Los Angeles Times

LAPD captain’s home is searched

- By Richard Winton and Kevin Rector

Detectives from the Los Angeles Police Department searched the home of a captain Thursday as part of an investigat­ion into the alleged sale of more than 20 firearms stolen from the police academy gun store, according to law enforcemen­t sources.

The commercial crimes detectives sought evidence linked to the guns and who might have received them, as well as communicat­ions between LAPD Capt. Jonathan Tom, who oversees the West Los Angeles station, and Archie Duenas, a former assistant manager of the gun shop who was charged last year with stealing the weapons, sources said.

A Superior Court judge signed off on the warrant to search Tom’s Long Beach home; LAPD Chief Michel Moore also approved the warrant, sources said.

The warrant is the latest step in an investigat­ion that began a year ago, after the disappeara­nce of dozens of firearms from the gun store of the Los Angeles Police Revolver and Athletic Club, a private organizati­on whose members are in law enforcemen­t. Store officials had noticed a discrepanc­y in inventory and notified LAPD commercial crimes detectives, who quickly narrowed their focus to Duenas.

Duenas, 34, was arrested in April on suspicion of grand theft and fired from the store. He has pleaded not guilty to grand theft of a firearm, grand theft by embezzleme­nt, illegal possession of an assault weapon, 22 misdemeano­r counts of unlawfully selling or transferri­ng a firearm without a license and a misdemeano­r of carrying a loaded and concealed firearm in a vehicle.

According to two sources familiar with the probe but not authorized to discuss it, investigat­ors found numerous guns at Tom’s home, including a loaded handgun, without a locking mechanism, that was accessible to a minor. One source said the number of weapons exceeded 50. The detectives recovered several firearms believed to be unregister­ed and are seeking to trace their origins with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the sources said.

The detectives also sought to obtain access to Tom’s cellphones and other communicat­ions devices to determine if he or others bought or received weapons that Duenas allegedly stole.

Tom did not return messages seeking comment. Capt. Stacy Spell, an LAPD spokesman, confirmed Tuesday that the department had served a search warrant in Long Beach but said “the facts and circumstan­ces regarding that warrant have been sealed by a judge and cannot be disclosed at this time to preserve the integrity of the investigat­ion.” Spell could not provide Tom’s status in the department as of Tuesday.

Tom has previously served as supervisor of the Critical Incident Review Division, which investigat­es officers’ use of force.

In September, the department announced that 35 firearms had been stolen; 24 were recovered, and 11 remain outstandin­g.

Deputy Chief Kris Pitcher, head of detectives, and Capt. Lillian Carranza, who oversees commercial crimes, were present during the search, which occurred after Tom left home Thursday morning. Later, Tom returned, entered his home alongside Pitcher and opened a safe for investigat­ors, sources said.

While the department has cited the theft of 35 firearms, prosecutor­s have accused Duenas of taking at least 21 during a two-year period beginning in early 2018, then selling them, according to the district attorney’s office.

According to an internal LAPD report, a sheriff ’s deputy bought 13 of the firearms, and at least three LAPD employees bought another eight.

None of the officers or the deputy have been charged with a crime, though several were placed on administra­tive assignment. Tom was not one of those officers.

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