Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Riverside officials seek an apology from sheriff

- By Nathan Solis

Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco recently took to Facebook to chastise a group of abortion rights protesters for defacing the county courthouse with green paint.

He also claimed that Riverside City Councilmem­ber Clarissa Cervantes supported the vandalism, saying, “You are lucky we couldn’t arrest you.”

City officials and residents have asked Bianco to apologize, calling his comments harmful.

Cervantes said that her council office had received a large volume of critical phone calls and that she had received threats on social media.

“It’s been extremely challengin­g to process that our sheriff would not only do this to an elected official, but to a person, without offering any evidence or proof,” Cervantes said.

Bianco took office in 2019 and acknowledg­ed that in 2014 he was a paying member of the Oath Keepers, a far-right, anti-government group whose ranks participat­ed in the U.S. Capitol insurrecti­on on Jan. 6. The informatio­n was part of a data leak that revealed the group’s donor list. Bianco said that he did not renew his membership.

This June, Bianco won reelection as sheriff, and in his Facebook post he reminded voters that he would continue to prosecute criminals in the county.

“As long as you keep electing me, this disgusting behavior will never be tolerated,” Bianco said in the same post in which he accused Cervantes of participat­ing in the vandalism.

Cervantes denied being involved in the protest and said in a Facebook post that she was in the downtown Riverside area the day of the protest for dinner and to attend a gallery show.

About 30 protesters gathered at the county courthouse on July 30 to bring attention to the overturnin­g of Roe vs. Wade by the U.S. Supreme Court. County officials said the group smeared green paint on columns near the courthouse entrance, and five people were charged with felony vandalism.

Bianco called anyone who participat­ed in the protest “a common criminal” in a Facebook post and claimed that an unnamed Riverside councilwom­an supported the vandalism. Several hours later, Bianco clarified that he was referring to Cervantes and not to other Riverside councilwom­en.

“I apologize to Councilwom­an Gaby Plascencia and Erin Edwards if my post caused you unnecessar­y attention,” Bianco wrote. “It was Clarissa Cervantes who was present.”

Cervantes said she was passing by the protest, asked a Riverside police officer what was happening and thanked him for his service, according to a statement she posted on Facebook.

Riverside Police Department spokespers­on Ryan Railsback confirmed that police reviewed body-camera footage from the scene, and Cervantes’ interactio­n at the protest lasted a few minutes.

Cervantes said Riverside police made that clear to Bianco, but he has not removed his post from Facebook. He also has not called to apologize or offer any explanatio­n.

“For myself, it’s extremely concerning and alarming that our sheriff would put my life in harm’s way and my family by extension,” Cervantes said. “I have a daughter.”

The Sheriff’s Department did not respond to requests for comment. The Press-Enterprise reported that a spokespers­on for the Sheriff ’s Department said it would not issue an apology.

At Tuesday’s regular City Council meeting, dozens of residents asked for an apology. Residents called Bianco’s comments inflammato­ry.

Plascencia said she has been the target of harassment since being elected to office in 2019 and called it “beyond shameful” that Cervantes is receiving the same type of intimidati­on.

“We know that when we walk into the political world, it’s going to be messy,” Plascencia said. “But nobody signs up to be attacked or threatened.”

She did not directly call out Bianco by name but said that comments posted to social media can be damaging.

“The damage is done. The threats are there,” Plascencia said.

Rosy Cortez, an artist who was with Cervantes on July 30, said Cervantes was not involved in the vandalism and interacted with police at the courthouse for only a few minutes. She could not believe that the brief interactio­n resulted in Bianco making a false claim on social media.

“I think his posts were incredibly damaging, and they were immediatel­y accepted as facts by thousands of people, which caused threats to her personal safety,” Cortez said.

Cervantes was first elected to office in June 2021. She previously worked as an organizer with the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union, where she represente­d healthcare workers and registered nurses in Southern California.

Her sister, Sabrina Cervantes, represents Riverside in the California Assembly. On Tuesday, she was joined by Assemblyme­mbers Eduardo Garcia (D-Coachella) and Jose Medina (D-Riverside) in demanding an apology from Bianco.

“It is reprehensi­ble for our county’s chief law enforcemen­t officer to recklessly publish false and inflammato­ry statements that place people in immediate danger and compromise the safety of fellow elected officials and their families,” the legislator­s said in their statement.

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