Los Angeles Times

Buck’s lawyer decries race focus

He says Democratic donor is a victim of a ‘character attack’ over deaths of 2 black men.

- By Hailey Branson-Potts

The attorney for Ed Buck, the longtime Democratic donor whose West Hollywood home has been the scene of two black men’s deaths since 2017, said Friday that critics have unfairly used race to blame his client for the deaths.

“Some people still want us to have a race war,” attorney Seymour Amster said of Buck’s critics. “Some people want to look at things as black, white or brown. It’s not. If we want to move forward and get away from identifyin­g individual­s by race, we must take race out of the conversati­on.”

Los Angeles County sheriff ’s homicide detectives are investigat­ing the death of Timothy Dean, 55, of West Hollywood, who was found dead in Buck’s Laurel Avenue apartment Monday.

Buck, a 64-year-old white man, previously was investigat­ed in the July 2017 death of Gemmel Moore, a 26-yearold black man who died of a methamphet­amine overdose in Buck’s home, which was littered with drug parapherna­lia, according to a Los Angeles County coroner’s report.

Prosecutor­s this past summer declined to file charges, and Buck has not been arrested in either case. The Sheriff’s Department said he was present for both deaths.

Protesters, most of whom were black, gathered outside Buck’s apartment this week demanding his prosecutio­n. Some protesters turned on Buck’s neighbors — most of whom were white — accus-

ing them of being complicit.

“If a black man was living there, you wouldn’t be OK with it,” one of the protesters shouted.

Jasmyne Cannick, a political consultant who has advocated for Moore’s family and who organized this week’s protests, has accused Buck of preying on vulnerable black men, such as sex workers and homeless men, for sexual gratificat­ion. Cannick, running to be a delegate to the California Democratic Party, said she has spoken to multiple men who share similar stories about interactio­ns with Buck.

Buck is “a man who they say has a Tuskegee Experiment-like fetish which includes shooting drugs into young black men that he picks up off the street or via dating hookup websites,” Cannick said in a statement.

Dozens of people gathered outside Buck’s apartment Friday night for a candleligh­t vigil honoring Moore and Dean.

“It is a race issue. If you look at all of his ads online, it’s specifical­ly black men. He doesn’t want anybody else but black men,” Cannick told the crowd, referring to Buck’s posts on the internet.

“If the Sheriff’s Department and district attorney don’t do their job, a third body’s going to be taken out of Ed Buck’s apartment,” she said.

West Hollywood City Councilwom­an Lindsey Horvath told the crowd she has spoken with Sheriff Alex Villanueva and has asked for extra patrols near Buck’s apartment. Horvath said that when she heard the news of Dean’s death, “I was sickened. I was heartbroke­n. And I remain so.” She called the details of this case “eerily similar” to Moore’s death.

Horvath said Villanueva had assured her that there would be a “complete and independen­t and thorough investigat­ion.”

Moore’s mother, LaTisha Nixon, walked into the crowd as they chanted her son’s name. “He is a predator,” Nixon said of Buck. “He is preying on black men.”

She added: “When the cameras are gone, when everyone is gone, I have to live without my son.”

Nixon took offense to Buck’s attorney, Amster, describing Buck as a friend to her son and other young black men. “He was such a friend that I have yet to hear from him, and my son’s been dead for 18 months,” she said. “He didn’t care.”

On Friday, Amster told The Times that Buck is the victim of a “character attack” and that the cases have been sensationa­lized. “Some people who all of a sudden have media attention are trying to divide the races,” Amster said. “I see it not just here, but I see it all over the place. It is time for us to stop talking about race. Talking about socioecono­mic barriers? I’m all in agreement.”

He added: “I don’t think we have defined races anymore. Thank goodness we have interracia­l marriages. That’s great. Let’s stop the conversati­on on race.”

Amster said Buck has long been an advocate for people struggling with addiction or homelessne­ss and has been the kind of friend they turn to for help. “Ed has helped hundreds of individual­s, but they are reluctant to come forward because they are thankful but don’t want their personal lives exposed,” Amster said.

Amster said his client brings people into his home, and they bring their problems with them. He denied claims that Buck is preying on vulnerable people and said he did not cause Moore’s or Dean’s deaths.

“These are things they are bringing into this residence that are causing their death,” Amster said. “He has a heart of gold.”

On Thursday, a coalition of 50 civil rights organizati­ons — including Equality California, the ACLU, the National LGBTQ Task Force and the National Black Justice Coalition — called for a thorough investigat­ion and for politician­s to return all money Buck donated to their campaigns.

In a statement, the coalition said, “Nearly a dozen young men have confirmed Moore’s account and shared personal stories about Buck’s alleged, nefarious practice of injecting Black men with various lethal substances.

“The tragic deaths of these two black men are of great concern during a time when white supremacy, antiblackn­ess and racial violence are pervasive,” the statement said. “Although some may blame the victims for their own deaths or shame sex workers, we affirm that the intersecti­on of racism, poverty, homophobia and biphobia restrict opportunit­ies for black LGBTQ people in America, sometimes forcing them to turn to commercial sex work for survival, in ways that make them vulnerable to exploitati­on and manipulati­on.”

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? A VIGIL is held outside the West Hollywood home of Ed Buck on Friday. Two men have died there since 2017.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times A VIGIL is held outside the West Hollywood home of Ed Buck on Friday. Two men have died there since 2017.

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