Los Angeles Times

SHERIFF IS NOW UNDER CIVILIAN WATCH

L.A. County’s new oversight commission, which will examine the department, holds its first meeting.

- By Maya Lau

Alicia Michel pleaded in front of the audience, asking for an inquiry into a sheriff ’s deputy she said was corrupt.

The Compton resident said she didn’t feel comfortabl­e lodging a grievance at her local Los Angeles County sheriff ’s station, so instead she spoke into a microphone at a public forum Thursday, hoping her complaint would be heard by those all the way at the top of the department.

“I wish to send it to the County of Los Angeles,” Michel said in Spanish, speaking through an interprete­r. “That is why I’m here. I want an in-depth investigat­ion.”

Michel’s brief statement immediatel­y elicited an invitation to file a complaint directly with the county’s inspector general, Max Huntsman, who monitors the Sheriff’s Department and who was sitting just yards away.

Michel was one of dozens of members of the public who spoke up Thursday at the first meeting of the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission, a nine-person group appointed by the L.A. County Board of Supervisor­s to examine the Sheriff ’s Department and provide recommenda­tions on improving it.

A long-awaited body — composed of a law professor, two attorneys, an advocacy group director, a former prosecutor, a former public defender, a retired sheriff ’s lieutenant, a pastor and a rabbi — the commission is the first all-civilian review board assigned to monitor the agency, one of the largest local law enforcemen­t agen-

cies in the nation.

Unlike the inspector general, whose office was establishe­d in 2014, the commission will hold monthly public meetings where anyone can comment and is set up to address overarchin­g themes rather than detailed policy analyses.

The commission and inspector general will work together and can view internal disciplina­ry files on deputies through a cooperativ­e agreement Huntsman has with the department.

Neither oversight group has subpoena or disciplina­ry power, an element some critics have said is necessary to straighten out a department battered by a years-long jail abuse scandal.

The meeting came a day after President Trump issued two executive orders signaling a crackdown on people living in the U.S. illegally, a topic raised by many audience members who said they’re terrified by the possibilit­y of immigratio­n officials working more closely with the department.

“Within my family, there’s fear for our family members who have been deported, and we’re worried that they won’t be able to come back,” said Vanessa Deleon, a member of the Youth Justice Coalition.

Sheriff Jim McDonnell pledged this week to not let Trump’s orders alter his department’s practice of staying out of immigratio­n enforcemen­t, noting it’s a federal responsibi­lity. Immigratio­n officials have some access inside the county jail system, which the department runs.

McDonnell, who’s advocated for a civilian oversight group and was a member of the Citizens Commission on Jail Violence, a blue-ribbon panel that chronicled a pattern of abuse in the county jail system in 2012, said the new commission represents an opportunit­y for his department to be “the national model of transparen­cy.”

“I ask that you share community concerns with us freely. When we are wrong, we will own it, acknowledg­e it and fix it. But when we perform our duties in a manner that demonstrat­es the courage, compassion and commitment that the overwhelmi­ng majority of our people have every day, [we ask] that you acknowledg­e that as well,” said McDonnell, who attended about an hour of the meeting.

Concerns over immigratio­n and the use of drones, which the department unveiled this month, calling them “unmanned aerial devices,” dominated the session.

The department said deputies would limit use of the aircraft to serious incidents, such as search-andrescue operations or standoffs with armed, barricaded suspects, but critics worried the devices could eventually be used in everyday surveillan­ce.

“We’re wondering, why this high level of militarygr­ade weapons?” said Steve Rogers, a member of the advocacy group Dignity and Power Now. “It’s almost like the Sheriff ’s Department is preparing to go to war against the community.”

The meeting began at 9:30 a.m. at Bob Hope Patriotic Hall, a building just south of downtown owned by the county Department of Military and Veterans Affairs.

Some attendees said the time and location of future meetings should be changed so that more residents who work during the day could participat­e. The panel is scheduled to meet on the fourth Thursday of each month.

Others argued that the presence of metal detectors and deputies standing at the front of the auditorium, as well as at some of the exits, could make some people uncomforta­ble about critiquing the department at the meetings.

“We hear you,” Commission­er Xavier Thompson, president of the Baptist Ministers’ Conference and a senior pastor at Southern St. Paul Church, told the audience at one point. “We are not asleep at the wheel. Hold us accountabl­e as we hold the Sheriff ’s Department accountabl­e.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? L.A. COUNTY SHERIFF Jim McDonnell, right, and members of the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission listen to one of dozens of people who spoke at the panel’s first meeting. Its purpose is to examine the Sheriff’s Department and recommend improvemen­ts.
Photograph­s by Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times L.A. COUNTY SHERIFF Jim McDonnell, right, and members of the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission listen to one of dozens of people who spoke at the panel’s first meeting. Its purpose is to examine the Sheriff’s Department and recommend improvemen­ts.
 ??  ?? MEMBERS of the county’s new Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission are sworn in Thursday. They include Lael Rubin, left, Sean Kennedy, Xavier Thompson, Hernan Vera, Patti Giggins and James P. Harris.
MEMBERS of the county’s new Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission are sworn in Thursday. They include Lael Rubin, left, Sean Kennedy, Xavier Thompson, Hernan Vera, Patti Giggins and James P. Harris.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States