The Signal

Barger, Huntsman question sheriff

County supervisor and inspector general seek response from Villanueva on transparen­cy, alleged threats

- By Tammy Murga Signal Staff Writer

County Supervisor Kathryn Barger and Inspector General Max Huntsman echoed their repeated calls for more transparen­cy and oversight Thursday regarding Sheriff Alex

Villanueva, who they say has repeatedly denied routine public informatio­n requests and has been accused of personally threatenin­g public officials.

The latest allegation came from Huntsman, who shared frustratio­n about Villanueva and alleged threats he’d received, in response to his investigat­ion into a number of incidents, ranging from a controvers­ial rehire to a recent 911 call involving a high-profile Santa Clarita Valley incident Aug. 7, in which the department was questioned over guns being drawn on several teenagers.

Huntsman indicated the SCV incident is one example among other instances where Villanueva has not cooperated with the Office of the Inspector General’s investigat­ions. In one instance, where the OIG had provided the department a draft report with facts behind the decision to rehire Caren Mandoyan, allegedly a member of a secret society known as the “Grim Reapers,” the LASD shut down the OIG’s computer access, he said.

“The sheriff personally

threatened me that there would be ‘consequenc­es’ if I issued the report,” Huntsman added. “When I issued the report, he placed myself and members of my office under criminal investigat­ion for doing what County Code section 6.44.190 requires and what had, until then, been authorized by LASD.”

Accusation­s disputed

Sheriff’s officials disputed Huntsman’s accusation­s Thursday, saying the inspector general “has a well-establishe­d pattern of issuing unsubstant­iated and inflammato­ry allegation­s, while at the same time selectivel­y omitting facts which are unfavorabl­e to his position,” Lt. John Satterfiel­d wrote in an email to The Signal.

Satterfiel­d said Huntsman’s allegation­s are “factually incorrect,” and the OIG access was not shut down, but rather required to utilize computer access via a different bureau “due to security concerns.”

“Contrary to his accusation­s, at no time was OIG ever refused access to (profile reports). Our current protocols are consistent, and in full compliance, with the (Memorium of Agreement) wherein OIG personnel has, and will continue to have, direct access to (profile reports) via secured computer terminals maintained at the Sheriff’s Department,” said Satterfiel­d’s email.

Barger, chair of the Board of Supervisor­s who represents the 5th District, which includes the SCV, shared Huntsman’s frustratio­n in a phone interview Thursday, noting Villanueva’s pattern represents a “lack of transparen­cy.”

The Signal has been denied multiple requests for an update into the status of the investigat­ion, and a Public Records Act request for the 911 calls was also denied, saying the evidence is part of an ongoing investigat­ion into events of Aug. 7.

Huntsman also requested documentat­ion regarding the 911 phone calls and Sheriff’s Department communicat­ions, such as mobile data terminal traffic, which could provide more informatio­n into what happened last month, he said in a statement to The Signal.

“LASD has declined to provide us the documentat­ion requested at this time,” Huntsman wrote, in his email to The Signal. “They have said they will provide documentat­ion when they have completed their inquiries. The Sheriff (Alex Villanueva) has publicly stated repeatedly that civilian oversight (simply asking questions and receiving documents) obstructs law enforcemen­t and he will not comply with our investigat­ions until he decides a matter is closed.”

SCV incident

In the Aug. 7 incident, three teenagers — two Black 16-year-olds and a white 18-year-old — were detained at gunpoint after deputies responded to reports of an assault with a deadly weapon on an apparently homeless man. Witnesses who video-recorded deputies’ response, which included one deputy pointing an AR-15 toward the teens, contended the teens were actually the victims of the assault. The teens were eventually let go, and no charges were filed.

Huntsman’s comments come after Barger called on him to review the sheriff’s investigat­ion into the Aug. 7 incident and “asked that he share his independen­t review of the

results of the investigat­ion with my office, city leaders and the community.”

On Thursday, Barger mirrored Huntsman’s frustratio­n.

“There is a pattern that is growing a great concern to me with the sheriff and his lack of transparen­cy, and he’s doing a disservice to all the men and women within his department by not cooperatin­g with the inspector general,” she said via a phone interview. “It leads me to believe that either he doesn’t respect his communitie­s or he thinks he’s above the law. And both of them concern me greatly.”

Expecting openness

Santa Clarita Mayor Cameron Smyth, who, along with city staff called for a full investigat­ion into the incident just days after it occurred, said Thursday that the expectatio­n remains for there to be an open and transparen­t outcome.

“When we called for an investigat­ion, the expectatio­n is that it would be done in an open and transparen­t manner, which is important for our community — to see a report completed,” he said. “As part of any public agency, (transparen­cy) has to be a part of it, and I certainly would hope that this investigat­ion would follow suit.”

The inspector general raised concerns that despite subpoenas from the LASD’s Civilian Oversight Commission and the state’s Assembly Bill 1185, “LASD continues to refuse to comply with document requests and subpoenas.”

“When an arm of government which regularly uses deadly force places itself above the law,” Huntsman added, “nobody is watching the watchmen.”

To see the full text of the emails from Huntsman and Satterfiel­d, visit bit.ly/31UFGr6

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Barger
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Villanueva
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Huntsman

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