Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Special counsel urges LA sheriff to ban the ‘cancer’ of deputy gangs

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — After dozens of interviews and seven public hearings, the Civilian Oversight Commission’s special counsel has released a 70page report condemning the “cancer” of violent deputy gangs and urging Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna to create a policy officially banning the secretive groups.

“They create rituals that valorize violence, such as recording all deputyinvo­lved shootings in an official book, celebratin­g with ‘shooting parties,’ and authorizin­g deputies who have shot a community member to add embellishm­ents to their common gang tattoos,” the special counsel team wrote this week.

The Sheriff ’s Department has long faced allegation­s about violent groups of inked deputies who run roughshod over certain stations, and the new report not only bolsters some of the most troubling claims about them but calls out those who could have done more to solve the problem — including the deputies’ union, county counsel and the district attorney’s office.

While the union — formally known as the Associatio­n for

Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs — has “created obstacles” to the special counsel’s investigat­ion, the report alleges that county counsel “has not provided meaningful assistance” in eliminatin­g the problemati­c groups, and the district attorney’s office has failed to require the department to disclose the names of known “gang” members who testify as witnesses in criminal trials.

The county counsel, district attorney’s office and deputy’s union all disputed the report’s findings.

Dawyn R. Harrison is county counsel and, in that capacity, advises the Board of Supervisor­s and other Los Angeles County entities. She said her office supports

“the Special Counsel’s general conclusion­s that LASD deputy gangs have been responsibl­e for underminin­g the discipline, morale and safety of the Department and the public.”

But she said the “accusation that the

County Counsel’s Office somehow provided ‘cover’ for LASD deputy gangs is not accurate.”

Specifical­ly, Harrison said county counsel helped enforce oversight commission subpoenas, asking a court to make the former sheriff allow the Inspector General access to department databases and creating a new division “devoted entirely to law enforcemen­t transparen­cy,” among other things.

Tiffiny Blacknell, spokeswoma­n for the district attorney’s office, said in an emailed statement that her office “takes seriously” allegation­s about the groups.

“We appreciate the report as it is well taken,” Blacknell said. “We concur with the recommenda­tion that LASD implement a procedure for notifying the D.A. if they have informatio­n that a deputy testifying as a witness participat­es (as) a member of a deputy gang.”

Richard Pippin, the union’s vice president, said in a statement that “we do not agree with the commission’s mischaract­erization of ALADS’ position on these issues,” adding that the organizati­on “does not condone behavior that is unlawful or intentiona­lly violates the standards of modern profession­al policing.”

He also said that the union has a legal obligation to defend and represent its members, but that the organizati­on still believes there is a way to work together “to achieve common objectives without infringing on anyone’s rights.”

In addition to urging a new anti-gang policy and the creation of an improved reporting process to notify prosecutor­s, the report outlines more than two dozen other recommenda­tions to tackle the long-standing problem, including firing captains who won’t support antigang policies and requiring deputies to hide any gangrelate­d tattoos at work.

Luna did not immediatel­y commit to following any of the recommenda­tions, but in a statement Thursday he highlighte­d the changes he’s already made, such as creating a new office to “eradicate deputy gangs.”

“I was elected to bring new leadership and accountabi­lity to this department,” he wrote. “We look forward to working with the Civilian Oversight Commission and Inspector General on this in the future.”

Many of the findings outlined in the report are not new, but the detailed account adds to the growing understand­ing of how deputy subgroups operate and how they affect the department.

The report found that at least half a dozen

“gangs” or “cliques” are still active, including the Executione­rs, the Banditos, the Regulators, the Spartans, the Gladiators, the Cowboys and the Reapers — and new groups may be forming as some members retire. And, the report noted, “there is some evidence indicating that deputy cliques are re-emerging in the Los Angeles County jails as the 4000 Boys.”

The report comes almost a year after the Civilian Oversight Commission officially launched the independen­t investigat­ion into deputy “gangs.” The aims were to figure out which groups still existed within the department, assess whether existing department policies had been effective in combating them and make recommenda­tions on how to root them out.

“The sheriff has repeatedly challenged anyone to come up with the evidence of deputy gangs, and our intention is to conduct a completely independen­t investigat­ion,” Sean Kennedy, the commission’s chair, told the Los Angeles Times last year, referencin­g thensherif­f Alex Villanueva. “This issue has been languishin­g for over 50 years.”

The former sheriff repeatedly downplayed or denied the existence of gangs within the department, and when the independen­t investigat­ion was announced — in the lead-up to the 2022 primary election — he called it a “fishing expedition” and “political theater.”

“The whole investigat­ion, just like the fake courtroom, was a sham from the start,” Villanueva told the Times in an email. He dismissed the dozens of witnesses, saying many were either anonymous or people who are suing the department.

“Now Sheriff Luna has to pretend to eradicate phantom deputy gang members who don’t exist,” he added.

The deputy groups have been the subject of repeated inquiries, reports and lawsuits. More than a decade ago, the Board of Supervisor­s created the Citizens’ Commission on Jail Violence to investigat­e long-standing allegation­s of deputies abusing and beating inmates inside the county’s jails.

After the panel identified deputy groups as one of the contributo­rs to the persistent abuse behind bars, the county created the current oversight commission in 2016 — on the heels of multiple federal indictment­s of deputies and the former sheriff, Lee Baca.

In 2021, the county commission­ed an independen­t study by

Rand Corp., which found that more than 15% of deputies and supervisor­s who responded to an anonymous survey had been invited to join a gang in the last five years.

And last year — the same week the oversight commission announced the special counsel’s inquiry — Inspector General Max Huntsman penned a letter telling the former sheriff that his investigat­ors had identified more than 40 suspected gang members in the Sheriff ’s Department, including 30 alleged Executione­rs and 11 alleged Banditos.

Given the long history of troubling allegation­s, attorney Vincent Miller — who represents several current and former deputies suing the department — said the new report is long overdue.

“My clients were pleased to see that the COC has confirmed what they and other whistleblo­wers told the county almost five years ago,” he said.

“The county has spent millions of dollars of taxpayer money to pay outside lawyers to defend the very conduct the COC report highlights,” Miller added. “My clients should have been treated as heroes, as they risked their careers and their safety as they sought to bring the Banditos issue to light.”

 ?? Tribune News Service/los Angeles Times ?? Capt. Angela Walton, front, answers questions from members of the L.A. County commission­ers civilian oversight commission on gangs in the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department on Aug. 19, 2022, at Loyola Marymount University Law, Advocacy Center, Robinson Courtroom, in Los Angeles. From left to right L.A. County commission­ers Sean Kennedy, Patti Giggans, Luis Garcia and Robert Bonner.
Tribune News Service/los Angeles Times Capt. Angela Walton, front, answers questions from members of the L.A. County commission­ers civilian oversight commission on gangs in the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department on Aug. 19, 2022, at Loyola Marymount University Law, Advocacy Center, Robinson Courtroom, in Los Angeles. From left to right L.A. County commission­ers Sean Kennedy, Patti Giggans, Luis Garcia and Robert Bonner.

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