Los Angeles Times

2 sergeants cleared in arrest death

Police Commission sides with LAPD chief on Aug. 2 encounter with Omar Abrego, who died the next day.

- By Kate Mather kate.mather@latimes.com

The Los Angeles Police Commission ruled Tuesday that two LAPD gang sergeants acted within department policy last year during a violent arrest of a South L.A. man who died the next day.

Commission­ers unanimousl­y sided with LAPD Chief Charlie Beck, who recommende­d the two sergeants and four officers who responded as backup be cleared in the Aug. 2 encounter with Omar Abrego.

The decision caps a nearly yearlong review of Abrego’s death, which drew attention from people protesting killings by police. Abrego died about a week before Ezell Ford, a mentally ill black man, was fatally shot by officers just a few blocks from where Abrego was taken into custody.

Coroner’s officials determined Abrego, 37, died from the effects of cocaine but listed the “physical and emotional duress” caused by the altercatio­n as a contributi­ng factor.

Abrego’s family is suing the LAPD in federal court, alleging the sergeants used “unreasonab­le and unlawful force.” An attorney representi­ng the family declined to comment Tuesday on the Police Commission’s decision.

A lawyer representi­ng the sergeants — Jeff Mares and Robert Calderon, both 20-plus-year veterans — said the ruling showed “sometimes the system works like it should.”

“It’s unfortunat­e that anyone dies, especially in circumstan­ces like this,” attorney Gary Fullerton said. “But I don’t think what the two sergeants did was a real contributi­on to the reason why he actually died.”

According to a redacted copy of Beck’s recommenda­tions obtained by The Times, the sergeants were driving on Broadway when someone f lagged them down and told them about a suspicious white vehicle in an alley. The sergeants noticed a white van run a stop sign and nearly hit a pedestrian, according to the report.

The sergeants followed the van, which they told investigat­ors was being driven erraticall­y, and pulled up next to it when it came to a stop on South Main Street, the report said. Abrego then jumped out of the van’s back doors, the report said.

The sergeants told Abrego to get down on the ground, the report said, but he ran. One sergeant followed Abrego, who stopped and turned toward the sergeant, the report said. The sergeant then “grabbed Abrego in a bear hug.”

Abrego “physically resisted and was able to break free,” then punched the sergeant in the chest, according to the report. The sergeant punched Abrego three times in the face and used “various additional force” as the altercatio­n continued.

The other sergeant grabbed Abrego’s arm and the two took him to the ground as he “continued to be combative and resist,” the report said. The sergeants, who police say were injured during the altercatio­n, called for backup.

The sergeants and backup officers handcuffed Abrego and hobbled his legs, the report said. The sergeants told investigat­ors they believed Abrego was under the influence of drugs because he was sweaty, wide-eyed and “seemed agitated.”

Paramedics treated Abrego at the scene, then took him to an Inglewood hospital where he was admitted for renal failure and a toxic breakdown of muscle tissue, according to his autopsy report. Abrego was also treated for a severe concussion, cuts, bruises and “cocaine toxicity.”

He died the next morning.

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