Los Angeles Times

Retired L.A. County judge is charged with assault

Police say James A. Bascue opened fire on an LAPD officer, prompting a standoff with the SWAT team.

- By Matt Hamilton matt.hamilton @latimes.com Twitter: @MattHjourn­o

The state attorney general’s office has filed a felony assault charge against a retired Los Angeles County judge who police say opened fire on an officer during a standoff at his home in June.

James A. Bascue, 75, who was a top gang prosecutor in L.A. County before becoming a judge, was charged Thursday with one count of assault with a firearm. He is accused of opening fire on an LAPD officer, according to a criminal complaint filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court.

Police say the shooting occurred after Bascue called authoritie­s about 11:45 p.m. June 10 and reported he was being held hostage inside his West L.A. home.

Dispatcher­s gleaned little informatio­n from Bascue’s call, LAPD Public Informatio­n Officer Liliana Preciado said.

He offered few details and refused to turn down the volume on a blaring TV set, she said.

When police arrived at the town house in the 1900 block of South Barrington Avenue, they found the retired judge inside his living room with two guns on his lap, police said.

He loaded the guns’ magazines and pointed a gun at his head, police said.

Officers pleaded with him to drop the weapons.

Police said that Bascue fired two shots, one inside his house and another toward an officer at the window.

The shooting prompted a standoff with a SWAT team, and officers tried to talk Bascue into surrenderi­ng.

Family members were contacted, but he would not emerge, police said.

A neighbor eventually persuaded him to give up and he was arrested.

Police evaluated Bascue for mental health problems but did not place him on a psychiatri­c hold.

During a hearing last month, Bascue’s attorney Richard G. Hirsch said his client was at an undisclose­d location getting treatment but declined to specify what type.

“Judge Bascue is working hard to deal with some serious issues in his life,” he said.

Bascue’s attorneys did not immediatel­y respond Friday to a request for comment.

Because Bascue was a longtime L.A. County prosecutor, the case was transferre­d to the state attorney general’s office.

At a hearing last month, Judge Keith L. Schwartz said that all L.A. County judges would have to recuse themselves from the case.

Bascue’s arraignmen­t is scheduled for Sept. 4 before Orange County Superior Court Judge Thomas Goethals, according to a spokesman for the attorney general’s office.

‘Judge Bascue is working hard to deal with some serious issues in his life.’

Richard G. Hirsch, James A. Bascue’s attorney,

about his client receiving treatment at an undisclose­d

location

 ?? Clarence Williams
L.A. Times ?? JAMES A. BASCUE was a top gang prosecutor in L.A. County before becoming a judge.
Clarence Williams L.A. Times JAMES A. BASCUE was a top gang prosecutor in L.A. County before becoming a judge.

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