Los Angeles Times

Justice Dept. warns L.A. against long lockdown

Letter to Garcetti criticizes what it calls a ‘heavy-handed’ plan on stay-home orders.

- By David Zahniser, Dakota Smith and Joseph Serna

The Trump administra­tion sent a warning letter Friday to Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti saying the Department of Justice is concerned the city may pursue “an arbitrary and heavyhande­d approach” to stayat-home orders.

Eric S. Dreiband, assistant attorney general for the department’s Civil Rights Division, pointed to what he said were public comments by Garcetti and Barbara Ferrer, Los Angeles County’s director of public health.

“Reports of your recent public statements indicate that you suggested the possibilit­y of long-term lockdown of the residents in the city and county of Los Angeles, regardless of the legal justificat­ion for such restrictio­ns,” Dreiband wrote. “Any such approach may be both arbitrary and unlawful.”

The letter was also addressed to Ferrer.

Garcetti defended the city’s approach to the health crisis at a news briefing Friday when asked about the Justice Department’s criticisms. “We were able to do this and save lives,” he said, adding that the city collaborat­ed with businesses, employees and labor groups on the region’s response.

“Together, with science, the numbers will always guide us forward,” Garcetti said. “There is nothing else. There’s no games, there’s nothing else going on.”

The mayor issued a stayat-home order for L.A. in March, extending it twice. But he has signaled that restrictio­ns would be loosened in the coming weeks.

Over the last month, beaches, golf courses, tennis courts and hiking trails have reopened, and curbside pickup is allowed at retail stores.

Ferrer said this month at a public meeting that the stay-at-home orders will “with all certainty” be extended for the next few months, which led some to believe that the status quo would remain in place through the summer.

Her comment drew widespread attention, and Garcetti appeared on television news programs later that day, seeking to clarify the region’s response to the health crisis.

He also released a statement that day saying that “while the city’s Safer at Home order will remain in place beyond May 15, we will also continue to adjust the order gradually — to safely allow more activities, more businesses to operate, and more Angelenos to get back to work.”

In response to Friday’s letter, L.A. County Department of Public Health spokesman Bernard Tolliver said “the quote was taken out of context” but didn’t elaborate. Health orders are being modified on a “regular basis to support reopening sectors and relaxing restrictio­ns,” Tolliver said.

The letter to Garcetti came the same day that Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House’s coronaviru­s response coordinato­r, singled out Los Angeles as one of three regions where persistent spread remains a significan­t concern.

Speaking with reporters at the White House, Birx said the L.A. metropolit­an area, Chicago and Washington, D.C., remain a concern.

Birx asked the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to work with those areas “to really understand where are these new cases coming from, and what do we need to do to prevent them in the future.”

Garcetti, when asked about Birx’s comments, said L.A. is “nowhere near the top of the infection rates, the cases and the deaths.”

Many in the L.A. region have followed the stay-athome orders over the last few months, which political leaders have credited with slowing the virus’ spread.

Some protesters seeking to have the order lifted and the economy fully reopened have demonstrat­ed outside Los Angeles City Hall and the Getty House, the official residence of the mayor, during the pandemic.

Times staff writer Soumya Karlamangl­a contribute­d to this report.

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