Los Angeles Times

Probe f inds no wrongdoing in woman’s death

Attorney general finds no sign of wrongdoing by deputies in Mitrice Richardson case.

- By Matt Hamilton

Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s deputies will not face criminal charges over the 2009 disappeara­nce and death of Mitrice Richardson.

A California attorney general’s investigat­ion has failed to uncover evidence that would merit criminal charges against Los Angeles County sheriff ’s deputies for their handling of the disappeara­nce and death of Mitrice Richardson, according to an official letter.

The 24-year-old woman went missing in 2009 after being released from the sheriff’s Malibu/Lost Hills station in the middle of the night, even though she was without a phone, wallet or car.

Nearly a year later, her decomposed body was found in a Malibu Canyon ravine, several miles from the sheriff ’s station.

To this day, the cause of Richardson’s death remains undetermin­ed, according to the coroner’s office.

Richardson’s family insists she was the victim of foul play and faults deputies for their treatment of the young woman. Deputies had arrested her for failing to pay an $89 tab at Geoffrey’s restaurant in Malibu, and then released her about 12:40 a.m. even though she showed signs of potential mental illness.

Her family has also blasted deputies for mishan-

dling her remains. Coroner’s officials said deputies moved her body parts without permission, and months later, Richardson’s mother was visiting the site and found a finger bone that belonged to her daughter.

The office of then-Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris balked at reviewing the case in 2015, saying there was “no reasonable inference” that deputies broke the law. But months later, in February 2016, the case appeared to gain new momentum after Harris agreed to review the matter at the request of Richardson’s father, Michael Richardson.

That yearlong inquiry appears to have revealed no evidence of wrongdoing. A Dec. 31 letter from the attorney general’s office to Richardson’s father, which was released to The Times, briefly outlines why “there is insufficie­nt evidence to support a criminal prosecutio­n for destructio­n, alteration or concealmen­t of evidence.”

The closure of the investigat­ion was first reported by the Los Angeles Daily News.

The letter to Richardson’s father also noted that the statute of limitation­s for concealmen­t or tampering of evidence had passed more than two years ago.

Reached by phone Thursday, Michael Richardson said he was disappoint­ed in the findings of the attorney general and angry that a statute of limitation­s prevented prosecutio­n. He maintains his daughter was murdered and that her killer remains at large.

“I’m a great deal upset,” Richardson said. “We have too many loopholes and too many unanswered questions.”

He also accused Harris of taking interest in the case as part of an election-year bid for publicity, noting that the announceme­nt in February 2016 that she would review the case coincided with her campaign for U.S. Senate. Harris was elected to the Senate in November.

“Kamala Harris is a phony,” Richardson said. “We don’t need people like that leading us.”

A spokesman for Harris did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

In its review, the attorney general’s office looked at whether sheriff’s officials had withheld video taken of Mitrice Richardson while she was at the sheriff ’s station as well as whether the removal of her remains from the site where they were found before the coroner’s office arrived had violated the law.

In the letter, Senior Assistant Atty. Gen. Lance Winters acknowledg­ed that sheriff’s Capt. Tom Martin, the former station commander, did not immediatel­y hand over videotape of Richardson to her family but noted that the video “was preserved and eventually disclosed.”

Los Angeles Police Department detectives, who were investigat­ing Richardson’s disappeara­nce, were aware of the tape, so there was no apparent criminal aim to hide the video evidence, Winters said.

“We also were unable to find any indication that the videotape had been altered or tampered with, nor did we find any evidence suggesting officer misconduct on the videotape,” Winters added.

Jail records revealed no clues that evidence was concealed. Winters said that the station phone log did show Richardson made four phone calls to her grandmothe­r, but AT&T phone records did not reflect those calls.

“Although the calls could have been made, those calls were either not picked up or not made at all,” Winters wrote.

The attorney general’s office did conclude that sheriff ’s deputies removed Richardson’s remains before the coroner’s office arrived, but said it was “highly disputed” whether the coroner’s office gave them permission to remove them.

That finding contrasts with what the coroner’s office said in 2010, when Assistant Chief Coroner Ed Winter publicly rebuked deputies for removing her remains without approval.

A detective at the time countered that investigat­ors removed the body because they were concerned about approachin­g nightfall and the possibilit­y that animals might disturb the remains in the rugged ravine.

“There is no indication that any part of the discovered remains were destroyed or concealed,” Winters wrote in his letter. “Ample photograph­s were taken of the skeletal remains at the site before and after they were unearthed so that the whole recovery process was well documented.”

Sheriff Jim McDonnell said in a statement that he agreed with the findings, and noted that the case has been reviewed by the Sheriff’s Department as well as the county’s inspector general and the OIR Group, a police oversight consulting firm.

“Each inquiry has produced the same results,” McDonnell said. “There is no evidence of concealmen­t, tampering of evidence or criminal wrongdoing.”

Mitrice Richardson’s parents each received $450,000 from the county in a legal settlement.

Michael Richardson continues to maintain that his daughter was killed, and in a conversati­on Thursday night he asked deputies who may know more about her death to come forward.

“These officers took an oath to protect and defend people,” he said. “You didn’t take an oath to keep secrets.”

‘I’m a great deal upset. We have too many loopholes and too many unanswered questions.’ — Michael Richardson, father of Mitrice Richardson

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? LATRICE SUTTON, mother of Matrice Richardson, talks about her daughter at a vigil in Inglewood in 2010. The cause of Richardson’s death remains unresolved.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times LATRICE SUTTON, mother of Matrice Richardson, talks about her daughter at a vigil in Inglewood in 2010. The cause of Richardson’s death remains unresolved.
 ??  ?? MITRICE RICHARDSON’S family insists she was the victim of foul play and faults sheriff ’s deputies for their treatment of the young woman.
MITRICE RICHARDSON’S family insists she was the victim of foul play and faults sheriff ’s deputies for their treatment of the young woman.

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