Subpoena tied to Bryant crash photos eyed
LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles County’s chief law enforcement watchdog is seeking to subpoena documents related to allegations that Sheriff Alex Villanueva directed a cover-up after deputies shared graphic photos of the helicopter crash that killed Kobe Bryant, his daughter and seven others.
“The documents are relevant to a pending inquiry into allegations that the sheriff directed the destruction of evidence and suppressed an administrative investigation to avoid negative publicity,” Inspector General Max Huntsman said in a letter last week to the chair of the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission.
Huntsman said Villanueva had declined to provide the records and requested that the subpoena item be placed on the agenda for the commission’s meeting set for Thursday.
Villanueva had already launched an internal investigation into the photo sharing incident. On Friday he said that “monitoring does not give license to interfere or obstruct the investigation. The OIG will receive what they are lawfully entitled to once the investigation is concluded.”
Huntsman’s request came less than a week after Bryant’s wife, Vanessa Bryant, filed a claim against the Sheriff ’s Department alleging that it failed to “adequately investigate the extent of the deputies misconduct.”
The Los Angeles Times first reported that deputies shared photos taken at the scene of the Jan. 26 crash near Calabasas after someone filed a written complaint to the Sheriff’s Department.
The complaint, filed three days after the crash, said a young deputy was displaying gruesome crash scene photos at the Baja California Bar & Grill in Norwalk.
For weeks, the leadership of the Sheriff ’s Department tried to keep a lid on the episode instead of following normal investigative protocols — even after determining that several more deputies had obtained photos.
After it was reported publicly, Villanueva acknowledged that he ordered the deputies to delete the photos, a move that some inside the department as well as legal experts said could amount to destruction of evidence. He said he launched an investigation, which he asked the Office of the Inspector General to monitor.
Last month, the office requested a list of documents and information, including the identity of any personnel who displayed or saw the photographs as well as those involved in deciding how the matter would be handled. It also sought information about the cellphones with which the photos were taken, stored or displayed, along with the call and text history for all cellphones of employees on the scene.
Villanueva responded in a letter that his investigators “will maintain full control of the investigation and all information discovered until completion.” He added that the inspector general’s office would continue to get weekly updates until the investigation was complete.
Villanueva said last week that the internal affairs investigation was “getting near its conclusion” and would be released publicly. He did not answer questions about how many deputies are under investigation, policy violations and what discipline those violations carry.
Huntsman said in his subpoena request that county attorneys need reliable information about Villanueva’s conduct to appropriately respond to Vanessa Bryant’s claim.
According to the claim, Villanueva “personally assured” Bryant that deputies were securing the crash site to ensure her privacy.
“In reality, however, no fewer than eight sheriff’s deputies were at the scene snapping cellphone photos of the dead children, parents and coaches,” said the claim, which is a precursor to a lawsuit. “As the department would later admit, there was no investigative purpose for deputies to take pictures at the crash site. Rather, the deputies took photos for their own personal purposes.”
The claim also states that the department’s response to the incident has been “grossly insufficient.”
“Mrs. Bryant was distressed to learn that the department did not initiate a formal investigation until after the L.A. Times broke the story,” it said. The document said five deputies and three trainees or reserve deputies took or shared photos of the scene.
The claim alleges that the deputies who took and shared the photos are liable for negligence, intentional infliction of emotional distress and invasion of her right to privacy.
Along with Kobe Bryant and his 13-year-old daughter, Gianna, the others who died in the crash were Christina Mauser; Payton and Sarah Chester; John, Keri and Alyssa Altobelli; and pilot Ara Zobayan.
Coroner’s officials said Friday that each died of blunt trauma resulting from an accident.