Los Angeles Times

Phoned threat to county’s top lawyer sparks investigat­ion

Call came from man claiming to be sheriff ’s official, inspector says.

- By Maya Lau

Los Angeles County officials said Monday they are investigat­ing a call made by a man claiming to be a Sheriff ’s Department official who threatened to arrest the county’s chief attorney.

The threat came in the form of a call Saturday to the personal cellphone of the county counsel, Mary Wickham, from a person who said he was a Sheriff’s Department sergeant, the county’s interim Inspector General Rodrigo A. Castro-Silva said in a statement.

The caller apparently told Wickham to immediatel­y surrender to a Sheriff ’s Department station for failing to appear on a grand jury summons from 2006.

The caller threatened to arrest Wickham at her home when she told him there was no basis for his demand, the statement said. CastroSilv­a said his office has launched an investigat­ion into the matter.

Detectives from the sheriff’s Major Crimes Bureau were also assigned to look into the call and are prepared to “launch a full assessment” of the potential threat, Sheriff’s Department spokesman Lt. A.J. Rotella said in a statement.

Rotella said that for several weeks the department has received reports about calls by people purporting to be from the Sheriff ’s Department warning residents that they had not appeared for jury duty.

Another spokesman, Capt. Darren Harris, said the call to Wickham appeared to be part of a common scam that the agency has alerted the public about.

But Castro-Silva said the incident was a serious matter, calling it “a hostile act intended to intimidate a public official doing her job on behalf of Los Angeles County, the Board of Supervisor­s and the residents we serve.”

“I anticipate and expect the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s full and immediate cooperatio­n in determinin­g the individual or individual­s behind this unwarrante­d attack on the County’s top legal advisor,” Castro-Silva said in the statement.

Lennie LaGuire, a county spokeswoma­n, said the details of the threat against Wickham do not line up with the informatio­n about the scam that was described in a link sent by Harris. LaGuire said the man who called Wickham gave his name, which matched the identity of a Sheriff’s Department employee.

LaGuire said Wickham declined to comment.

The incident comes at a time of heightened tension

between Sheriff Alex Villanueva and the county Board of Supervisor­s, which has gone to court to try to stop the sheriff from reinstatin­g a deputy who was fired for violating policies related to domestic violence and dishonesty.

“This was clearly meant not only to intimidate Mary Wickham but to send a message to the board to back off,” Supervisor Sheila Kuehl said.

She said she believes the call was not a hoax or coincidenc­e, noting that it made Wickham fearful for herself and her family.

“She has been the one in the lead of all of our actions with the Sheriff’s Department recently,” Kuehl said, adding that Wickham is the “tip of the spear.”

Supervisor­s Kathryn Barger and Hilda Solis, in separate statements, also condemned the call made to Wickham.

“Threatenin­g a public servant is despicable and will never be tolerated. This undemocrat­ic intimidati­on is designed to chill the County Counsel from doing her job,” Solis said.

At least six deputies who were previously discharged have been reinstated under Villanueva during his first few months in office after his surprise election victory last year over then-Sheriff Jim McDonnell.

The Times reported that some of the rehires were made as part of settlement­s that the Sheriff’s Department struck with deputies who had been fired for misconduct.

Wickham, in a letter to Villanueva dated April 1, told the sheriff that only her office can handle such settlement­s and directed him not to enter into any more agreements related to discipline. She also told him not to employ outside attorneys for those arrangemen­ts.

In a recent interview, Villanueva said Wickham had “gone rogue” by claiming that she has power over legal settlement­s involving deputy discipline.

“She basically said that, for all intents and purposes, she’s in charge. I don’t think the voters elected her as the sheriff,” Villanueva told The Times this month.

Supervisor Mark RidleyThom­as expressed skepticism that Wickham was merely a coincident­al target for the jury duty scam, saying Villanueva’s recent moves have “set the tone for undesirabl­e behavior.”

Rotella, the Sheriff ’s Department spokesman, said that the agency is committed to investigat­ing all incidents of fraud.

The department has been criminally investigat­ing numerous reports from residents about the jury duty scam, he said.

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? COUNTY COUNSEL Mary Wickham was told to surrender to the Sheriff ’s Department for failing to appear on a grand jury summons in 2006. She refused.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times COUNTY COUNSEL Mary Wickham was told to surrender to the Sheriff ’s Department for failing to appear on a grand jury summons in 2006. She refused.

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