The Signal

Sheriff’s highway team put on hiatus

One of new leader’s 1st orders of business is to halt highway squad that garnered big seizures, controvers­y

- By Jim Holt Signal Senior Staff Writer

A specialty team of detectives including a Santa Clarita Valley contingent that led the nation this year for the largest amount of heroin seized roadside has been temporaril­y shut down following an audit of the team by the county’s Office of Inspector General.

In October, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s Domestic Highway Enforcemen­t Team came under scrutiny for alleged racial profiling and became the subject of two independen­t probes overseen by the county inspector general.

On Nov. 16, the LASD suspended the team.

“We are complying with the Office of Inspector General’s audit on the Domestic Highway Enforcemen­t Team and we’re also in the process of doing our own internal audit, which includes gathering data and reviewing procedures and protocols,” LASD spokeswoma­n Nicole Nishida said, citing an official statement issued by the LASD.

Detectives assigned to the local arm of the DHE led the nation for the largest amount of heroin seized in the past year. As of June, the team had taken a street value of more than $80 million worth of drugs off the streets, according to Sgt. Dan Peacock at that time.

On Monday, Nishida said: “As of Nov. 16, 2018, the DHE team has been suspended until further notice.”

Asked for a response to the decision, Shirley Miller, spokeswoma­n for the SCV Sheriff’s Station, said: “The DHE Team has been temporaril­y suspended pending an internal audit and review of the team’s work product and performanc­e.”

Concerns about racial profiling by members of the DHE team prompted two county investigat­ions.

The probes were requested by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s following media reports that almost

70 percent of motorists stopped between 2012 and last year were found to be Latino, two-thirds of whom had their vehicles searched — an incident rate much higher than motorists from other racial and ethnic groups.

Responding to a Los Angeles Times article, L.A. County 1st District Supervisor Hilda L. Solis called on complaint investigat­ors of both the Office of the Inspector General and the Civilian Oversight Commission to look into the suspicion of racial profiling.

In a prepared written statement, Solis said in October: “I have fought my entire life to end disparate impacts such as racial profiling on people of color, including Latinos.”

The Domestic Highway Enforcemen­t Team was created in 2012 to help take drugs off county streets.

Since then, the team has taken more than 3,500 pounds of methamphet­amine, heroin, cocaine and Fentanyl off the streets of L.A. County, and rescued six human traffickin­g victims.

In October, when the probes were suggested, 5th District Supervisor Kathryn Barger weighed the merits of getting drugs off the street against the civil rights of those detained.

“The sheriff’s enforcemen­t team works to curtail the traffickin­g of opioids, methamphet­amine and other drugs, which have had a devastatin­g impact on my district, particular­ly the Santa Clarita and Antelope valleys,” she said at the time.

“However, no innocent individual­s should be subjected to unreasonab­le targeting or unconstitu­tional search and seizure, and the data cited by the Times is already under review by the OIG,” she added.

Peacock, who led the local team before it was sidelined, revealed the team took 11 pounds of Fentanyl off the street in a single haul in 2017, the largest roadside seizure in the nation last year, during a traffic stop on a typical patrol.

 ?? Austin Dave/The Signal (See additional photos at signalscv.com) ?? Deputies Adam Halloran and Mike Vann debrief on the discovery of a gun hidden inside a vehicle after a traffic stop on Interstate 5, near Gorman. Since 2012, the Domestic Highway Enforcemen­t team seized more than 3,500 pounds of meth, heroin, cocaine and fentanyl, and rescued six human traffickin­g victims.
Austin Dave/The Signal (See additional photos at signalscv.com) Deputies Adam Halloran and Mike Vann debrief on the discovery of a gun hidden inside a vehicle after a traffic stop on Interstate 5, near Gorman. Since 2012, the Domestic Highway Enforcemen­t team seized more than 3,500 pounds of meth, heroin, cocaine and fentanyl, and rescued six human traffickin­g victims.

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