Los Angeles Times

Verdict caps long jail abuse inquiry

Former L.A. County deputy is found guilty of lying to FBI in final trial arising from the federal investigat­ion.

- By Joel Rubin

A jury on Friday found that a former Los Angeles County sheriff ’s deputy lied to FBI agents about the beating of a visitor to a county jail.

The guilty verdict against Byron Dredd, which came nearly eight years after the 2011 assault, served as a capstone on the sweeping investigat­ion federal authoritie­s carried out into abuses in county jails. Dredd, who was being retried after an earlier mistrial, was the final defendant in a string of cases that arose from the probe.

Prosecutor­s won conviction­s or guilty pleas against each of the 22 deputies and higher-ranking officials who faced criminal charges — a group that includes former Sheriff Lee Baca and the department’s former secondin-command.

“All law enforcemen­t officers will be held accountabl­e for abusing their positions — whether that includes the illegal use of force or lying to cover up a civil rights violation,” U.S. Atty. Nicola Hanna said. “This former deputy actively tried to conceal the illegal actions of his fellow deputies, and today a jury held him accountabl­e for his role in the cover-up of an unjustifie­d beating.”

A jury in 2016 acquitted Dredd, 36, on charges he helped cover up the beating of the jail visitor, but deadlocked over whether he lied to investigat­ors about the

incident. Only two of the 12 jurors had wanted to convict Dredd of lying.

Prosecutor­s chose to retry him, and the case stalled as Dredd’s attorneys unsuccessf­ully appealed.

In the retrial this week, Dredd’s attorney Nina Marino tried to sway jurors with the same argument she made in the first trial — that the deputy did not lie but had simply been mistaken in what he saw.

Unlike before, however, the jury did not struggle to reach a decision, returning a verdict after only an hour or so of deliberati­ons.

“We are very disappoint­ed in the verdict,” Marino said.

The accusation­s against Dredd stemmed from the February 2011 beating of Gabriel Carrillo, who had come to visit his brother, an inmate in the county’s main jail facility downtown.

Carrillo and his girlfriend were handcuffed and taken into custody after deputies said they found them carrying cellphones, which is against state law. When Carrillo reportedly mouthed off repeatedly to the deputies in a secluded room, he was punched, kicked and pepper-sprayed in the face.

After the beating, which left Carrillo bloody and bruised, the deputies and their supervisor claimed in reports that when they released one of Carrillo’s hands for fingerprin­ting, he attacked deputies and tried to escape. In an interview with FBI agents the next year, Dredd echoed that account, describing in detail how he had seen Carrillo attack the deputies.

Two of the deputies who participat­ed in the beating eventually pleaded guilty and helped prosecutor­s convict three others who were involved. The two deputies returned to testify at Dredd’s trial.

Dredd, who faces a maximum of five years in federal prison, is scheduled to be sentenced in May.

Mack Jenkins, who heads the Public Corruption and Civil Rights Section of the U.S. attorney’s office in L.A., said the verdict capped a “great accomplish­ment” by prosecutor­s and FBI agents who took on the difficult task of investigat­ing officers from another law enforcemen­t agency, building cases against them and prevailing.

Jenkins credited his predecesso­r Brandon Fox, who orchestrat­ed the jail prosecutio­ns, and highlighte­d reforms that the Sheriff’s Department has put in place in the aftermath of the scandal.

“These types of cases are hard — hard to uncover, harder to charge and exceedingl­y difficult to win,” Jenkins said. “But that’s our job. We want people to know we won’t sit by when there are allegation­s of corruption against public officials.”

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