The Mercury News Weekend

LAPD hacked into iPhone

- By Matt Hamilton

Los Angeles police investigat­ors obtained a method to open the locked iPhone belonging to the slain wife of “The Shield” actor Michael Jace, according to court papers reviewed by The Times.

LAPD detectives found an alternativ­e way to bypass the security features on the white iPhone 5S belonging to April Jace, whom the actor is accused of killing at their South L.A. home in 2014, according to a search warrant filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court.

The bypass occurred earlier this year, during the same period that the FBI was demanding that Apple unlock the iPhone 5c of San Bernardino shooter Syed Rizwan Farook. The FBI eventually said it found another method for unlocking the phone without using Apple.

LAPD Detective Connie Zych wrote that on March 18, the department found a “forensic cellphone expert” who could “override the locked iPhone function,” according to the search warrant.

The search warrant did not detail the method used by the LAPD to open the phone, nor did police reveal the identity of the cellphone expert. It’s also unclear what operating system April Jace’s phone had.

Jace’s attorney and the prosecutor assigned to his case could not be reached for comment.

The LAPD’s move comes as law enforcemen­t across the U.S. struggle to crack the encryption and other security features on digital devices that may hide potential evidence in criminal investigat­ions.

April Jace’s iPhone has been at the center of the criminal case against her husband, who is charged with carrying out the May 19, 2014, killing, according to court papers.

Investigat­ors have contended that the actor and his wife argued “about their relationsh­ip” via text message shortly before he opened fire, according to the search warrant.

His attorneys have countered that April Jace, a well-liked financial aid counselor at Biola University in La Mirada, was having an extramarit­al affair, the Associated Press reported. Earlier this year, the actor’s attorneys successful­ly persuaded a judge to delay his murder trial, arguing that the dead woman’s phone should undergo a more exhaustive search than one initially conducted by police.

Shortly after her killing, April Jace’s cellphone was locked by a passcode, which “hindered” the investigat­ion, Zych wrote. But in 2015, an Apple technician was ordered by an L.A. judge to help police extract data from the phone’s hard drive, according to the search war- rant.

In late January, an investigat­or with the L.A. County district attorney’s office again tried to extract data from the phone but could not, and only obtained the contents of its SIM card. Zych wrote that the phone “was disabled,” according to the warrant. The following month, authoritie­s tried to inspect April Jace’s iPhone but it didn’t even turn on, the warrant stated.

But in March, investigat­ors learned that a forensic cellphone expert could “override” the security features and let authoritie­s view the phone’s contents, according to the warrant. A senior investigat­or with the district attorney’s office was able to examine the phone in April, as was Jace’s private cellphone expert, the warrant states.

Jace, 53, is currently awaiting trial. Authoritie­s allege about 8:30 p.m. on the day of the killing, a man called police from the actor’s cellphone, saying that he had just shot his wife to death. Police allege that Michael Jace placed that call.

Two children, both reportedly younger than 10, were inside the pink stucco home in the 5400 block of Brynhurst Avenue when April Jace was killed.

“At the very least they heard the shots,” then-LAPD Det. Sal LaBarbera said at the time. “It is a terrible tragedy, made all the more worse by their children being there.”

Within hours, Jace had been booked on suspicion of murdering his 40-yearold wife.

A handgun was later recovered in the home.

Michael Jace had no arrest history, according to public records, but divorce papers from a previous marriage include allegation­s of threats and domestic violence.

Ex-wife Jennifer Bitterman alleged in a November 1997 divorce filing that Jace threatened to kill her if they went to “war over his visitation rights to their son.”

From 2002 to 2008, Jace played Los Angeles Police Officer Julien Lowe on “The Shield.” He also had roles in “Planet of the Apes,” “Forrest Gump” and “Boogie Nights.”

The actor filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy protection in March 2011, when he listed his liabilitie­s at more than $500,000 against assets of $325,000, according to federal court records.

At the time he was more than $22,000 in debt to the government, more than $16,000 in debt to credit card companies and still owed on two mortgages.

After the killing neighbors expressed shock, saying Jace’s family appeared to be happy.

“They were the Huxtables on the block,” a neighbor said, referring to the fictional family in the long-running sitcom “The Cosby Show.”

The bypass occurred earlier this year, during the same period that the FBI was demanding that Apple unlock the iPhone 5c of San Bernardino shooter Syed Rizwan Farook.

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