Los Angeles Times

L.A. County supervisor­s fire probation chief

- Times staff writer Melissa Gomez contribute­d to this report.

are being attacked, and many are not showing up to work.”

Supervisor Kathryn Barger said she supported sending in a “strike team” with the power to overhaul the Probation Department. She said Gonzales had lost what was left of her support during a visit to one of the juvenile halls a few weeks ago.

“Although I personally saw deficienci­es and ensured they were communicat­ed to the Department, over a week later nothing had been done,” Barger said in a statement. “This is just plain unacceptab­le.”

Chief Deputy Karen Fletcher, Gonzales’ secondin-command, has been named the interim chief of the department, according to spokespeop­le for Hahn and Barger. The Probation Oversight Commission called for both Gonzales’ and Fletcher’s resignatio­ns earlier this month.

The commission applauded the supervisor­s’ action in a statement, saying, “We appreciate this necessary step toward our efforts to bring stability for all stakeholde­rs of the L.A. County Probation Department and to achieve real reform for the youth and adults impacted and served by the Department.”

The Probation Department did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Supervisor Lindsey Horvath called Gonzales’ removal “only step one.” Supervisor Hilda Solis said the next chief would need to address a “serious culture issue and lack of leadership within the department.”

“To that end, in the County’s next search for a new Probation Department Chief, we need someone who can take initiative and has the courage to make the necessary changes needed for our youth and adults in Probation’s supervisio­n,” she said in a statement.

Gonzales was named the county’s top probation official in February 2021 after a five-year stint running San Diego County’s probation department. The L.A. County department was already troubled when he took over. The California Department of Justice entered into a settlement with the agency to reform its treatment of juveniles one month before Gonzales was hired. But it has been the subject of nearconsta­nt controvers­y during his run as chief.

In September 2021, the California Board of State and Community Correction­s found the Probation Department was “unsuitable” to care for youths, the first time the oversight body made such a ruling against a juvenile institutio­n in state history. When such rulings occur, an agency has 60 days to implement an action plan to improve conditions or the state can order juveniles to be relocated into housing beyond the Probation Department’s reach.

Fearing another negative ruling from the state board in early 2022, Gonzales and other executives emptied Central Juvenile Hall and crammed nearly every teen in the department’s custody into Barry J. Nidorf Juvenile Hall in Sylmar, a chaotic and poorly planned move that resulted in violence and injuries to officers and children.

Gonzales and Fletcher had repeatedly denied reports in The Times that the transfer was done to sidestep an investigat­ion by the state board, but the L.A. County Office of Inspector General confirmed the newspaper’s reporting late last year.

For most of 2022, probation officers often refused to come to work because of fear of violence in Central and Nidorf halls, leading to major staffing shortages and frequent lockdowns of both facilities. The situation led to a significan­t spike in fights and injuries to staff and had major effects on the mental health of the youths the department is supposed to be helping rehabilita­te, a Times investigat­ion found last year.

The final straw for Gonzales appeared to come last month when The Times published surveillan­ce video of officers violently restrainin­g a 17-year-old inside Camp Kilpatrick. The footage showed officers grabbing the teen by each limb and his neck and pinning him to a bed after an argument. Once the teen appeared subdued, a supervisor named Oscar Cross bent the child’s legs toward his head and yelled, “Stop resisting,” while the boy yelled out for his mother.

The inspector general and the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office have launched investigat­ions into the footage, and the Probation Oversight Commission called for the department to fire every officer seen using force on the video.

On Feb. 27, Gonzales told a group of high-level probation officials that he would not step down and that the board would have to fire him, according to a law enforcemen­t source who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the situation candidly.

 ?? County of San Diego ?? ADOLFO GONZALES was hired in early 2021.
County of San Diego ADOLFO GONZALES was hired in early 2021.

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