

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin L. A. Times ?? ‘ A GREAT LEADER’ Hutchens, 65, was the f irst woman to lead the O. C. department.
Jay L. Clendenin L. A. Times ‘ A GREAT LEADER’ Hutchens, 65, was the f irst woman to lead the O. C. department.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States