Los Angeles Times

False police report in drug raid

Sheriff ’s detective will get probation after pleading no contest to a misdemeano­r count.

- By James Queally Times staff writer Alene Tchekmedyi­an contribute­d to this report.

A Los Angeles County sheriff’s detective pleaded no contest Tuesday to filing a false report in connection with a 2018 drug raid in East L.A., more than two years after another investigat­or testified against him.

Pedro Guerrero-Gonzalez will receive probation and must permanentl­y give up his status as a peace officer in California after pleading no contest to one misdemeano­r count of filing a false police report, according to L.A. County Deputy Dist. Atty. Greg Apt.

Guerrero-Gonzalez and another gang detective, Noel Lopez, were indicted in 2021 in connection with the search of an East L.A. home that netted a haul of firearms including an assault rifle, a large amount of methamphet­amine, black tar heroin and items used to bag and distribute drugs.

Sheriff’s Det. Jason McGinty, who was also part of the raid, alleged Guerrero-Gonzalez asked him to say he’d seen one of the suspects holding the rifle when they entered the room, according to court records.

“I told him no, that that’s not what happened and that I wasn’t going to say that,” McGinty recalled in May 2021 testimony before an L.A. County grand jury.

Detectives found the rifle in a case and neither of the suspects had touched it, according to McGinty, who testified he was the first person to reach the room where detectives arrested two men and seized weapons and drugs.

But Guerrero-Gonzalez filed a report claiming McGinty made the allegation about the suspect and Lopez repeated that detail in a sworn probable cause declaratio­n, prosecutor­s alleged. The claim was later used to bring gun charges against one of the suspects in the raid, according to court records. McGinty said he was unaware of the report the other detectives had filed until he was subpoenaed to testify at a preliminar­y hearing against the raid suspect, according to court records.

McGinty made a complaint about the false document to the Sheriff’s Department’s Internal Criminal Investigat­ions Bureau a short time later, and the case against the defendants arrested during the 2018 raid collapsed.

All three investigat­ors were part of the Sheriff ’s Department’s Operation Safe Streets bureau, a unit designed to target street gangs and disrupt narcotics traffickin­g. McGinty has since left the department, according to two people with knowledge of the case who requested anonymity to speak about personnel matters.

It was not clear why he resigned. The Sheriff’s Department did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Wednesday morning. Previous attempts to contact McGinty were not successful.

Guerrero-Gonzalez was initially charged with a felony, but L.A. County Superior Court Judge Michael Garcia downgraded the count to a misdemeano­r after the indictment, according to Apt.

His attorney, Vicki Podberesky, did not reply to an e-mail seeking comment.

Perjury charges against Lopez were dismissed Tuesday after prosecutor­s determined they could not prove an electronic signature was actually entered by the detective, according to Apt.

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