Los Angeles Times

Tanaka painted as jail plot’s leader

A federal prosecutor confronts former undersheri­ff with logs showing frequent contact with his boss.

- By Joel Rubin

Paul Tanaka, Los Angeles County’s former undersheri­ff, took the witness stand Monday and was grilled by a federal prosecutor who portrayed him as the main culprit in a plot to impede FBI agents investigat­ing jail abuses.

In questionin­g that lasted nearly three hours, Assistant U. S. Atty. Brandon Fox confronted Tanaka with a barrage of emails, phone records and other evidence in an effort to undermine Tanaka’s claim that it was his boss who orchestrat­ed the Sheriff ’s Department’s angry response to the FBI investigat­ion and that he was unaware of what was going on.

In one tense, extended exchange, Fox presented call logs from several days in 2011 that showed all the communicat­ions between Sheriff Lee Baca, Tanaka and others accused of having a role in the plan.

Going hour by hour, Fox pressed Tanaka to f ind in the logs any conversati­ons that supported the defense claim that Baca had dealt directly with underlings and left Tanaka out of the alleged machinatio­ns.

Over and over Tanaka conceded there were no such calls except one, and that each day’s log showed Tanaka was frequently in contact with Baca and the others.

The cross- examinatio­n marked a sharp contrast to Tanaka’s testimony Friday, when he f ielded friendly questions from one of his own attorneys.

Tanaka, who once wielded great power as the department’s second in command, faces conspiracy and obstructio­n of justice charges for allegedly working with others to conceal the whereabout­s of an inmate who served as an FBI informant and to intimidate an FBI agent by threatenin­g her with arrest.

The case is likely to be the last in a string of prosecutio­ns arising from the messy turf battle that erupted in August 2011, when sheriff ’ s officials learned of the secret FBI investigat­ion into widespread allegation­s that deputies were beating inmates and visitors at the nation’s largest jail system.

Nine sheriff ’ s officials have been convicted or pleaded guilty for helping to interfere with the FBI.

Last month, Baca himself admitted to lying to FBI

agents and prosecutor­s. Under the terms of the deal he struck with prosecutor­s, Baca, who left office two years ago, will avoid being indicted on more serious charges and can be sentenced to no more than six months in prison.

U. S. District Judge Percy Anderson, who has handled the various proceeding­s stemming from obstructio­n allegation­s, must still approve the agreement.

Tanaka, who serves as the mayor of Gardena, was a polarizing figure in the Sheriff ’ s Department until he retired in 2013.

Though he enjoyed support from a loyal segment of the force, he ultimately came to be seen as someone who carved out a powerful fiefdom under Baca that he ran with impunity.

A blue- ribbon panel that investigat­ed the jails and found widespread problems of abuse faulted Baca for allowing his undersheri­ff to run the jails without effective oversight.

Tanaka, they found, “failed to uphold the department’s goals and values.”

Tanaka’s risky decision to take the stand came after a week of testimony by witnesses whom Fox and other prosecutor­s brought forward as they presented their case to jurors.

Although testifying gave Tanaka the chance to offer the jury a different story and to knock down allegation­s made by prosecutor­s, it also forced him to endure unrelentin­g questions from Fox, who was given wide berth by the judge to dig into Tanaka’s past.

Fox zeroed in on a period in the late- 1980s when Tanaka was a sergeant at the sheriff ’ s Lynwood station and reportedly joined the Vikings, a clique of deputies who were dogged by allegation­s of violence and other gang- like behavior.

Tanaka tried to push back, denying the group even existed and at one point raised his voice in the only sign of irritation he showed during his testimony.

Fox didn’t let up, asking Tanaka to explain why he chose to get a tattoo of a viking. Tanaka said the image had been a benign mascot for the station.

“Just because you’re trying to make it evil doesn’t make it evil, so there’s no reason for me to remove it,” Tanaka said of the tattoo.

Much of the back and forth Monday, however, fo- cused on the alleged efforts to impede the FBI investigat­ion.

Prosecutor­s allege Tanaka dispatched deputies to pressure clerks working in the sheriff ’ s records center to falsify entries in the agency’s database in an attempt to hide an inmate working as an FBI informant.

The episode was part of a broader plan in which the deputies repeatedly moved the inmate, Anthony Brown, between various jail facilities under fake names to conceal his whereabout­s from federal authoritie­s, prosecutor­s allege.

Tanaka is also accused of being part of a decision to send two sergeants to confront the lead FBI agent in the investigat­ion at her home.

When the agent refused to speak with them, one of the sergeants told her he planned to arrest her for running an undercover sting operation in which a deputy smuggled a cellphone into jail for Brown.

As Fox tried to elicit answers about meetings and conversati­ons Tanaka had at the time, Tanaka often claimed not to recall details.

For example, Fox accused Tanaka of trying to identify deputies who were talking to FBI agents by issuing an order that required sheriff ’s employees to report any contact with the FBI or other outside law enforcemen­t agencies.

“I may have given the order, I don’t know,” Tanaka said.

Fox showed Tanaka an internal memo in which a sheriff ’ s staffer said the order came from “the undersheri­ff.”

Tanaka replied that he didn’t know why such a claim had been made.

‘ Just because you’re trying to make it evil doesn’t make it evil, so there’s no reason for me to remove it.’

— Paul Tanaka,

responding to questions about his viking tattoo

 ?? I rfan Khan
Los Angeles Times ?? PAUL TANAKA was second in command to L. A. County Sheriff Lee Baca. He allegedly worked with others to conceal the whereabout­s of an inmate who was acting as an FBI informant and also intimidate­d an FBI agent.
I rfan Khan Los Angeles Times PAUL TANAKA was second in command to L. A. County Sheriff Lee Baca. He allegedly worked with others to conceal the whereabout­s of an inmate who was acting as an FBI informant and also intimidate­d an FBI agent.

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