Los Angeles Times

FORCE CASES RISE AT YOUTH CAMPS

County probation officials say reasons behind the uptick in incidents at juvenile lockups are unclear.

- By Abby Sewell

Use-of-force incidents at Los Angeles County juvenile halls have increased in recent months, but probation officials say it’s unclear what’s behind the rise.

Overall, use-of-force incidents increased by 85%, from 55 in January to 102 in July, at the three county-run juvenile halls — Central Juvenile Hall in Boyle Heights, Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall in Downey and Barry J. Nidorf Juvenile Hall in Sylmar — statistics released Thursday by the L.A. County Probation Department show.

At Los Padrinos, the number of reported incidents rose from 12 in January to 31 in July. At Central Juvenile Hall, the number increased from 20 in January to 39 in July. Incidents climbed from 23 to 32 at the Barry J. Nidorf facility.

Each camp holds about 200 youths awaiting court action in their cases or transfer to other facilities.

The total number of force incidents remained relatively stable early in 2016 and dipped slightly in March, but jumped in June and July.

The department did not provide statistics for the same period in the previous year, and the figures provided for this year did not break down the level of force used or give context about the circumstan­ces.

Probation officials who presented the statistics at a probation commission meeting said any time a staffer places hands on a youth, including to break up a fight between minors, a use-of-force report is triggered.

Department spokeswoma­n Kerri Webb said there could be “a variety of reasons” for the overall increase.

“While we do regularly review these incidents, we’re assessing this specific informatio­n to identify the reasons for the fluctuatio­ns,” she said in an email. “It’s too soon to know now what the results of the analysis are.”

The department has been under increased scrutiny over use of force in the juvenile facilities since June, when informatio­n about an incident at the Sylmar juvenile hall in April became public.

In that incident, video of which was leaked to the blog WitnessLA, four probation officers were accused of pummeling a noncombati­ve 17-year-old probatione­r. The case was referred to the dis-

trict attorney’s office by the Probation Department.

This month, the county Board of Supervisor­s ordered the Probation Department to produce a report on how the agency handles socalled critical incidents.

The board is also exploring setting up an oversight body to monitor the department, and is considerin­g an overhaul that would split the department — which oversees both minors and adult probatione­rs — into two agencies, one tracking the adult population and the other overseeing juveniles.

The number of youths locked up in juvenile halls and camps has decreased substantia­lly over the last decade, but probation officials have noted that as more low-level juvenile offenders have been diverted, the young people who remain tend to be higher-risk.

Cyn Yamashiro, the probation commission member who had asked for the use-of-force data, said that he could not comment on the increase in incidents but that he hopes the release of the numbers will signal more informatio­n-sharing by the Probation Department.

He and some other commission­ers have complained in recent months that the department was slow to share informatio­n about the use of force.

“Today was, I think, the beginning of a larger conversati­on about two things — one is simply the use of force in detention facilities, and also how that informatio­n is collected and distribute­d,” Yamashiro said.

“My hope is that it’s going to continue, that we’re going to continue to try to figure out why we’re having the problems that we’re having.”

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