Los Angeles Times

SLAIN MARINE’S KIDS HELD 13 HOURS

The girls, 9 and 14, were kept away from their mother, the family’s attorney says.

- Christophe­r Goffard

For 13 hours after they watched an Orange County sheriff’s deputy fatally shoot their father, the traumatize­d daughters of Marine Sgt. Manuel Loggins were held for questionin­g and not allowed to join their mother, according to the lawyer representi­ng the Loggins family.

“They just basically incarcerat­ed them,” attorney Brian T. Dunn said Wednesday, one month after the shooting in a darkened parking lot at San Clemente High School.

The accusation is contained in a claim Dunn said he would file Wednesday with the county, giving notice that the Loggins family plans to file a wrongful death suit in Superior Court against the Sheriff’s Department and the deputy.

An attorney representi­ng Darren Sandberg, identified as the deputy who shot Loggins, declined to comment. The sheriff’s deputies union had no comment.

Orange County Sheriff Sandra Hutchens declined to discuss the facts of the case, saying the district attorney’s office is investigat­ing.

“Everybody wants answers,” she said. “That is what the investigat­ion is for.”

The girls, ages 14 and 9, were in the family’s sport utility vehicle with their father when the deputy fired into the vehicle before dawn on Feb. 7.

The Sheriff’s Department said Loggins had crashed through a gate at the school parking lot, walked to a nearby athletic field and then ignored Sandberg’s orders not to restart the SUV.

The department initially said Sandberg fired out of concern for his own safety, but later said the deputy — a former Marine — feared for the girls’ safety. Loggins was unarmed.

The girls were held at the Orange County Sheriff’s Department and not allowed to see their mother until 6 p.m. that day, Dunn said, describing the treatment as a form of “false imprisonme­nt.”

“They had games for them to play, but they wouldn’t let them go,” Dunn said.

He said that Loggins had committed no crime, that he posed no threat to anyone’s life and that Sandberg shot him “multiple times.”

The deputies union, in early comments, said Loggins had been acting “irrational­ly,” putting his daughters at risk and ultimately setting up his own death.

The shooting has driven awedge between the Marine Corps and sheriff’s deputies in San Clemente, a beach town in south Orange County where both uniforms are a common sight.

Camp Pendleton, where Loggins was based, is next to San Clemente, and sheriff ’s deputies patrol the city’s streets.

Dunn said that in addition to a wrongful death suit, he would file suit in federal court on the grounds that Loggins’ civil rights had been violated.

Friends and Marine colleagues described Loggins, 31, as a body builder and martial arts expert, as well as a devoutly religious man who frequently took his daughters on early morning prayer walks at the high school track.

He left behind three daughters and a pregnant wife, Phoebe, who gave birth to their fourth daughter days ago.

“She’s devastated. Her future’s been changed in an instant,” Dunn said. “She’s not doing well.”

Critics of the shooting have asked why Sandberg didn’t use nonlethal force against Loggins if he perceived a threat.

Hutchens declined to comment on whether Sandberg had been carrying a Taser, saying they are optional for her deputies.

“This is, I think, the first fatal shooting we’ve had in three years, so it’s not a frequent event for us,” Hutchens said.

The district attorney’s office said the investigat­ion could take six months to a year to complete.

 ?? Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times ?? MARINE CORPS Master Gunnery Sgt. Jay Michael Auwae, right, thanks Rod Rodriguez and other members of the Marine Corps League for their $1,000 donation to a fund for the family of Marine Sgt. Manuel Loggins.
Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times MARINE CORPS Master Gunnery Sgt. Jay Michael Auwae, right, thanks Rod Rodriguez and other members of the Marine Corps League for their $1,000 donation to a fund for the family of Marine Sgt. Manuel Loggins.

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