The Riverside Press-Enterprise

L.A. County

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the task force in February to investigat­e and prosecute drug trafficker­s within the juvenile justice system.

Last year, Los Angeles County’s juvenile facilities experience­d at least half a dozen overdoses, including the death of an 18-year-old in custody at the Barry J. Nidorf Secure Youth Treatment Facility in Sylmar.

A report from the Office of Inspector General found that drugs, fentanyl in particular, had spread throughout the facilities due to lax security.

Since then, the department has increased the frequency of room searches and intensifie­d its security checkpoint­s. It planned to install airport-style scanners at its largest juvenile hall, Los Padrinos in Downey, in early 2024.

Latest setback

The arrest marks the latest stain on the embattled Probation Department, which has been under fire from the state for its substandar­d operation of juvenile facilities.

Last year, the state shut down two of the county’s juvenile halls over deplorable conditions, forcing the department’s leadership to scramble to reopen Los Padrinos to house the hundreds of youth impacted by the decision.

Now, Los Padrinos and the SYTF at Barry J. Nidorf, could suffer the same fate. Probation officials have until April to bring both locations back into compliance with the state’s minimum standards, or those facilities will be emptied, too.

Rumors of employees bringing drugs into the facilities have circulated for months.

Last year, the department arrested Nicholas Ibarra, 22, a youth who was in custody at the SYTF, for drug possession following a series of overdoses.

Two officers assigned to transport Ibarra later alleged he gave up the name of an officer who had been supplying fentanyl to youths at Barry J. Nidorf, but that they were placed on leave for trying to investigat­e, according to their attorney, Tom Yu.

In September, the Office of Inspector General reported that security at Barry J. Nidorf allowed a staff member to bring food in without scanning the container, which the Probation Department “later believed introduced contraband into the facility.”

The department has declined to comment on those incidents.

Los Angeles County is already facing hundreds of lawsuits from former juvenile detainees who alleged they experience­d sexual abuse within the juvenile halls dating back to 1972.

Los Angeles County CEO Fesia Davenport estimated the county could be forced to pay $1.6 billion to $3 billion for “more than 3,000 claims alleging childhood sexual assault at various County and non-county facilities,” according to a 2023 budget.

Los Angeles County Supervisor Hilda Solis called on the department to “thoroughly investigat­e this incident and discipline all, including staff who continue to harm our youth.”

“The County of Los Angeles

is contending with lawsuits from the past about allegation­s of sexual trauma in our facilities and yet, there continues to be a disturbing pattern of staff, who are in roles to protect, preying on those that need guidance and protection,” Solis said in a statement.

“I applaud Probation leadership for taking swift action against the staff; however, there needs to be a clear message of zero tolerance policy on any forms of abuse and swift consequenc­es that follow to eradicate the culture that enables these crimes to occur.”

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