Los Angeles Times

Sheriff ’s donors got gun permits

Licenses to carry concealed weapons have gone to dozens of Villanueva backers.

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an and Ben Poston

There are few things Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva has boasted about more during his first term in office than his success in dramatical­ly increasing the number of people who are permitted to carry guns in public.

But Villanueva’s decision to supercharg­e the issuing of weapons permits has brought problems.

A Times investigat­ion found that among the thousands of people who have received permits under Villanueva are dozens of donors to his election campaigns and others with special links to the sheriff. These people often gave questionab­le reasons for needing to be armed, received their permits more quickly than the average wait or were assisted by two deputies who worked directly for Villanueva.

And now those deputies, along with others with ties to the sheriff, have come under suspicion of wrongdoing that stems from the frenzied atmosphere Villanueva created around the permits, which are called licenses to carry concealed weapons or CCWs.

Earlier this month, the Sheriff’s Department announced it was conducting a criminal investigat­ion into “irregulari­ties discovered in the CCW applicatio­n process” that it described as a “possible long-term scheme

to defraud” county residents and “weapon law violations.”

While the department said in a statement that Villanueva was “disappoint­ed at the alleged conduct this investigat­ion uncovered,” the owner of a gun shop that was raided as part of the investigat­ion recently held a fundraiser for the sheriff’s reelection campaign, which Villanueva attended. It was one of several events at which Villanueva has appeared with people now under investigat­ion.

A campaign spokespers­on said Villanueva did not know the gun shop owner was under investigat­ion when he attended the fundraiser last month.

For this article, The Times analyzed gun permit applicatio­ns submitted before the U.S. Supreme Court rewrote the rules regarding permits in June when it found that Americans do not need to have a reason for wanting to be armed in public. Because the Sheriff ’s Department has refused to provide The Times with copies of every permit applicatio­n, it was difficult to determine whether people connected to the sheriff were treated differentl­y than others who applied.

But The Times’ analysis of applicatio­ns submitted by donors and others with links to Villanueva revealed red flags.

A donor who was assisted by Gisel Del Real, one of the deputies now under investigat­ion, wrote on his permit applicatio­n that he needed to be armed because he and his boss “hike to remote areas like in the high mountains to meditate with nature where there is no law enforcemen­t readily available.”

The donor, tax records show, worked for a religious figure who called himself the “Pope of Buddhism” and was wanted by Chinese authoritie­s for fraud before he died this year. The donor received his permit in a month, much more quickly than the six to eight months that Villanueva said in June was the typical wait. He could not be reached for comment.

Another permit holder, Alejandra Dominguez, is a friend of the sheriff’s wife who has posted photos on social media of the two walking the Villanueva­s’ dog and, last year, of herself in Villanueva’s office, sitting at his desk, with the caption: “Because when you get the opportunit­y to sit on the Sheriff ’s chair ... you just take it!”

On her permit applicatio­n last year, Dominguez cited a climate of “hatred towards law enforcemen­t officers” and claimed she was in danger because she was married to one. Two months after being granted her permit in October, Dominguez donated to Villanueva’s campaign and, earlier this year, helped host a fundraiser for him.

Reached by phone, Dominguez declined to comment.

“I’m not comfortabl­e talking to you about any of this stuff,” she said.

Villanueva and a spokespers­on for the Sheriff ’s Department did not answer most of more than a dozen questions about how weapons permits are awarded and the treatment given to donors who applied for permits. The spokespers­on said that campaign donations have “no bearing on the issuance” of a weapon permit.

“Over 3,400 people have donated to Sheriff Alex Villanueva’s reelection campaign, and it stands to reason some may have also applied for a CCW,” Lt. Oscar Martinez wrote in an email late last month.

With some of the toughest gun laws in the nation, California has long required gun owners to have “good cause” to carry weapons in public. Permit applicants had to convince their police department or county sheriff’s department that there was a credible threat to their safety or they had some other legitimate reason.

Past L.A. County sheriffs took a hard-line approach to applicatio­ns.

“We just didn’t want guns all over the county,” said Larry Waldie Sr., who served as former Sheriff Lee Baca’s second in command for several years until he retired in 2011. “We didn’t feel there was a great need for” it.

The Sheriff’s Department gave out just 20 permits in 2015, 32 the following year and 76 in 2017, according to figures provided by the department.

Villanueva blew up the status quo by making it easier for people to qualify for permits. The lower standard, he said, was necessary in light of a rise in crime and a push from the left to cut law enforcemen­t budgets in favor of more social services.

In 2020, Villanueva said he would increase by five times the number of people permitted to arm themselves in public. At that time, just 155 people in the county of 10 million had CCW permits issued by the department. By late May of this year, that number had swelled to more than 2,800 — an eighteenfo­ld increase.

“If you’re working as a real estate agent, female real estate agent, you’re showing houses, you know, by yourself — for me that’s good enough,” Villanueva said at a town hall event last year, when he advised attendees on how to successful­ly apply for permits.

“Same thing if you’re in a business, you have cash receipts, you do deposits at the bank. That’s good enough as well. All we’re asking for is a reasonable explanatio­n on the good cause.”

The Times’ analysis found that at least 50 people who received permits contribute­d either to Villanueva’s first campaign for sheriff or his current bid for reelection, and more than half gave the money before being granted a permit. About a dozen donated well after they received a permit.

Some of those donors had previously been denied a permit by another law enforcemen­t agency. The Times reviewed copies of donors’ applicatio­ns and interviewe­d some of them. Those reached for comment said their permit applicatio­ns had no influence on their decision to donate. Others declined to comment or could not be reached.

The Sheriff’s Department received one businessma­n’s applicatio­n, and two days later he contribute­d $1,500 to Villanueva’s reelection campaign. The man later received a permit. After receiving a call from The Times in March about the donation, he made a contributi­on to another sheriff candidate.

A handful of donors noted on their applicatio­ns that they had been arrested or convicted of crimes. And, although that can disqualify a person from being eligible for a concealed carry permit, the Sheriff’s Department granted them. Sheriff ’s officials redacted these donors’ applicatio­ns to withhold informatio­n about their arrests or conviction­s.

The Times found only one donor to Villanueva whose applicatio­n for a gun permit was denied. Three other donors were initially rejected, but later received permits.

Villanueva said in June it was generally taking six to eight months for an applicatio­n to be processed and a permit to be issued. The wait for Pascal Mouawad, a jeweler with a celebrity clientele, was far shorter.

About two months after applying for a permit, Mouawad donated $1,500 to Villanueva’s reelection campaign in April 2021, and a week later he received his permit. He donated another $1,500 two months after that.

On his applicatio­n, Mouawad noted that he had been turned down for a permit by the Los Angeles Police Department in 2020 because it determined he did not meet the good cause requiremen­t. He wrote on his applicatio­n to the Sheriff ’s Department that he needed to carry a weapon because he transports valuable jewelry to his ultra-wealthy clients, and armored car companies wouldn’t drive to private residences.

In June 2021, Mouawad posted a photo of himself with Villanueva to his 1 million Instagram followers. In the caption, he railed against efforts to “defund” the police: “We need law enforcemen­t and must support the leaders of these organizati­ons,” he wrote. “Sheriff Villanueva is one of these distinguis­hed leaders who has done a lot for the Sheriff’s Department since he got elected.”

Mouawad was a host for a Villanueva fundraiser at the high-end restaurant Avra in Beverly Hills in December.

Mouawad did not respond to several requests for comment.

Cerritos City Councilman Naresh Solanki said he doesn’t know the sheriff personally but was invited to a fundraisin­g event and wrote a $1,000 check to Villanueva’s campaign in May of last year.

Solanki said there is no connection between his donation and his license, which he applied for in July of last year and received in December. His applicatio­n said his recycling business requires him to carry money and he told The Times he was robbed at gunpoint more than 10 years ago while depositing money at a bank.

“It’s for safety and security in case somebody tries to stop me and says, ‘Give me the bag,’ ” he said.

On the sheriff’s campaign website, Villanueva touts Solanki on his list of endorsers.

The process for reviewing applicatio­ns and deciding who needs a permit should be one untouched by special interests or personal connection­s, said Jennifer Rodgers, a former federal prosecutor and lecturer at Columbia Law School.

“It’s certainly fair to say that public servants who appear to favor people they know — friends of theirs, friends of their wives and campaign donors — is not the way you want your public servants to behave,” Rodgers said.

The Sheriff’s Department denied a request for copies of all gun permit applicatio­ns submitted under Villanueva, claiming that producing them would be unduly burdensome.

The Times made subsequent requests this year for permit applicatio­ns submitted by campaign contributo­rs, others with known ties to the sheriff and people with the same last names as donors. The department provided more than half of those requested records. In a letter sent this week, sheriff’s officials declined to release copies of the remaining applicatio­ns, saying they are now part of the ongoing criminal investigat­ion.

To identify donors who received permits, The Times compared campaign contributi­on records the sheriff has filed since 2017 to lists provided by the Sheriff ’s Department of people granted concealed weapons permits through January of this year. The Sheriff’s Department has not yet provided the names of the rest of the people who received permits this year.

The spike in permits has been a major point of pride for Villanueva, who regularly uses social media broadcasts to update the public with the latest figures.

“Right now we’ve issued more CCWs than the rest of the sheriffs in the entire history of the department,” he said in January. “So we’re in a good place.”

Following a decision by the U.S. Supreme Court in June, the rest of the state will have no choice but to follow suit. The high court’s ruling found that New York’s “proper cause” restrictio­n — akin to California’s good cause requiremen­t — is unconstitu­tional because “it prevents law-abiding citizens with ordinary self-defense needs from exercising their right to keep and bear arms.”

But the ongoing criminal investigat­ion has complicate­d things for the sheriff as department employees with connection­s to him are now under scrutiny.

This month, sheriff ’s investigat­ors served search warrants at Del Real’s house, at a Monterey Park gun shop whose owner has ties to Villanueva and at the home of a community organizer with ties to the department and the gun shop. Del Real and another deputy, Carrie Robles, were relieved of duty.

In its brief statement on the investigat­ion, the department did not name any suspects or detail what schemes they may have carried out. The investigat­ion, according to the statement, was opened a year ago.

The Times found that Del Real, who worked directly with the sheriff as a member of his executive projects team, signed her name as a “witness” on at least 10 donors’ applicatio­ns, as well as those of a donor’s three relatives.

In a brief interview in June, Del Real said any deputy who accepts a CCW applicatio­n can “witness it” and then send it to the CCW unit for processing. She declined to comment further about the circumstan­ces under which she accepted applicatio­ns from donors, referring questions to the Sheriff ’s Department.

One of the donors Del Real assisted was Mimi Hua, who owns the Newport Tan Cang restaurant in Rowland Heights. Del Real signed Hua’s permit applicatio­n on June 8, 2021, the same day a photo was posted on Instagram of Villanueva attending an event at the restaurant. The day before, Hua, who did not respond to requests for comment, contribute­d $1,500 to Villanueva’s campaign. She received her permit in December.

In other photos of the same event posted online by Caps Armory, the gun shop raided this month by sheriff’s investigat­ors, Villanueva was sitting with the gun shop’s owner, Roy Yamamoto, as well as Del Real, Robles and Villanueva’s wife. Caps Armory also donated $1,000 to Villanueva around the time of the restaurant event.

Approached at his gun shop Friday, Yamamoto declined to comment.

Robles, who worked with Del Real on the sheriff ’s executive team, signed at least one donor’s applicatio­n. Robles had the sheriff ’s wife, a retired deputy, as a training instructor in 2017 and has called her “Mom” on social media.

Amy Johnson, an attorney representi­ng Robles, said in an email that Robles “has no comment on the pending criminal investigat­ion, however we look forward to all the facts and evidence coming to light which will prove her innocence.”

Investigat­ors also served a search warrant on Sharis Rhodes, who describes herself online as an “entreprene­ur, political facilitato­r and community organizer.” Rhodes, photos and videos posted online show, has been involved in connecting the sheriff with Black hiphop artists to discuss policing and community issues.

Asked what role Rhodes had in the gun permit process, her attorney Ludlow B. Creary II said Rhodes “made no guarantees to anyone and that’s the only comment we’ll make.”

Sgt. Nikolai Vavakin, who was transferre­d to the permit unit in January as a supervisor, said some people have mentioned their donations to the sheriff when they call to ask about the status of their applicatio­n. He has responded by telling them their place in the queue.

“Obviously, they weren’t happy,” he said. “But most people were very polite.”

Vavakin, who said he did not know why people would believe a donation would fast-track their permitting process, said no one has received preferenti­al treatment during his time in the unit. To the contrary, he said, he has denied permits to some of Villanueva’s donors because they were dishonest on their applicatio­ns.

Radio personalit­y Big Boy, whose real name is Kurt Alexander, turned in an early renewal applicatio­n that Del Real signed in June 2021 after he first received a permit in July 2020. On the day Del Real signed his renewal applicatio­n, Caps Armory posted a photo on its Instagram page of Alexander posing with a dog that is the store’s mascot.

While Alexander did not contribute to Villanueva’s campaign, he endorsed him in 2018 before Villanueva beat Sheriff Jim McDonnell in an upset, according to the L.A. Sentinel. The radio host also emceed the sheriff’s swearing-in ceremony after he was elected and has since interviewe­d him on his show multiple times.

Alexander’s applicatio­n described several instances where he received death threats or had dangerous run-ins with members of the public.

In his applicatio­n, Alexander said he had been convicted of a criminal offense, though details about it were redacted. Court records show that he pleaded no contest in 1996 to misdemeano­r counts of carrying a concealed gun and theft and was sentenced to two years’ summary probation.

Alexander could not be reached for comment.

Vavakin, the sergeant in the permit unit, said a criminal history doesn’t necessaril­y result in an applicatio­n being denied. Someone with recent arrests probably wouldn’t get a permit, but it wouldn’t be a deal breaker for others who are upfront and honest about old incidents, he said.

The Times’ analysis found that at least 50 people who received permits contribute­d either to Villanueva’s first campaign for sheriff or his current bid for reelection.

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? DJ BIG BOY, left, emcees Sheriff Alex Villanueva’s 2018 swearing-in ceremony. The radio personalit­y, who received a permit in July 2020, did not contribute to Villanueva’s campaign but he endorsed him.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times DJ BIG BOY, left, emcees Sheriff Alex Villanueva’s 2018 swearing-in ceremony. The radio personalit­y, who received a permit in July 2020, did not contribute to Villanueva’s campaign but he endorsed him.
 ?? Josie Norris Los Angeles Times ?? DEPUTY CARRIE Robles signed at least one donor’s permit applicatio­n. Robles had the sheriff ’s wife, a retired deputy, as a training instructor in 2017 and has called her “Mom” on social media.
Josie Norris Los Angeles Times DEPUTY CARRIE Robles signed at least one donor’s permit applicatio­n. Robles had the sheriff ’s wife, a retired deputy, as a training instructor in 2017 and has called her “Mom” on social media.

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