Jul 112012
 

L.A. County sheriff recalls 200 badges given to local politicians

 

Los Angeles Times

by Robert Faturechi

by Jeff Gottlieb

July 10, 2012

 

 

This photo of a woman wearing the Sheriff’s Department badge of Cudahy Councilman Osvaldo Conde was released by the U.S. attorney’s office. (unknown / July 10, 2012)

 

 

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, which has faced criticism for handing out official-looking credentials to civilians with no law enforcement duties, is recalling an estimated 200 badges the department gave to local politicians, according to documents and interviews.

Sheriff Lee Baca‘s decision to recall the badges comes two weeks after the FBI arrested three city officials in Cudahy on bribery charges. In support of the charges, the U.S. attorney’s office released a photo of a smiling young woman in a Cudahy nightclub, brandishing two handguns and wearing a councilman’s badge on her chest.

One command-level sheriff’s official briefed on the badge recall said the move was prompted by the revelation in Cudahy. Sheriff’s spokesman Steve Whitmore, however, said that the timing was a coincidence and that a 2007 state attorney general’s warning prompted the call to return the badges.

Asked why it took more than four years for the Sheriff’s Department to take action on the attorney general’s legal opinion, Whitmore replied, “That’s a good question.”

The emergence of the Cudahy photo is the latest in a series of incidents in which official-looking credentials given to civilians by law enforcement agencies have come under scrutiny. Critics have long said badges and identification cards appeared to be rewards for political contributions and had the potential for abuse.

After a series of Times stories, California police chiefs and sheriffs were told by then-Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown in 2007 that handing out badges created the potential for civilians to falsely pose as law enforcement officers. The attorney general’s opinion covers any badge “that would deceive an ordinary reasonable person into believing that it is authorized for use by a peace officer.”

In the wake of the opinion, some agencies pledged to stop issuing the IDs and badges.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department recalled official-looking identification cards but continued giving badges to council members and city managers in cities that contracted for the department’s police services.

At first glance, the badges closely resemble those deputies wear, with the same six-pointed star design. Instead of identifying the person as a “deputy sheriff,” the badges read “City Official Los Angeles County.”

Whitmore said the badges were given to city officials for use during emergencies so they could pass through sheriff’s command posts. He estimated that about 200 badges will be recalled from about 40 cities.

Aside from the Cudahy case, Whitmore said he was not aware of any other incident in which a city official misused a badge. But civilian abuse of such credentials has been a problem in the past.

In the 1980s, the issue caught the attention of members of the county Board of Supervisors after they learned that “Hillside Strangler” Kenneth Bianchi had used a county emblem to pose as a police officer while luring his victims.

Prior to the attorney general’s 2007 opinion, two political contributors to the Riverside County sheriff told The Times they displayed their honorary badges during encounters with law enforcement. One used it to gain access to a secure area of Bob Hope Airport in Burbank. The other showed it to police officers serving a search warrant at his business.

About the same time, a Compton man was arrested after allegedly flashing Redondo Beach police officers a badge issued to him by a state assemblyman.

The Times also reported that Baca gave official-looking identification cards to members of his Homeland Security Support Unit, a civilian group that was staffed by many of his political donors.

According to an internal policy memo, the practice of giving badges to city officials has been going on since 1986. In fact, the policy was reexamined in 2010 but allowed to continue despite the attorney general’s warning on the matter three years earlier.

Whitmore said the photograph of the woman wearing Councilman Osvaldo Conde’s badge at the El Potrero nightclub in Cudahy was “a vulgar display.”

Three Cudahy officials were arrested June 22 as part of a federal investigation into allegations of corruption in the city’s government. Conde, then-Mayor David Silva and Angel Perales, the former head of code enforcement, are accused of taking a total of $17,000 in bribes from the owner of a medical marijuana dispensary who wanted to open a store in the city.

In a transcript of a secretly recorded conversation, Perales is quoted talking about “a crooked deputy.”

“Well, he just got transferred to Cudahy, but I knew all about him before … he came in,” Perales tells an FBI informant.

The two men talk about paying off the deputy. “Money makes the monkey dance,” Perales says.

Whitmore said department investigators looked into the allegation about a corrupt deputy and concluded that it was a “fabrication, it’s not real.”

 

Direct Link:  http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-sheriff-badges-20120711,0,7628614.story

Feb 292012
 

Hackers publish private information about L.A. police officers

Los Angeles Times

By Andrew Blankstein 

Twitter.com/anblanx

February 24, 2012

http://latimesphoto.files.wordpress.com/2011/05/police-memorial01.jpg

 

Photo: LAPD officers outisde police headquarters.

Credit: Los Angeles Times

 

 

The FBI is probing an Internet breach in which hackers publicly posted private information belonging to more than 100 local law enforcement officers who are part of the Los Angeles County Police Canine Assn.

Tony Vairo, a San Fernando police officer, who is president of the group, told The Times that they were contacted by the FBI Tuesday morning informing them that information belonging to its members, who include the Los Angeles police and Los Angeles County Sheriff’s deputies, had been compromised.

“I’m appalled that our website was breached,” Vairo said. “It’s not right and we will pursue it [a case] on every level, state or federal.”

Vairo described the FBI probe into the hacking incident as being part of an ongoing criminal investigation. FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller would not comment on what, if any, involvement the agency had in the case.

The incident, first reported Tuesday by CNET.com, comes two months after personal information about more than two dozen members of the Los Angeles Police Department’s command staff was anonymously posted on an Internet site.

In that case, the hackers posted officers’ property records, campaign contributions, biographical information and, in a few cases, the names of family members, including children. But that information was gleaned from public records.

Authorities said the current intrusion is different because the information gleaned from the association’s website was not available to the public.

Marshall E. McClain, president of the Los Angeles Airport Peace Officer’s Assn., which has three members whose information was compromised, said his association has contacted the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office to ask for a criminal investigation.

The postings were linked to from a publicly available Twitter account, where unnamed activists claimed responsibility for the information dump. The information was posted on a site that allows users to anonymously input data. This type of site has increasingly been used to post personal information of individuals who raise the ire of online activists. The practice is known as “doxing.”

 

ALSO:

Teen didn’t mention bullying in suicide notes, authorities say

Roosevelt High teacher accused of having sex with two students

Security probed after teens found having sex at O.C. Juvenile Hall

 

Direct Link:

Jan 162012
 

The Homicide Report

THE TIMES CHRONICLES L.A. COUNTY HOMICIDE VICTIMS

Showing 17 homicides from Jan. 1, 2012 to Jan. 8, 2012

Current view:
Homicides are grouped based on number of homicides in an area.
Click a group to zoom there.
Name Age Date
Gerardo Fernandez 20 1/8/12
Hector Hernandez 42 1/8/12
Alberto Cruz 38 1/7/12
Juan Nunez 34 1/7/12
Mark Miles 48 1/6/12
Jeff Pouncil Jr. 19 1/5/12
Richard Hughes 38 1/5/12
Jane Doe #1 0 1/4/12
Jazmyne Eng 40 1/4/12
Calvin Milner 62 1/3/12
Asia Sonnier 23 1/3/12
David Morales Jr. 18 1/3/12
Jimmie Jackson Jr. 21 1/2/12
Leobardo Esparza 50 1/2/12
Edwin John Jr. 18 1/2/12
Cristin Alvarez 28 1/2/12
Jude Burns Jr. 14 1/1/12
a 19-year-old Latino male, died Saturday, Jan. 29, 2011, after being shot in Westmont, according to Los Angeles County coroner’s records.

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The Homicide Report is the Los Angeles Times’ interactive map and database to track homicides in Los Angeles County and provide a forum for readers to remember victims and to discuss violence in their communities.
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Source: The Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles County coroner’s office
Credits: Sarah Ardalani, Megan Garvey, Thomas Suh Lauder, Maloy Moore, Anthony Pesce, Sandra Poindexter, Ken Schwencke, Doug Smith, Ben Welsh
In Case You Missed It…
Jan 152012
 

 

LOS ANGELES TIMES

HOMICIDE REPORT

 

 

Cause of death determinations: January to June 2011

Los Angeles County coroner’s officials routinely provide The Times with a weekly list of deaths initially considered to be homicides.

Reporters follow up with the department to obtain additional information about each case and, in some cases, learn that the victim’s cause of death has been deferred. This means the final determination on the mode of death is postponed pending additional laboratory tests. The death can later be ruled a homicide, suicide, natural or accident. The results usually are available within six to eight weeks.

The Homicide Report has followed up with the coroner’s office on about 30 deferred cases. Here are the findings in several cases from 2010 and the first six months of 2011::

Marilyn Villatoro, a 1-year-old Latina, died Feb. 10, 2010, two days after she was found unresponsive in Long Beach. The initial coroner’s report listed the child as going into cardiac arrest. However, the coroner’s office was unable to conclude the exact cause of death and it was ruled undetermined.

Russell Rathert, a 50-year-old man, was found dead Aug. 31, 2010, in Valley Village. Firefighters found a car engulfed in flames and discovered Rathert’s remains in a four-door-sedan. Coroner’s officials have since ruled the death as a homicide citing “affects of drugs and other unknown factors.”

Alois Nihswohl, an 84-year-old white man, was found dead at his home Sept. 1,2010, in El Sereno. Firefighters arrived at the ransacked residence to find Nihswohl dead. According to preliminary coroner’s records, he died from possible blunt-force trauma. Coroner’s officials have since ruled his death an accident stating he died from systemic heart disease.

Sue West, a 93-year-old white woman, was found dead at her home Dec. 18, 2010, in North Hollywood. Preliminary coroner’s records show West may have died from elder abuse. Although the coroner’s office conducted laboratory tests to establish the mode, her death was ultimately ruled as undetermined.

Joe Ward, a 67-year-old black man, died Dec. 22, 2010, after he was found in his home in Lynwood. Ward had signs of decubitus, or bed sores, all over his body, according to preliminary coroner’s records. Officials said he was taken to St. Francis Medical Center, where he died. Coroner’s officials said the case is still deferred.

Kenneth Cowan, a 42-year-old white man, died Wednesday, Jan. 5, four days after he was found unresponsive in his home in Palmdale. The night before he was discovered, Cowan celebrated New Year’s Eve with some friends. Authorities said during that time Cowan may have been involved in a fistfight and then went home. Coroner’s officials have determined he died from a blunt head injury and his death has been ruled a homicide.

Bich Truong, a 56-year-old Asian woman, died Sunday, Jan. 9, in Harbor City. Truong and her daughter Lisa Nguyen, a 27-year-old Asian woman, were found dead in the front of a residence. It was later revealed that the victims’ husband and father killed the two women before committing suicide. Coroner’s officials said Truong died from asphyxia by neck compression and her death was ruled a homicide.

Averon Fletcher, a 45-year-old black man, died Sunday, Feb. 13, after he was believed to have sustained trauma in Hawthorne. Preliminary coroner’s records revealed Fletcher had trauma to his right rib area and noted that he had been kicked several times. Despite the injuries, his death was ruled as undetermined.

Isiah Meza, a 3-year-old Latino, died Thursday, Feb. 17, in Elysian Valley. According to preliminary coroner’s records, Isiah was jumping on a bed when he was later found on the floor. The case was initially listed as deferred, however investigators have since placed a security hold on the case and the coroner’s office is unable to provide any further information about the child’s death.

Janet Hays, a 54-year-old white woman, died Sunday, Feb. 20, in Covina. Authorities received a call regarding a possible suicide at a convalescent home and found Hays dead. The coroner’s office said Hays did not commit suicide, but was killed. She died from asphyxia by neck compression and her death was ruled a homicide.

A man identified only as John Doe #3 was found dead Wednesday, March 9, in unincorporated West Covina. The body was discovered behind a field. The coroner’s office was unable to determine the age or race of the decedent since there were only skeletal remains. A cause of death was listed as undetermined.

Roy Thomas, a 54-year-old black man, died Thursday, March 24, in Historic South-Central. Thomas was found dead in a parked car with possible head trauma. The cause of death was initially deferred, but the coroner’s office has since determined Thomas died from liver cirrhosis and left ventricular hypertrophy, or an enlargement of the heart muscle. His death has been ruled as natural.

Harvey Dobbins, a 40-year-old black man, died Saturday, April 2, in Watts. Dobbins was discovered on the street with possible stab wounds. Authorities were called and he was pronounced dead at the scene. According to coroner’s records, Dobbins died from several factors including atherosclerotic heart disease, cocaine use and multiple sharp force injuries. His death was ruled a homicide.

Sergio Salazar, a 53-year-old Latino, died Monday, April 4, in Sylmar. Salazar, who critically wounded a Los Angeles police officer, was found dead inside his home. He had been barricaded inside for nearly a day as authorities fired tear gas and used a hydraulic forklift to rip open the house. His body was found on the second floor with a rifle at his side. At first it was unclear if Salazar sustained a self-inflicted gunshot wound or if he had been shot by an officer. The coroner’s office has since determined that the gunshot wound to the head was caused by authorities and the death was ruled a homicide.

Frederick Buzzell Jr., a 77-year-old white man, died Saturday, April 9, two days after he was taken from a hospital in Lake View Terrace. Coroner’s records show Buzzell’s body had “decubitus ulcers,” commonly known as bed sores, and his death may have been the result of elder abuse. The death has since been ruled as natural. The coroner’s office cited septic shock, as well multiple bacteria organisms as the cause of death.

Michelle Lozano, a 17-year-old Latina, was found dead Tuesday, April 26, near the southbound 5 Freeway at State Street and Cesar Chavez Avenue in Boyle Heights. A homeless person called police after finding Lozano’s nude body in a broken-open container in the brush. Investigators determined from evidence that Lozano had been wrapped in plastic bags and stuffed in the plastic container. Afterward, the container was dumped over a concrete barrier along the freeway. When it hit the ground, the container broke open and spilled Lozano’s body into the shrubs. The coroner’s office said Lozano died from asphyxia by strangulation and her death was ruled a homicide.

Xi Huang, an 82-year-old Asian woman, died Friday, April 29, in Monterey Park. Huang was found dead on the floor in the bathroom of her home. According to coroner’s records, Huang died from asphyxia by strangulation and her death was ruled a homicide.

Ernesto Castillo, a 38-year-old Latino, died Monday, May 9, 15 years after he was shot in Historic South-Central. It was initially believed Castillo died as a result of the gunshot injury. However it was later determined that his death was an accident. Castillo died from hyper-trophic heart disease, in conjunction with a drug overdose.

Dori Cassaday, a 49-year-old white woman, died Thursday, June 30, in Stevenson Ranch. Cassaday was found dead in her apartment by an exterminator. The coroner’s office said her death was a suicide. She killed herself through multiple drug intoxication.

 

Cause of death determinations: July to December 2011

Los Angeles County coroner’s officials routinely provide The Times with a weekly list of deaths initially considered to be homicides.

Reporters follow up with the department to obtain additional information about each case and, in some cases, learn that the victim’s cause of death has been deferred. This means the final determination on the mode of death is postponed pending additional laboratory tests. The death can later be ruled a homicide, suicide, natural or accident. The results usually are available within six to eight weeks.

The Homicide Report has followed up with the coroner’s office on about 30 deferred cases from 2010 and 2011. Here are their findings in cases in the final six months of 2011:

A man identified only as John Doe #86 was found dead Tuesday, July 5, in Lancaster. The skeletal remains were discovered behind a closed business after the Fourth of July weekend. Due to the state of the remains, investigators said they were unable to identify the victim or cause of death. The case was closed as undetermined.

Ralph Jimenez, a 65-year-old man, was found dead Friday, July 29, in Cypress Park. Firefighters responded to a report of a fire in an alley and discovered Jimenez’s burning body. According to coroner’s officials, they are still investigating the death and the case remains deferred.

Gorky Lopatinsky Sr., an 81-year-old white man, died Tuesday, Aug. 2, a day after he was assaulted in Boyle Heights. Lopatinsky was walking through Hollenbeck Park when he was attacked. Preliminary records show he died from blunt head trauma, but coroner’s officials have since determined that his death was the result of his falling and hitting his head. The death was deemed an accident.

John Bowles, a 50-year-old white man, died Tuesday, Aug. 9, three days after sustaining trauma in Palmdale. Bowles was taken to the hospital after falling from a car. It was initially believed that he may have been pushed out of the vehicle and sustained the fatal head trauma. The coroner’s office said it was unable to determine how Bowles fell out of the car and his death was listed as undetermined.

Keith Davis, a 45-year-old white man, died Wednesday, Aug. 10, in Northridge. Davis got into an altercation with two people when he suddenly collapsed and later died. According to coroner’s officials, Davis died from “excited delirium” that led to him going into cardiac arrest. Additionally, he was under methamphetamine intoxication. His death was ruled an accident.

Edward Forte, a 51-year-old white man, died Friday, Aug. 19, in Long Beach. Forte was found unresponsive at a board-and-care home and pronounced dead. According to the coroner’s office, Forte’s died of natural causes. He died from complications of a heart attack.

Yadira Ruiz, a 23-year-old Latina, was found dead Sunday, Aug. 28, in Mid-City. Ruiz was found unresponsive in her boyfriend’s parents’ house. There were no obvious signs of trauma to her body and the death may have been a suicide. The coroner’s office said that it was still investigating the case and the cause of death is pending.

Karla Brada, a 31-year-old white woman, died Thursday, Sept. 1, in Santa Clarita. Brada’s boyfriend said he found her unresponsive. She was pronounced dead at the scene by authorities. Coroner’s officials later determined that Brada died from asphyxia and her death was deemed a homicide.

Amparo Villanueva, a 97-year-old woman, died Monday, Nov. 7, in Long Beach. Villanueva was found living in an unsanitary and filthy environment with her elderly husband. The two were under the care of their adult sons. It was reported that Villanueva had numerous bedsores on her body, although it’s unclear why she died. The coroner’s office said the cause of death is pending.

 

Direct Link (Jan – Jun 2011):  http://projects.latimes.com/homicide/post/cause-death-determinations-january-june-2011/

 

Direct Link (Jul – Dec 2011):  http://projects.latimes.com/homicide/post/cause-death-determinations-july-december-2011/

 

Jan 032012
 

Los Angeles Police Arrest Suspect in Car Arsons

 

The New York Times

By ADAM NAGOURNEY

January 2, 2012

 

Dan Steinberg/Associated Press

An arson fire in the Sherman Oaks area of Los Angeles was one of dozens throughout the city over the last few days. A suspect was taken into custody around 3 a.m. Monday.

 

LOS ANGELES —

A four-day storm of arsons that caused more than $3 million in damage to cars and apartment buildings across Los Angeles led to an arrest early Monday morning after a reserve sheriff’s deputy, on patrol in the midst of another chaotic night of serial fires, recognized a man from a video surveillance tape released this week.

Gene Blevins/Reuters

The suspect, Harry Burkhart, 24, was spotted by a patrolling reserve sheriff’s deputy, who recognized him from surveillance footage of a parking lot that was released on Sunday.

Paul Buck/European Pressphoto Agency

Capt. Jaime Moore spoke about the arrest on Monday outside a fire station in Los Angeles.

 

The man, Harry Burkhart, 24, was taken into custody without incident around 3 a.m. on Sunset Boulevard on the outskirts of Hollywood, close to a drug store and a gas station. He was charged with arson around 6 a.m. and was being held without bail.

“A serial arsonist has, I believe, been caught,” Sheriff Lee Baca of Los Angeles County, standing in front of a bank of television cameras, said at a news conference attended by a parade of elected officials.

Sheriff Baca called the suspect “perhaps the most dangerous arsonist in the county of Los Angeles that I can recall.”

Chief Charlie Beck of Los Angeles Police Department said Mr. Burkhart was a German national; few additional details about the case would be provided for now, he added.

Chief Beck said he hoped that the suspect was acting alone, but he refused to rule out the possibility of other people being involved. “That is our huge concern at this exact moment,” Chief Beck said. “We have every hope that he did. But we do not know that yet.”

Search warrants were being executed at Mr. Burkhart’s house, Chief Beck said, and information from those searches would help officials determine how many people were involved in setting the fires.

Still other officials, including Mayor Antonio R. Villaraigosa, seemed more optimistic that this arrest would resolve the case. And they said that there had been no more fires after Mr. Burkhart, who was driving a van that contained some incendiary material, was taken into custody.

The arrest brought at least a temporary reprieve in an episode that dominated the New Year’s weekend here. The attacks began early Friday morning and continued the next three nights. In the end, 52 cars were set on fire. Since many of the cars were in carports or garages, a number of apartment buildings sustained serious damage as well.

The random attacks stirred anxiety in neighborhoods across the city. But there were no significant injuries in connection with the fires, the authorities said.

Mr. Burkhart’s arrest came after another chaotic night, as cars began exploding into flames after dusk. The streets were again flooded with police officers, detectives and fire investigators.

Chief Beck said the case would not have been solved without the release on Sunday of a videotape showing the suspect leaving a parking lot.

Shervin Lalezary, a reserve sheriff’s deputy who works for $1 a year, spotted the suspect and stopped him at Sunset Boulevard and Fairfax Avenue. He was introduced to considerable applause at the news conference on Monday evening as he described the stop. “As soon as I put on my lights and initiated a traffic stop of the suspect vehicle, I had an L.A.P.D. vehicle behind me ready to go,” he said.

For the next two hours, the area was roped off and police helicopters rumbled overhead.

Although the police declined to rule out the possibility of accomplices, they said two other men arrested last week and charged with arson in connection with fires set in the same area were not related to Mr. Burkhart or these latest attacks.

Chief Beck said officials would release only limited information while the investigation continues.

“This is an ongoing investigation,” he said. “Details about the suspect will not be released tonight. Many questions will go unanswered. That is not because the investigation is dormant.”