Los Angeles Times

Sheriff is dealt a setback in his investigat­ion of Kuehl, Metro

Judge orders a halt to the search of some computers, demands answers about warrant.

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an

A Superior Court judge late Thursday ordered Los Angeles County sheriff ’s officials to stop searching certain computers seized as part of sprawling raids tied to an investigat­ion into county Supervisor Sheila Kuehl, the Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority and a domestic violence nonprofit.

The order from Judge William Ryan applies solely to computers that sheriff ’s investigat­ors took from Metro’s Office of Inspector General, whose attorney filed papers Thursday asking the judge to toss the search warrant used to seize the equipment.

The attorney, Harvinder Anand, argued that the warrant served this week was illegal. He said it failed to comply with a ruling made by a different judge regarding “an identical warrant” served last year in the same case and has generated criticism that Sheriff Alex Villanueva is targeting his critics.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department “thus flagrantly ignored a ruling by another Los Angeles Superior Court judge and took matters into its own hands by obtaining the second warrant while intentiona­lly omitting from its affidavit” the judge’s ruling, Anand said in the filing.

A sheriff ’s spokespers­on complained in a statement that the county was not providing a lawyer to respond to the challenge on behalf of the Sheriff ’s Department.

“This is exactly the type of obstructio­n, interferen­ce, and political shenanigan­s which Sheriff Alex Villanueva fights against daily,” said Capt. Lorena Rodriguez. “We are now forced into a position of being unrepresen­ted with no County authorizat­ion to pay for legal representa­tion and

reduced to solicit pro bono representa­tion in this matter.”

Ryan’s order does not apply to materials seized this week from the homes and offices of Kuehl and Patti Giggans, the head of the nonprofit Peace Over Violence and a member of the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission.

Neither has challenged the warrants in court — an attorney for Kuehl declined to comment on whether she would do so, while an attorney for Giggans said he plans to do so next week. Both Kuehl and Giggans have denied wrongdoing.

Kuehl said in a statement Friday that she was gratified by the judge’s order and “hopeful that, if and when the warrant on my home is reviewed, a judge will recognize how equally baseless it is. I am eager to see this intrusive and retaliator­y vendetta brought to an end.”

Rodriguez, the sheriff’s captain, said in the statement, “If Supervisor Sheila Kuehl, Commission­er [Patti Giggans], the Board of Supervisor­s, County Counsel, and the Office of the Inspector General are as committed to transparen­cy and accountabi­lity as they continuous­ly state, then why are they scared for these electronic devices to be examined and fighting the search warrant?”

Ryan ordered sheriff ’s investigat­ors, including Dets. Mark Lillienfel­d and Max Fernandez, to “cease searching any and all computers seized” from the Metro inspector general’s office until further instructio­n. Both are members of the sheriff’s secretive public corruption unit. Critics say the unit is used to target Villanueva’s political enemies and others who have crossed him.

Ryan set a hearing for next week, demanding answers as to how and why the warrant was secured, and why key details were kept from the judge, Craig Richman, who signed it.

Ryan asked in his order how it was determined — and by whom — that the warrant applicatio­n would be presented to Richman, who has a decades-long relationsh­ip with Lillienfel­d. They have known each other since at least 1996, when Richman was a prosecutor handling an attempted murder case that Lillienfel­d investigat­ed. The detective would later visit the judge’s home to get warrants signed. Additional­ly, Lillienfel­d’s wife worked in Richman’s courtroom as an official court reporter.

The relationsh­ip came under scrutiny years ago, when there was an internal Sheriff’s Department inquiry into whether Lillienfel­d tried to help Richman out of legal trouble.

Ryan also asked why sheriff ’s investigat­ors withheld from Richman the fact that the other judge, Eleanor Hunter, had decided just two weeks ago to appoint a special master to oversee the search of the inspector general’s computers.

Hunter said at a Sept. 1 hearing that she was appointing a special master to make sure materials that are under attorney-client privilege are sealed.

“Why, after Judge Hunter was going to require a Special Master, did the Sheriff immediatel­y seek a warrant from a different judge, and who made that decision?” Ryan asked in his order.

The statement that investigat­ors presented to Richman made clear they were focused on a series of contracts worth more than $800,000 that Metro awarded to Giggans’ nonprofit from 2014 to 2020 to operate a hotline for reporting sexual harassment on public transit. The statement says the hotline was a “complete failure,” but the contract was extended without a competitiv­e bid or analysis.

Both Kuehl and Giggans have clashed fiercely with Villanueva and called for his resignatio­n. Villanueva has claimed he has recused himself from the investigat­ion in order to avoid conflicts of interest.

According to the statement, a whistleblo­wer, whose name was redacted, told sheriff’s investigat­ors that the contract was pushed forward by Metro Chief Executive Phillip Washington “in order to remain ‘in good graces’ with” Kuehl.

It also details campaign contributi­ons Kuehl received from Giggans and others associated with Peace Over Violence, alleging that “the donations can be seen as having been given for payment in return for the future awarding” of the hotline contracts.

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? DEPUTIES with the L.A. County Sheriff ’s Department approach the home of Supervisor Sheila Kuehl on Wednesday to serve her with a search warrant.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times DEPUTIES with the L.A. County Sheriff ’s Department approach the home of Supervisor Sheila Kuehl on Wednesday to serve her with a search warrant.

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