Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Suspension

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saulted a 10-year-old girl in the stall of a women's bathroom inside Denny's restaurant in Palmdale on New Year's Day in 2014.

Tubbs was sentenced to two years at a juvenile facility after Gascón's office declined to move the case to adult court.

Tiffiny Blacknell, director of communicat­ions for the District Attorney's Office, said that while she is unable to comment specifical­ly on a personnel matter, the actions taken were the result of findings from an independen­t Los Angeles County Policy of Equity investigat­ion.

“I can also say that the transgende­r community is frequently the target of violent attacks,” she said in

an email. “They are also reluctant to come forward and report their attacks because of how they're treated in the criminal legal system. The LADA office takes seriously our responsibi­lity to treat all people with respect and dignity no matter their gender identity.”

In an unrelated case involving Tubbs, the Kern County District Attorney's Office has charged her with murder for allegedly beating a fellow survivalis­t group member to death with a rock in 2019. She faces a possible life sentence if convicted and is referred to in Kern County jail booking records as James Tubbs.

In a statement, Gascón reaffirmed that he believes juveniles should not be tried as adults, but said he has learned from the Tubbs case that adjustment­s

sometimes are warranted.

Vocal critic of Gascón

Sanna said he has been an outspoken critic of Gascón's handling of other cases, including one involving convicted murderer Andrew Cachu, who was released from custody in 2021 after serving just six years of a 50-year prison sentence when the DA's former special assistant, Alisa Blair, refused to call witnesses during a dispositio­n hearing.

Cachu originally was tried in adult court even though he was two months shy of his 18th birthday when he shot and killed 41-year-old Louis Amela outside a Palmdale restaurant in March 2015. Under changes in state law since then, however, he was entitled to a retroactiv­e transfer hearing

to determine if his conviction should be in juvenile or adult court.

While waiting in jail for his case to be resolved, Cachu was told by his mother Bertha Cachu, in a phone conversati­on that Blair had agreed to intervene on his behalf.

“That's Gascón's special adviser,” Bertha Cachu explained to her son in a recording of the call obtained by the Southern California News Group. “Oh my God! She's going to be coming in your case. Did you hear that, man? She's good. She's the one I've been emailing back and forth.”

Sanna said his suspension won't silence him.

“GascÓn is on a crusade to fire me because I have spoken out on his injustices,” he said. “I am going to keep speaking out. That's my job as a prosecutor.”

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