Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Was deputy lying, or merely ‘sloppy’?

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an

In his testimony against two men facing weapons charges, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Deputy Kevin Honea was clear: While searching a car the men were in, he had found a gun in a box in the front seat area.

But prosecutor­s who later watched video footage of the May 2019 stop saw that account was wrong: It was another deputy who had discovered the weapon — in a bag that had been shut away in the trunk.

Honea’s false testimony forced prosecutor­s to drop the charges, and an attorney for one of the men pressed the Sheriff ’s Department to investigat­e Honea for perjury and filing a report with false informatio­n. Both would be crimes and grounds for him to be fired.

Sheriff ’s officials, however, chose not to open a criminal investigat­ion, and an internal department inquiry cleared Honea of lying. Investigat­ors concluded he had not meant to mislead anyone, and chalked his misstateme­nts up to sloppiness. He received a 10-day suspen

sion.

The handling of the Honea case by sheriff ’s officials highlights a concern that has arisen among criminal justice watchdogs since Sheriff Alex Villanueva took office two years ago. Under Villanueva, the department has investigat­ed fewer allegation­s of dishonesty, and the number of times deputies have been found guilty of the misconduct has dropped.

Some department watchdogs worry the decline is part of a deliberate effort by Villanueva to shield the agency from the increased public scrutiny brought on by a state law that makes cases of dishonesty and other types of misconduct public.

In response to questions from The Times, Villanueva did not address the lower number of investigat­ions during his time in office but said inconsiste­nt statements that compromise the integrity of deputies are “extremely troubling.”

“I will not tolerate misconduct in any form by our personnel,” Villanueva said in a statement. “These cases will be investigat­ed thoroughly and appropriat­e administra­tive action will be taken, as well as criminal action when warranted.”

Villanueva took office in December 2018. That year and in the three previous years, sheriff’s officials investigat­ed between 31 and 59 allegation­s of dishonesty by deputies, and between 15 and 29 of those charges were substantia­ted, department figures show. In 2019, 22 allegation­s of dishonesty were probed, 12 of which were found to be true. And last year the number of times deputies were investigat­ed for dishonesty fell further to 15 through Nov. 10. All but one of those investigat­ions were ongoing.

Those figures include investigat­ions into various types of dishonesty, including tampering with evidence and making false statements. It’s unclear how many deputies are included in the figures, because some may have been charged with more than one violation in an incident.

The landmark law, Senate Bill 1421, which went into effect a month after Villanueva took office, reversed decades of secrecy afforded to police in California by opening up previously confidenti­al records about officers involved in shootings or other serious uses of force, as well as those who committed sexual assaults or acts of dishonesty.

Under the new law, informatio­n is made public only if the allegation­s against the law enforcemen­t officer are found to be true. A finding of dishonesty, especially when made public, can undo an officer’s career. If they are not fired, their credibilit­y is likely to be called into question whenever they testify about an arrest. A dishonest cop can also damage a police department’s reputation in the eyes of the public, making such cases particular­ly worrisome to sheriffs and police chiefs.

Inspector General Max Huntsman, who oversees the Sheriff’s Department, said that dynamic creates a “dangerous incentive to police agencies to water down charges as a means of maintainin­g secrecy, which could result in more dishonest police officers being retained rather than fewer.”

In a 2019 report that examined cases in which deputy discipline was downgraded, Huntsman highlighte­d another case, in which allegation­s of dishonesty by a deputy were thrown out a few months into Villanueva’s term. The deputy, who had been discipline­d repeatedly for previous incidents, was accused of severely choking his wife, instructin­g her not to cooperate with the department’s investigat­ion and then lying about his actions to investigat­ors.

The deputy, who was not identified in the report, had been relieved of duty and faced being fired by the previous sheriff. Instead, under Villanueva, he was offered a settlement in which the charges of dishonesty and interferin­g with an investigat­ion were dropped, the report said. The deputy kept his job and was suspended for 25 days for assaulting his wife.

Other large agencies in California have not experience­d the same drop in dishonesty cases as the Sheriff ’s Department.

In the Los Angeles Police Department, the number of allegation­s of lying and similar claims ranged from 164 to 201 each year from 2015 to 2018, according to data released by the agency. In 2019, officials logged 194. The number of sustained allegation­s, however, has declined steadily, from 25 in 2015 to 10 in 2019.

Complete figures were not available for 2020.

The LAPD’s figures are probably far higher than the sheriff’s because they include complaints brought by members of the public. The categories that the LAPD uses for dishonesty allegation­s are not the same as those of the Sheriff ’s Department, and not all of its cases are disclosabl­e under SB 1421.

Investigat­ors for the San Francisco Police Department looked into between 12 and 24 allegation­s of dishonesty by officers each year from 2015 to 2018, according to the Department of Police Accountabi­lity. In 2019 there were 16 allegation­s and 22 through mid-December of 2020. Since 2015, only nine allegation­s have been sustained.

And the number of dishonesty allegation­s investigat­ed by the Orange County Sheriff’s Department has remained in the single digits every year except 2018, when there were 13, according to statistics released by the agency.

Since being elected to run the nation’s largest sheriff ’s department, Villanueva has been outspoken about his controvers­ial belief that discipline under previous sheriffs was unfair and has vowed to make changes. In his first several months on the job, the Sheriff’s Department closed down dozens of ongoing investigat­ions into deputy misconduct and cut the number of new cases by more than half.

A Sheriff’s Department spokesman said the reduction in dishonesty charges is “yet another example of the incredible organizati­onal culture changes occurring under Sheriff Villanueva.”

The events that led to the perjury complaint against Honea began on a night in May 2019.

Honea, who was assigned to the South L.A. station, was on patrol in Gardena when he saw an Audi sedan leaving a Motel 6 parking lot, according to transcript­s of his preliminar­y hearing testimony reviewed by The Times. He ran the license plate and discovered it was linked to a robbery reported to the Los Angeles Police Department. Three men were arrested.

At a court hearing a month later to determine whether there was sufficient evidence to prosecute the driver of the car and the man who had been riding in front passenger seat, Honea described opening the box in the front passenger’s seat area and finding various items, including the gun.

“It was like where your foot would be if you were sitting in the front passenger seat,” he said, when questioned by the prosecutor.

During cross-examinatio­n, Deputy Public Defender Alison Hudak asked: “Pertaining to the brown box that is in the front passenger seat, you opened that box, correct?”

“Correct,” he replied, adding that the gun was inside.

She asked soon after, “Did you personally recover the firearm?”

“Yes,” Honea replied. The judge cited Honea’s testimony when she decided there was enough evidence for the case to proceed to a trial, noting that the firearm was within reach of the driver and at the feet of the front passenger.

Later, the defense team for one of the men obtained the video footage taken from a security camera at the motel.

The video, a copy of which was reviewed by The Times, shows Honea and other deputies looking inside the box that was in the front passenger’s seat several times over the course of about an hour and not finding a gun.

Shortly after 1 a.m., one of several deputies who had responded to the scene pulled a small box out of a bag that had been removed from the trunk of the car. Honea, who was on the phone, walked back toward the group as another deputy opened the box, and the group celebrated, patting one another on the shoulders.

Without identifyin­g Honea by name, Lt. John Satterfiel­d, a Sheriff’s Department spokesman, said sheriff’s investigat­ors concluded the deputy was unaware his testimony was false. The deputy knew he was being recorded by security cameras, Satterfiel­d said.

“The deputy in question was sloppy in their investigat­ion and made incorrect assumption­s regarding the location of the weapon, which led them to make those same incorrect assumption­s in court,” Satterfiel­d said.

Citing privacy laws, Satterfiel­d declined to name Honea specifical­ly but said the 10-day suspension handed down in the case was appropriat­e.

The deputy’s attorney, Bill Hadden, declined to comment other than to say that Honea is a well-regarded deputy whose supervisor­s call him reliable and hardworkin­g and that he has had no other previous discipline in his several years in the department.

On the day in October that The Times asked about the gun case involving Honea, the district attorney’s Justice System Integrity Division, which reviews allegation­s of police misconduct, opened a formal inquiry into the matter, a spokesman said.

The deputy has been listed as a potential witness in criminal cases more than 240 times since he joined the Sheriff’s Department in 2015, according to records The Times obtained through public records act requests.

Of those cases, about 45 were filed after he testified in the gun case.

Hudak, the deputy public defender, said her client spent more than four months in custody because of Honea’s false report and testimony.

“His dishonesty was rewarded every time someone in authority accepted his representa­tions as true,” she said.

“The fact that this evidence was presented to the sheriff and district attorney and that Deputy Honea is still working in a position of trust reinforces his bad behavior. There should never be any room in any police agency for a peace officer who lies.”

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? INVESTIGAT­IONS into various types of deputy dishonesty have declined under Sheriff Alex Villanueva.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times INVESTIGAT­IONS into various types of deputy dishonesty have declined under Sheriff Alex Villanueva.
 ??  ?? VIDEO shows L.A. County Sheriff’s Deputy Kevin Honea and others searching a car in May 2019. Honea testified that he had found a gun in the front seat area, but it was another deputy who had discovered the weapon.
VIDEO shows L.A. County Sheriff’s Deputy Kevin Honea and others searching a car in May 2019. Honea testified that he had found a gun in the front seat area, but it was another deputy who had discovered the weapon.

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