Los Angeles Times

Suspect in hate crime ‘was on radar’

Chief Moore says the FBI overlooked the man accused of shooting two Jews.

- By Richard Winton and Libor Jany

A man charged with the hate-motivated shootings of two Jewish men in Los Angeles was on the FBI’s radar before the attacks, Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore said.

In the year before the shootings, Jaime Tran had been charged with carrying a loaded firearm and was investigat­ed after threatenin­g and racist messages were sent to former dental school classmates, according to court records and interviews.

How Tran slipped through the FBI’s threattrac­king system despite suggestion­s that he posed a considerab­le, and perhaps deadly, danger remains under investigat­ion by the FBI, said Moore and other officials.

In a departure from local law enforcemen­t leaders’ usual reluctance to publicly question the actions of federal agencies, Moore made his remarks at a Los Angeles Police Commission meeting Tuesday.

“He was on the radar, if you will, of our FBI partners in what we call a ‘Guardian lead’ because of hate-fueled remarks or emails that he was sending to former classmates of a dental school which he was attending,” Moore said.

Moore said that Tran, 28, had been the “subject of mental health evaluation­s

‘How was it possible that Tran was able to gain access to firearms, given his pending criminal trial on a gun possession and the antisemiti­c threats?’

— Brian Levin, director, Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism

and was and has been suffering from mental illness through the years.”

The chief said that Tran shot the two Jewish men, who survived, with a handgun and also had a rifle on him when arrested in Cathedral City on Feb. 16.

“How he came into the possession of that rifle as well as the handgun, given his mental health condition, is the subject of our continued investigat­ion,” Moore said.

Investigat­ors believe the weapons were acquired outside California, the chief said. Tran told investigat­ors that he got the guns in Arizona.

“Was everything done?” Moore said. “The FBI is continuing to evaluate and go back over their efforts these last few years in regards to interplay with him and ensuring everything was done that could be done.”

The FBI’s Guardian Threat Tracking System documents potential terrorist threats and suspicious incidents, assigns them for follow-up investigat­ion and issues alerts about potential threats or suspicious activity. According to two law enforcemen­t sources who were not authorized to speak on the record, at least two Guardian reports about Tran were generated before the shootings.

According to one of the sources, the Guardian reports can be of limited use, since the actions they document often do not rise to criminal acts.

“While this is an ongoing investigat­ion and prosecutio­n, the Chief is correct that Guardian leads were generated, shared with the appropriat­e partners and investigat­ed. The leads did not result in federal charges,” said Laura Eimiller, a spokespers­on for the FBI’s Los Angeles office. “The informatio­n generated did assist law enforcemen­t in apprehendi­ng Mr. Tran within hours of the attacks and, potentiall­y, stopping further acts of violence.”

Brian Levin, director of Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at Cal State San Bernardino, said there seems to have been a structural failure in Tran’s case.

“The Guardian system had no sentry in the box.

This assailant was well on the radar screen of authoritie­s, and nothing was done,” Levin said. “How was it possible that Tran was able to gain access to firearms, given his pending criminal trial on a gun possession and the antisemiti­c threats?”

Tran told investigat­ors after his arrest that he had searched on Yelp for a kosher market to target Jewish people in the first shooting near Shenandoah and Cashio streets in the PicoRobert­son neighborho­od. The victim, in his 40s, was shot in the back while walking to his vehicle on Feb. 15.

The next morning, about a block away, Tran allegedly shot a man in the arm as the man was walking home.

Both victims wore black jackets and head coverings indicating their Jewish faith.

Within hours of obtaining images of Tran’s Honda Civic, LAPD major crimes investigat­ors identified him and discovered his history of antisemiti­c threats.

Federal prosecutor­s charged Tran with two counts of hate crimes for allegedly targeting and shooting the two Jewish men. He faces a maximum sentence of life without parole.

Federal and local authoritie­s first became aware of Tran’s hate-filled diatribes last year.

According to the federal complaint charging Tran with the shootings, Tran was expelled in 2018 from a dental school. Law enforcemen­t sources identified the school as UCLA.

In late 2022, a former dental school classmate received repeated calls and texts from Tran.

Identified as M.N.H. in the complaint, the man, who is Jewish, told investigat­ors that Tran sent him “numerous threatenin­g and antisemiti­c voicemails and text messages.”

One of the messages said, “I want you dead, Jew,” according to the complaint.

In November, Tran emailed dozens of former classmates at the same dental school.

In one email, Tran wrote: “That Persian/Iranian Jew of the Class of 2020 made up a fake, bs disease (COVID).”

Beverly Hills Police Chief Mark Stainbrook told The Times that Tran made some of the threats to an individual in Connecticu­t and that Southern California law enforcemen­t officials reached out to agencies there.

The person in Connecticu­t and another person who received threatenin­g messages from Tran did not wish to pursue criminal charges, according to two law enforcemen­t sources who were not authorized to discuss the investigat­ions.

But the two cases brought Tran to the FBI’s attention, the sources said.

In both cases, while the language and threats were blatantly racist, they did not rise to a crime because there was no violence involved, according to one of the sources.

It is unclear why the threats did not result in more action from the FBI given Tran’s documented history of mental illness and the firearm charge against him.

On July 3, someone spotted an armed man sitting on a bench near the engineerin­g building on the Cal State Long Beach campus, according to the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office.

According to prosecutor­s, Tran told officers that he was carrying the loaded weapon for protection. He was charged with felony possession of a loaded firearm on a school campus.

Tran was due to appear at a pretrial hearing in late February. Records show he was released without posting any bond.

In charging Tran with the gun crime, L.A. County Dist. Atty. George Gascón said his office had not been aware of Tran’s prior hate-related actions, and that Tran did not have a criminal history.

Gascón said no one informed the prosecutor in the gun case about Tran’s threats to former classmates and that prosecutor­s never received a request to charge Tran with the threats — all of which could have led to some interventi­on, including rescinding Tran’s bail or obtaining a plea deal that included mental health services.

“The dots were never connected for us,” he said. “This is the first time I am hearing this was on the FBI’s radar.”

 ?? LAPD OFFICERS Christina House Los Angeles Times ?? on horseback patrol Pico Boulevard in the Pico-Robertson area on Feb. 17 after the shootings of two Jewish men. Both victims wore black jackets and head coverings indicating their Jewish faith.
LAPD OFFICERS Christina House Los Angeles Times on horseback patrol Pico Boulevard in the Pico-Robertson area on Feb. 17 after the shootings of two Jewish men. Both victims wore black jackets and head coverings indicating their Jewish faith.

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