Los Angeles Times

Detective accused of drug links can’t be fired, court says

Wiretap evidence in Sheriff ’s Department case is ruled invalid.

- By Maya Lau

Carlos Arellano was a narcotics detective with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department when the agency received a disturbing tip that he was fraternizi­ng with criminals.

After months of investigat­ing, the department accused him of being involved with a drug-traffickin­g organizati­on, cultivatin­g his own marijuana plants and discussing drug payments in phone conversati­ons that fellow detectives overheard on a wiretap, according to court records.

In 2011, two years after the initial tip came in, Arellano was fired.

But an appeals court panel this week upheld the veteran deputy’s efforts to keep his job, ruling that the law did not allow the department to use evidence gathered from the wiretap in a disciplina­ry proceeding.

Arellano’s attorney praised Wednesday’s appellate decision, saying her client has always denied he was the person heard on the wiretap and had been wrongly portrayed as “a bad guy.”

“This case from the beginning was an overreacti­on from the Sheriff’s Department,” Elizabeth Gibbons said.

The deputy, who joined the department in the late 1980s, is on paid administra­tive leave and is not actively investigat­ing drug crimes, said department spokeswoma­n Nicole Nishida. Last year, he was paid $130,000 in salary and other compensati­on, according to county records.

Nishida said the depart-

ment is considerin­g whether to appeal to the California Supreme Court.

The decision marks the latest setback for Sheriff Jim McDonnell, who has made several attempts to go to court to fire deputies like Arellano who were discharged for misconduct but won their jobs back after appealing to the county’s Civil Service Commission.

The commission, a panel of five appointed by the Board of Supervisor­s, hears disciplina­ry cases against county employees and can overturn or reduce punishment­s. In the case of law enforcemen­t officers, the commission’s proceeding­s are not open to the public.

Last year, an appeals court panel ruled in favor of Daniel Genao, who successful­ly appealed his firing after he was convicted of filing a false police report. He earned $120,000 last year, according to county payroll data.

At least one other deputy has prevailed in court, while a third deputy’s case is still on appeal.

The Sheriff’s Department launched its criminal investigat­ion into Arellano in June 2009.

The move came after a narcotics team investigat­ing a known drug dealer had obtained a judge’s approval for several wiretaps during an inquiry focusing on drug activity at the El Dorado restaurant in Palmdale. On an intercepte­d call, a person identified by investigat­ors as Arellano spoke about obtaining cloned marijuana plants and demanded money from the restaurant’s owner, who was a suspected drug distributo­r, according to the appeals court opinion.

The wiretaps revealed that the deputy was involved with a “drug-traffickin­g organizati­on, that he obtained marijuana plants from the organizati­on ... and that he maintained relationsh­ips with criminals and known narcotics trafficker­s,” according to a court filing by the county summarizin­g its evidence against the deputy.

The criminal investigat­ion into Arellano ended in 2010 without criminal charges. Under California law, conversati­ons caught on a wiretap cannot be used to prosecute someone solely for marijuana activity, according to the opinion.

Sheriff ’s officials instead used the wiretap evidence to fire Arellano and accused him also of improperly releasing a man who had been jailed on a drug charge and refusing to provide informatio­n to help catch his brother-in-law, who was a fugitive, the opinion said.

But Arellano insisted he had nothing to do with the illegal narcotics activity and that the Sheriff’s Department never proved it was his voice on the recording.

Gibbons, his attorney, said he became friendly with the restaurant owner as part of his job working in a sheriff ’s narcotics unit in the Antelope Valley.

At his appeal before the Civil Service Commission, Arellano argued that the wiretap evidence should be suppressed. A hearing officer agreed, saying the wiretap was authorized for use only in criminal court or a grand jury, not in an administra­tive proceeding.

A Superior Court judge, and now three appeals court justices, affirmed that decision.

The suppressio­n of the wiretap evidence crippled the Sheriff’s Department’s case that Arellano violated department policies relating to fraternizi­ng with criminals, obstructin­g an investigat­ion, making false statements and other infraction­s.

maya.lau@latimes.com

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