Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

L.A. sheriff is sued for records on helicopter use

Two groups studying effects on residents say aircraft fly lower in Black communitie­s.

- By Jeong Park

Law enforcemen­t helicopter­s routinely buzz around Greater Los Angeles. But in certain neighborho­ods, they swoop in — low and loud. So say two community groups that are studying the effects of helicopter­s on the health of county residents.

“The higher the proportion of Black population, the lower the altitude of the helicopter,” said Nicholas Shapiro, an assistant professor of biology and society at UCLA and director of the Carceral Ecologies Lab.

The lab and the Stop LAPD Spying Coalition are suing the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, saying it has not released records about its helicopter f leet for more than six months.

By not releasing the records, the department is keeping researcher­s from better understand­ing the effects of helicopter­s on the health of county residents — especially on their sleep, Shapiro said.

The UCLA lab and Stop LAPD Spying Coalition say they’ve been studying law enforcemen­t’s use of helicopter­s for more than a year.

Through the public records request, they are seeking the fleet’s tail numbers, as well as informatio­n about how many people work on fleet maintenanc­e and within the department’s Aero Bureau. The groups are also looking for the budget and financial documents related to operating and maintainin­g the fleet, according to the request, which was filed July 27.

That informatio­n, Shapiro maintains, will help the public better understand the “true costs” of the helicopter fleet.

In the city of L.A., Controller Kenneth Mejia recently announced that his department was starting an audit of the effectiven­ess of LAPD helicopter operations.

“Helicopter­s are a real nuisance in L.A.,” said Matyos Kidane, a community organizer with the Stop LAPD Spying Coalition. “That is especially true if you’re Black or brown, if you live in a neighborho­od that’s predominan­tly Black or brown or poor.”

Shapiro said the groups had found that in every census block of L.A. County that is more than 40% Black, the median elevation of helicopter­s was below 1,000 feet, the “minimum safe altitude” for congested areas, as determined by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion.

Kidane said low-flying helicopter­s could cause issues with residents’ sleep. They also could create a threatenin­g atmosphere for communitie­s that are already weary of police, he said.

In one instance, the noise from a low-flying Los Angeles Police Department helicopter led to confusion among officers who were shouting to hear one another and ended in a suspect’s shooting death.

About a month after the groups filed the public records request, they received a response from the Sheriff ’s Department that it had identified “responsive records” and was reviewing the documents. But the department has yet to release the documents or issue any response, the groups said in the lawsuit.

The groups said they filed a similar request to the LAPD that was fulfilled in October.

The Sheriff’s Department said in a statement that it hadn’t had an opportunit­y to review the complaint.

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