Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Sheriff is L.A.’s loosest cannon and pettiest cop

By going after critics, Alex Villanueva earns his place as the county’s chief thug.

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The potential evidence that armed Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies confiscate­d from the home of Supervisor Sheila Kuehl on Wednesday included her mobile phone, personal computer — and videotapes of the TV show she starred in 60 years ago, “The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis.” Maybe that’s an indication of how deep L.A.’s sheriff thinks this suspected conspiracy goes — Kuehl, and her alleged co-conspirato­r, activist Patti Giggans, might have been planning to collude on a nobid contract since the 1950s.

More likely it’s an indication of just how unhinged Sheriff Alex Villanueva has become in the weeks before voters decide if he deserves another term.

No prosecutor seems to be able to see the crime that Villanueva sees in the awarding of a Metro contract to the nonprofit organizati­on Giggans runs, Peace Over Violence, for a sexual harassment hotline. (The warrant served on Kuehl indicates that they were looking for documents that suggested bribery or other crimes related to the contract’s acquisitio­n.) The district attorney rebuffed the Sheriff ’s Department a year ago because the evidence it had compiled didn’t amount to anything. The D.A. said, in essence, there’s no “there” there.

But the sheriff has a ready explanatio­n for that: The D.A. is George Gascón, whom Villanueva blames (instead of himself ) for chaos in L.A. and against whom he campaigned (unsuccessf­ully) to recall. Besides, Villanueva noted in a television interview (conducted as he sat in a bar), a majority of the Board of Supervisor­s endorsed Gascón. And all of them have endorsed Villanueva’s opponent in the Nov. 8 election, Robert

Luna. So there you are. They’re all in on the corruption that Villanueva asserts.

But at least federal prosecutor­s are on board with him, right? Wrong. The Sheriff’s Department asserts that the feds are “monitoring” his investigat­ion, but they really seem to be telling the sheriff, “No thanks, but feel free to send us a note every now and then to let us know how things are going.” There has been no official public statement from the U.S. attorney’s office or the FBI. Maybe they’re in on it too.

California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta has yet to sign on to the investigat­ion. Is he also in on this grand conspiracy?

It’s odd, though, that Villanueva held forth on the probe in that TV interview Wednesday, given the fact that he claims to have recused himself from the whole matter and left it to his undersheri­ff, Tim Murakami.

The self-recusal didn’t stop the sheriff from comparing the searches of Kuehl’s and Giggans’ homes, plus offices at the Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority and the Los Angeles County Hall of Administra­tion, to the FBI search of former President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago. Maybe those “Dobie Gillis” tapes were classified.

The warrant is based in part on the implicatio­n that there was no legitimate reason for Kuehl to have appointed Giggans to the commission that oversees the sheriff. It claims that Giggans’ only qualificat­ion is a black belt in karate. (Seriously. We are not making this up.) What possible law enforcemen­t oversight role could there be, it asks, for a person such as Giggans, who has spent her entire career advocating for and advancing the reduction of violence?

Perhaps what the warrant should have asked instead is whether Villanueva targets his political enemies and wanders at will outside his own jurisdicti­on and the bounds of the law, such as when he proposed sending deputies door to door during the 2020 lockdowns because he was concerned that child abuse reports had decreased, or when he substitute­d his own legal opinion for county lawyers’ on whether gun stores weren’t, then were, essential businesses (and then reversed himself on the topic). Or when he sent his deputies into Venice Beach, in the city of L.A., supposedly to crack down on homelessne­ss, or when he overrode a county public health order that people wear masks in public to prevent the spread of disease.

Villanueva has a history of making specious allegation­s against people he considers his enemies. In 2020 he falsely accused Sachi Hamai, then the chief executive officer of L.A. County, of a crime for having a financial interest in United Way when her office vetted a ballot measure proposed by the nonprofit. The shocking similarity between that bogus assertion and the one he’s now making against Kuehl, who was on the advisory board of Giggans’ nonprofit, shows a pattern of vindictive­ness and inept legal analysis.

It’s extremely dangerous for the county sheriff to launch criminal investigat­ions that no prosecutor will join, against public officials who happen to be his political opponents. Those repeated practices raise serious concerns that the same Keystone Cops level of criminal investigat­ion is employed every day in the field against suspects less able to defend themselves against armed law enforcemen­t officers.

All of this drives home the point that Villanueva is a loose, dangerous, misfiring cannon aimed at his perceived enemies, as well as a miserable law enforcemen­t official who costs taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars because of his mismanagem­ent. He’s a petty man in a powerful position — the type of person against whom the law and the Constituti­on were intended to protect us.

Even if we suppose for a moment that there is crime afoot that only Villanueva can see, he is unfit to pursue it. Every day, deputies must choose whether to follow his crazy directives or defy him and sacrifice their jobs. The one job that should be sacrificed is his.

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? SUPERVISOR Sheila Kuehl with deputies after being served a search warrant at her home Wednesday.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times SUPERVISOR Sheila Kuehl with deputies after being served a search warrant at her home Wednesday.

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