Los Angeles Times

It gets personal in race for sheriff

Villanueva and Luna question each other’s fitness to hold job

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an

Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva and retired Long Beach Police Chief Robert Luna squared off Wednesday night during a heated, often antagonist­ic, debate in which they traded barbs over their records in law enforcemen­t and their ability to lead the nation’s largest sheriff ’s department.

Villanueva painted his opponent as someone who would be a “puppet” for the county Board of Supervisor­s, which controls the Sheriff ’s Department’s budget, while Luna accused the sheriff of spewing falsehoods about his tenure in Long Beach and blamed him for causing the bitter relationsh­ips Villanueva has with other county leaders.

When asked about the controvers­ial raids by sheriff ’s deputies last week at the home and office of county Supervisor Sheila Kuehl,

who is a vocal critic of Villanueva, and others in connection with a corruption probe, Luna said he would have referred such a case to an outside agency.

“The sheriff had no business investigat­ing this from the very beginning,” Luna said. “You cannot investigat­e your political opponents or enemies.”

Villanueva fired back: “He’s not going to touch public corruption. He won’t touch it with a 10-foot pole because his job as puppet is to look the other way.”

Luna suggested that Villanueva routinely deflects responsibi­lity for failures that have occurred on his watch — such as the uptick in homicides in the sheriff ’s jurisdicti­on — onto the supervisor­s and the district attorney. Violent crime in Long Beach went down under his watch, Luna said.

“I was working for the same D.A. that everybody else was in L.A. County,” Luna said. “Stop the excuses. Let’s get the job done.”

The candidates were asked about homelessne­ss, one of the most pressing issues to county voters. Luna criticized Villanueva for going before news cameras to inaccurate­ly and unfairly take credit for clearing encampment­s in Venice and elsewhere, while Villanueva retorted that Luna had no plan to address the crisis.

Asked how he’d explain what a moderator said was his recent comment that Black people were “prone to criminalit­y,” Villanueva dodged the question. Instead, he tried to turn the attention to Luna, alleging that he mishandled an incident in Long Beach in which a member of the department’s homicide unit drew a family tree of convicted killers that included a noose around a Black man’s neck.

Luna said that he had reported the drawing properly and that it had been investigat­ed, but Villanueva said an officer who raised concerns about the episode faced retaliatio­n.

The candidates vied to present themselves as the person best equipped to lead the agency, but they were often short on details when it came to saying how they would address particular issues.

Luna presented himself as a collaborat­or who would improve the Sheriff’s Department’s working relationsh­ip with other county leaders. Villanueva defended his more combative approach, saying he was standing up against efforts to reduce department resources.

“So when they impose a hiring freeze on the department, what am I going to do? Greet it with open arms?” Villanueva said. “Of course I’m going to object to that.”

The debate, held at the Skirball Cultural Center and televised live Wednesday evening, was co-hosted by the Los Angeles Times.

In the June primary election, Villanueva and Luna emerged as clear favorites from a crowded field of candidates and advanced to a November runoff.

Luna, little known outside of Long Beach, finished only a few percentage points behind Villanueva, who won about 31% of the vote. The tally was widely viewed as a lackluster result for an incumbent sheriff and left Villanueva looking vulnerable going into the head-tohead race.

Perhaps Luna’s biggest challenge is a lack of name recognitio­n among voters, facing off against a highly visible incumbent sheriff who often makes headlines. Villanueva, meanwhile, is a controvers­ial figure who has faced criticism for myriad scandals under his watch.

Most recently, the California attorney general took control over the Sheriff ’s Department’s public corruption investigat­ion involving Kuehl and others amid mounting questions about the department’s handling of the inquiry.

Critics have alleged that Villanueva, despite saying publicly that he’d recused himself from the investigat­ion, is using a secretive public corruption unit he formed to attack political enemies.

He has also supercharg­ed the handing out of licenses to carry concealed weapons — in 2020, he pledged to increase the number of permits by five times and has far exceeded that goal.

A Times investigat­ion last week found that among the thousands of people who have received permits to carry weapons in public 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.

A poll conducted last month by UC Berkeley and co-sponsored by The Times found that Luna had a slight edge over Villanueva and was favored strongly by liberals and Democrats, while Villanueva was more popular among conservati­ve and Republican voters.

The political divisions illustrate a significan­t shift in Villanueva’s base of support since 2018, when he wooed progressiv­e Democrats with a promise to kick immigratio­n agents out of the L.A. County jails at a time when many left-leaning voters were frustrated with former President Trump’s hard-line immigratio­n policies.

The platform led to an improbable upset as Villanueva, a longtime registered Democrat, became the first challenger to unseat an incumbent sheriff in more than a century.

Villanueva has since rebranded himself as a more conservati­ve, law-and-order sheriff and candidate, railing against the “woke left” and efforts to “defund” law enforcemen­t while seizing on voter frustratio­ns with the homeless crisis and crime.

Luna, meanwhile, has spent much of his life registered as a Republican. He registered as a Democrat in 2020 after previously switching from Republican to noparty preference in 2018, according to voter records.

Despite Luna’s past affiliatio­n as a Republican, much of the county’s Democratic party machine has begun to coalesce behind him in an effort to unseat Villanueva.

The L.A. County Democratic Party and all five members of the Board of Supervisor­s, all but one of whom lean left, are backing Luna.

Luna also announced earlier this month that the seven other candidates who ran for sheriff in the primary have endorsed him.

 ?? Photograph­s by Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? CANDIDATES Rick Caruso and Rep. Karen Bass share a smile after their debate Wednesday at the Skirball Cultural Center. Their rancorous exchanges built on the coarser tone the campaign has taken in recent weeks.
Photograph­s by Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times CANDIDATES Rick Caruso and Rep. Karen Bass share a smile after their debate Wednesday at the Skirball Cultural Center. Their rancorous exchanges built on the coarser tone the campaign has taken in recent weeks.
 ?? ?? L.A. COUNTY Sheriff Alex Villanueva, right, and challenger Robert Luna got antagonist­ic during their debate on who has the right qualities to lead the agency.
L.A. COUNTY Sheriff Alex Villanueva, right, and challenger Robert Luna got antagonist­ic during their debate on who has the right qualities to lead the agency.
 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? ROBERT LUNA, left, called the raid of a county supervisor’s office a vendetta by Sheriff Alex Villaneuva, right. For his part, Villaneuva said Luna would be a “puppet” of the supervisor­s if he won the election.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ROBERT LUNA, left, called the raid of a county supervisor’s office a vendetta by Sheriff Alex Villaneuva, right. For his part, Villaneuva said Luna would be a “puppet” of the supervisor­s if he won the election.

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