Los Angeles Times

Gascón pile-on after tragedy

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Re “Cop killer could have faced more prison time,” June 17

I do not blame Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. George Gascón for the killing of the two El Monte police officers. The district attorney was nowhere near the scene when the killings occurred.

While I feel horrible for these police officers and their families, I worry about how quickly we seek to politicize the situation and attribute fault to what appear to be good-faith efforts to reform our criminal justice system. No criminal justice policies can prevent all crime, and we must be wary of partisan efforts to politicize these situations.

Crime is also increasing in communitie­s with conservati­ve prosecutor­s. Our current system is just not working, and simply exclaiming that all folks who come in contact with it should somehow be restrained or warehoused away, does not work. That is what we have been doing throughout the last few decades, and it has not served us well.

While I certainly blame the person who pulled the trigger, I also blame the pervasive poverty in our communitie­s and the lack of resources to help those struggling to make a living or deal with mental health issues.

Daniel Luna

West Covina

Justin Flores, the man who killed two cops in El Monte and was ultimately himself killed, was arrested in 2020 and charged with being a felon in possession of firearms and methamphet­amine.

He was “sentenced” to 20 days in jail and two years’ probation.

If we are not going to get tough with felons when they are arrested with guns and meth, then how can we be serious about curbing violence in society?

David Waldowski

Laguna Woods

This article’s click-bait headline is so disappoint­ing. Gascón’s critics would have put Flores away for longer than Gascón, but the article admits Flores might have still been released in time to commit this shooting.

Our prisons are full, they are ineffectiv­e at deterring crime, and they cost the taxpayers more than $100,000 per prisoner per year, money that could be better invested in programs that have actually proven to deter crime. The question Gascón has been asking is what actually increases public safety.

Why wasn’t your article titled, “Gascón’s critics pounce on lesser sentence for cop-killer when there is no evidence longer sentence would have prevented crime”?

Merete Rietveld

Los Angeles

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