Los Angeles Times

Former chief says he was told not to probe ‘deputy gang’

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about the group.

“Don’t look into the Bandito aspect of the case,” he said he was told. “Just focus on the alcohol and the fight.”

Burson said Villanueva’s chief of staff at the time gave him the order on behalf of the sheriff.

It didn’t occur to him then, but he said he now feels he was unwittingl­y used to help cover up the Banditos’ involvemen­t in the incident.

“Do you now feel that you were used as kind of an unknowing dupe to shut down an investigat­ion?” asked Bert Deixler, the attorney heading the commission’s investigat­ion.

“I believe I was,” Burson said.

The troubling testimony by a former top-ranking executive added to other revelation­s that have come to light at the commission’s hearings. Deputies with alleged ties to the groups have been accused of using violent and aggressive tactics, and have cost taxpayers at least $55 million in settlement­s and payouts in incidents that date to the 1990s.

Villanueva and his second in command, Undersheri­ff Tim Murakami, defied subpoenas to testify Friday. Villanueva’s attorney cited three reasons for his absence, Deixler said, including that he feared for his security because members of the public had worn “F the sheriff ” shirts at prior hearings. Murakami relayed to the commission that testifying would be too stressful and create an adverse health risk.

“I’m astonished that Undersheri­ff Murakami is able to perform the duties of undersheri­ff but he’s unable to appear and testify for an hour or so,” said Commission­er Robert Bonner, a former federal judge. “If he’s not able to appear and testify, I suggest that he forthwith resign, take medical leave without pay or some other appropriat­e actions, because he has no business being the undersheri­ff.”

Deixler said he learned that a sheriff’s employee who was a potential witness had been ordered this week by the department to sign a confidenti­ality agreement. The agreement seemingly would have complicate­d the employee’s ability to testify. Deixler did not name the employee, but multiple sources identified him as Sgt. Jefferson Chow, who worked on the assault investigat­ion and who was told by Burson not to ask questions about the Banditos.

The Sheriff’s Department did not respond to questions about the nondisclos­ure agreement.

Deixler also asked the commission to authorize a subpoena requiring the Sheriff’s Department preserve all documents related to the East L.A. assault investigat­ion, which stemmed from an incident in which a group of Banditos allegedly assaulted other deputies at an off-duty party.

Larry Del Mese, Villanueva’s former chief of staff, also testified Friday. He said he did not recall instructin­g Burson to not ask questions about the Banditos or ever having a conversati­on with Villanueva about the group. Such an order would have been inappropri­ate, he said.

“Is that good policing?” asked Bill Forman, another attorney working for the commission.

“No.”

“Is it corrupt policing?” Forman asked.

“Could be,” Del Mese said. “If he was trying to obstruct an investigat­ion I think it could be criminal.”

The district attorney declined to file charges against the deputies involved in the assault. Three deputies who were fired for their roles in the incident are trying to get their jobs back, according to testimony Friday.

Del Mese initially resisted answering questions about whether he belonged to one of the deputy groups, citing his right to privacy. Commission­ers pressed, and he eventually admitted that he was a member of the Grim Reapers, a group based in the department’s now-shuttered Lennox station.

He acknowledg­ed getting a tattoo of a Grim Reaper that members of the group received.

“It was a fraternal group that worked hard and received some recognitio­n from their peers,” Del Mese said. He said he didn’t know what he did to get the invite.

He said he had his tattoo removed around 2018 or 2019.

“It served me no purpose from the day I got it but it had obviously become a liability,” Del Mese said. Del Mese said he lasted six months as Villanueva’s chief of staff and was eventually transferre­d partially over a disagreeme­nt about Villanueva’s fight to reinstate a deputy fired over allegation­s of domestic violence and dishonesty.

Chief April Tardy also testified Friday, saying 11 deputies who were “self-admitted” members of the Executione­rs group were transferre­d out of the Compton station and into non-patrol assignment­s.

She said that none of the deputies were found to have violated department policy and that they were not discipline­d.

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