Los Angeles Times

ERRORS HURT ED BUCK INQUIRY, D.A. SAYS

Lacey cites deputies’ search as possible reason donor wasn’t charged in 2017 death.

- By James Queally

Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Jackie Lacey told a political club Monday night that errors committed by Sheriff ’s Department deputies and a coroner’s office investigat­or may have played a significan­t role in the decision not to criminally charge Ed Buck in the death of a man who overdosed in his West Hollywood home in 2017.

Speaking to the Los Angeles chapter of the Stonewall Democratic Club, which posted a video of the event to Facebook, Lacey told the group that responding deputies illegally searched a red toolbox inside Buck’s home that was found near the body of Gemmel Moore in July 2017. The deputies, who were assigned to the West Hollywood station, did so based on the erroneous advice of a coroner’s department investigat­or at the scene, she said.

“They noticed around Mr. Moore’s body that there was a red toolbox. And they wanted to search that toolbox for evidence. A coroner’s investigat­or gave them informatio­n that turned out to be incorrect,” she said.

Moore’s death in 2017 has long served as a crucible for Lacey, who has been repeatedly criticized by activists in the LGBT and African American communitie­s for failing to hold Buck accountabl­e for alleged predatory behavior toward young men. Another man, Timothy Dean, died of an overdose in Buck’s home in January of this year and a third man nearly suffered the same fate in September, according to court records.

Many activists have argued that gap in status between Buck, a wealthy Democratic donor, and his victims, many of whom had been homeless and people of color, played a role in the decision not to prosecute him.

Buck was arrested in September and charged with running a drug den. A short time later, federal prosecutor­s charged Buck with providing the drugs that led to Moore’s and Dean’s deaths as well as three counts of drug distributi­on.

Buck faces a minimum of 20 years in federal prison if convicted. His attorney, Seymour Amster, has repeatedly declined to comment.

The details of the federal indictment only intensifie­d questions about why it took so long to charge Buck, despite the fact that several men had come forward and said Buck engaged in predatory behavior and injected them with drugs against their will.

Prosecutor­s cited an “inadmissib­le search and seizure” among the reasons not to prosecute Buck in connection with Moore’s death when they filed a memo declining to charge him with manslaught­er in 2018. But neither Lacey nor the Sheriff’s Department has answered questions beyond that one document.

Jasmyne Cannick, an activist who has led the charge calling for Buck’s arrest, said Moore’s family was unaware of the specific issues with the search until Lacey spoke on Monday.

Lacey told the group that a coroner’s official incorrectl­y told deputies they could search the toolbox. The investigat­or cited a government code believed to give law enforcemen­t certain permission­s to conduct a search at the scene of a death, Lacey said Monday. She did not elaborate.

Court records show that nearly two grams of methamphet­amine, syringes and drug parapherna­lia were found throughout Buck’s home the night of Moore’s death. All of the drugs were inside the toolbox and would have been inadmissib­le, Lacey said Monday night.

“That presented a challenge,” she said.

In a statement issued Tuesday, Lacey said much of what she discussed Monday night was contained in federal court filings but said she just learned of the events she described as leading to the problems with the initial search of Buck’s home.

“Many of the details of the search that were discussed last night are included in the declaratio­n filed by the Drug Enforcemen­t agent in the federal indictment,” she said. “I was briefed over the weekend about the details of the search and learned about the government code section used to justify the search. I included that in my remarks.”

The court document Lacey referred to is a 22page criminal complaint filed in mid-September charging Buck with providing the drugs that led to Moore’s death. Although the complaint discloses that deputies recovered 1.76 grams of meth from inside a toolbox at Buck’s residence, there are no references to the legality of the search or what role, if any, a coroner’s office investigat­or played in the decision to conduct a search.

A coroner’s office investigat­or is described as having “seized the narcotic evidence,” according to the complaint.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department declined to comment on Lacey’s remarks because Moore’s death is the subject of a pending federal criminal trial.

Sarah Ardalani, a spokeswoma­n for the coroner’s office, said she was “unaware of any concerns raised by any government entities about its handling of or actions during the investigat­ion of Gemmel Moore’s death.”

Lacey also repeated her past assertion that several potential witnesses who made allegation­s against Buck gave statements to investigat­ors that could not be corroborat­ed, maintainin­g that her office did not have a viable case until the most recent victim came forward last month.

Roughly 100 people packed Stonewall’s meeting as the membership was set to issue a vote of no confidence against the district attorney, according to Cannick, who said Lacey’s comments enhanced community frustratio­ns over the alleged mishandlin­g of Moore’s death.

“Why would the deputies be taking instructio­ns from the coroner’s office on what’s legal and what’s not legal?” Cannick asked.

The Stonewall Democratic Club, a political group that works to advance LGBT causes, has yet to make an endorsemen­t in the 2020 district attorney’s race. Lacey is trying to fend off multiple contenders to earn a third term, including former San Francisco Dist. Atty. George Gascon

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin L.A. Times ?? DIST. ATTY. Jackie Lacey spoke on the Ed Buck probe at the Stonewall Democratic Club.
Jay L. Clendenin L.A. Times DIST. ATTY. Jackie Lacey spoke on the Ed Buck probe at the Stonewall Democratic Club.

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