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.”

 

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Direct Link:

 

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.
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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
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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/

 

 

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.”

 

L.A.’s triumph over crime

More officers and better policing are among the key reasons L.A. is a much safer city today.

The graduation ceremony recruit officer class of October 2009.Across the nation, the homicide rate — the number of people killed per 100,000 population — increased from about four per 100,000 in the 1950s to about 10 in the early 1990s; since then, it has dropped to about 5.5. The decline in Los Angeles has been far greater: In 1993, the homicide rate was 30.5 per 100,000; this year, it’s on track to end at about six. (Los Angeles Times)

November 26, 2011

As families gather across Los Angeles and beyond, many will celebrate the holiday weekend with a joy they owe in part to this city’s historic triumph against crime. In the early 1990s, Los Angeles typically was the scene of more than 1,000 murders a year, a shocking toll that sapped the city’s self-confidence as it cut a devastating swath through neighborhoods, schools and, most tragically, families. It has become easy in recent years to expect crime to decline here, but it’s worth remembering how dangerous this city was compared with how safe it is.

As of mid-November this year, 254 men and women have been murdered in Los Angeles during 2011. That’s still a shocking number, but it means that some 800 families will enjoy this holiday without the shadow of murder. And that’s true year after year; those 800 families are merely those who escaped a tragedy in the last 12 months. Hundreds more would have suffered a loss in the previous year or years before, so the relief is as compounding as the tragedy once was.

That sea change in violence and its ramifications is part of a national trend, though the effects in Los Angeles have been particularly dramatic. Across the nation, the homicide rate — the number of people killed per 100,000 population — increased from about four per 100,000 in the 1950s to about 10 in the early 1990s; since then, it has dropped to about 5.5. The decline in Los Angeles has been far greater: In 1993, the homicide rate was 30.5 per 100,000; this year, it’s on track to end at about six. As city leaders like to note, not since Eisenhower was president has Los Angeles been this safe.

The reasons for this change have been widely studied, though not to a complete consensus. Social scientists have pointed to changing demographics — the aging of a youthful population that accounts for most violent crime — the waning popularity of crack, rising prison populations, gun control laws, even the legalization of abortion. The theory regarding abortion argues that unwanted children are disproportionately inclined to commit crimes, so limiting the number of such children also has had the effect of reducing crime. One provocative statistic: The decline in crime in high-propensity abortion states from 1985 to 1997 was 25.9%, while in low-propensity abortion states over the same period, crime increased 4.1%.

But two factors have commanded the most attention: the increased number of police officers, again nationally as well as in Los Angeles, and the adoption of new policing strategies, usually under the general definition of “community policing.” Both have been at work in Los Angeles for most of that period, and offer a persuasive rebuttal to social scientists who once doubted whether police had much to do with crime. Driven by improved statistical analysis and refined responses to crime trends — as well as renewed commitment to respect for constitutional rights — police are registering significant gains in systematically combating crime. Long and gratefully past are the days when chiefs such as Los Angeles’ Daryl F. Gates could argue that smaller, aggressive forces were in the public interest. Gates’ approach led to increased crime and public revulsion at police practices; the opposite has bolstered confidence in police and driven down crime. The impact of modern policing, both in numbers and in approach, is validated by the work of the LAPD in recent decades, as it is in New York and elsewhere. Today, few criminologists argue that police are irrelevant.

There is, in addition, a growing body of literature on the effects of this historic decline in crime, especially murder. For every crime there is a cost — property that is lost, medical bills to pay, work days missed and the more difficult-to-measure effects of psychological damage to survivors. One study by researchers at Iowa State University in 2010 concluded that the societal cost of a single murder — including the cost to victims, to the criminal justice system and to the lost productivity of offenders, as well as a complicated measure known as the “willingness to pay” to prevent murder — exceeds $17 million. By that calculation, the savings to Los Angeles of eliminating 800 murders a year since the early 1990s comes to more than $1.36 billion annually. As those researchers noted “In addition to the lives that are lost and shattered, murder also denotes extraordinary collateral fiscal costs.”

No family that has lost a relative to murder ever entirely recovers. The empty seat at Thanksgiving may be occupied, but the hole left by an absent son or daughter, a missing mother or father, never again is filled to the brim. This weekend in Los Angeles, 800 families enjoy a holiday that would have been barren by comparison had they lost a loved one this year to a murder. That is a social victory for which every resident of this city should be appreciative.

 

L.A. sheriffs reopen case of Natalie Wood’s mysterious death

Nov 18, 2011

By Natalie Abrams,

 

Natalie Wood‘s mysterious death may be finally explained: The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department announced Thursday that they will reopen the case of Wood’s death, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Article Video Link

“Recently sheriff’s homicide investigators were contacted by persons who stated they had additional information about the Natalie Wood Wagner drowning,” the department said in a statement. “Due to the additional information, Sheriff’s homicide bureau has decided to take another look at the case.”

Natalie Wood case should be reopened, her sister says

In Nov. 1981, Wood drowned off the coast of Catalina Island, which investigators ruled an accident. Back in 2010, Wood’s sister, Lana Wood, appeared on CNN and pleaded with authorities to re-open the case. Wood said she believed an argument between her sister and her husband, Robert Wagner, on the yacht’s back deck preceded her drowning.

As a child, Wood starred in Miracle on 34th Street and went on to make Rebel Without a Cause, Splendor in the Grass and West Side Story. She married Wagner in 1957. They divorced in 1962, then remarried in 1972. They often sailed their yacht off the coast of California. On the Thanksgiving weekend she drowned, they had invited Wood’s then co-star, Christopher Walken, to join them sailing.

Watch clips of Natalie Wood’s movies

Detective Duane Rasure, the sheriff’s lead investigator, has said the official theory is that Wood was awakened by the sound of the yacht’s dinghy hitting the side of the boat. Police believe she went to re-tie the dinghy but slipped on the boat’s swim step and fell into the water.

Wood was found wearing a long nightgown, socks, and a down jacket, according to police. Rasure told CNN he believes Wood was dragged underwater by her jacket. “She was such a little thing,” he said.

 

Direct Link: http://www.kpho.com/story/16073959/la-sheriffs-to-reopen-case-of-natalie-woods-mysterious-death

 

LASD Jail Probe: Chickens Come Home to Roost
Sheriff Lee Baca has not been taking care of business in his jails, and the eruption of numerous scandals threatens to tarnish his department’s reputation.
 by Dean Scoville
October 31, 2011

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department (my former agency) and the Los Angeles Police Department have historically tag-teamed their turns in the infamous limelight. Some cop will screw up, and the chief is called on the carpet; a deputy does something stupid and the sheriff is held to answer for it.

Regardless of who’s been at the helm of either agency, my reaction to their scandals has historically been one of ambivalence. That all-too-human part of me that enjoys the misfortune of otherwise privileged others—that human instinct that accounts for society’s intrigue with Lindsey Lohan’s shoplifting sprees, David Hasselhoff’s Heineken and hamburger diet, and Hugh Grant’s back alley courtships—always perks up when I’d see some honcho getting his ass chewed out.

Still, I’ve been objective enough to recognize that they are being held responsible for the transgressions of a relative few in their commands and that the vast majority of LASD and LAPD personnel are pretty good guys and gals.

As of late I am seeing something different, though. A series of simultaneous revelations calls into question just what kind of department L.A. County Sheriff Lee Baca is helming. These revelations include tales of custodians staging fights inside the jails, visitors being beaten absent sufficient provocation, deputies beating the crap out of one another, and no less than Baca’s own recent admission that he has basically been clueless as to what was happening in his jails, the largest custody system in the otherwise free world.

True, Baca’s mea culpa came with a mitigating excuse as he cited a lack of candor from his executives as a contributing factor to his living life as a mushroom. Perhaps there’s something to it; his predecessor Sherman Block was criticized for having been insulated from many a sordid truth, too. Yet one would have thought that Baca might have learned from Block’s example and taken protections against falling victim to it, particularly as his history of Machiavellian success elsewhere would have suggested as much.

It is quite possible that Baca did try to keep abreast of things, only to find his efforts undermined by another all-too-human factor-the fear of alienating one’s self from the marginal affections of el jefe. Face it, nobody wants to get caught playing Mr. Blackwell—the fashion critic-to the emperor with no clothes.

It’s disingenuous to believe that with so much innuendo in the air and allegations in the pipeline that nobody in the LASD brass didn’t know what was going on. I have heard through the grapevine that one man actually did try to do something about the jail problem while it was under his watch and he ended up getting punitively reassigned for it. I don’t even like the man in question, and was surprised to hear of the incident as it smacked of a rare political misstep. But I will readily give the man his due: On this matter, he apparently tried to do the right thing.

Unfortunately, he belatedly learned a lesson that those of political ambition generally learn early in their career: the value of prudence. While it might be great to embrace outdated notions such as “meritocracy” and “fair play,” to try and do things by the numbers and believe that people ultimately would want to hear the sometimes unpleasant truth if it would save them from some greater heartache down the line, life sometimes disabuses you of such fantasies. Left-wing country signer Kris Kristofferson might be full of crap on a lot of things, but he was dead right when he wrote: “The truth remains that no one wants to know.” (Is it any wonder that my candor has found pea-brained administrators vilifying me more than they would others who routinely betrayed their confidences and who disparaged them behind their back?)

Whatever the reasons for Baca’s problems—and no doubt they are myriad—schadenfreude (taking delight in the suffering of others) means that there’s a terrible temptation for me to jump on the beatdown bandwagon (but then, is there ever a better time to kick a man than when he’s down?).

Knowing that ideas such as installing audio and video monitors in Men’s Central Jail were laughed off when I proposed them two decades ago makes my temptation toward schadenfreude all the stronger as my prescience has since been vindicated. And the reason given back in the day for not installing such technology? Supervisors were fearful that their interactions with subordinates would be taped.

One would think that there’d be little to inhibit me from criticizing Baca and company (they’ve got bigger fish to fry). But I always ask myself if in condemning some act, might I not be making myself even more of a hypocrite than the average man is resigned to being? Moreover, in calling further attention to yet another LASD drama, might I unnecessarily be further diminishing the reputation of a once fine department?

These are legitimate questions, variations of which could probably be asked of anyone who makes assertions of others.

But for my part, there are two things that encourage my willingness to comment:

One, Baca has put himself in the position to have his actions commented upon; indeed the man has campaigned for the privilege, and not just once.

Two, while people may not want to know the truth, it is better to point out the ways things actually are than to color-code them as they are not. A momentary sense of discomfort can sometimes save a helluva lot of pain and anguish later.

Finally, I’ve never been shy about acknowledging my own screw-ups and parceling them out over the years. No doubt, more will follow, such is my lot as a cautionary parable for the politically aspirant. One might think it exhibitionist zeal that accounts for my fessing up on having screwed around on duty (in every sense of the word). But aside from time, I have never stolen anything on duty.

When it comes to committing moral infractions, sliding down that silicone-enhanced slippery slope of ethics, and violating the law and all its permutations, I suspect the day will soon come when technology will leave damn little doubt as to our individual and collective credibility. And when that day arrives and the prevaricators and controverts are culled from the herd, there will be little doubt as to who did or did not do what had been expected of them, and who knew what and when (are you listening Eric Holder?). Those who have acted responsibly will get the belated recognition due them, and a greater accountability will be made of others.

I can’t say I’m really looking forward to that day, as I am sure that there are any number of questions that could be asked of me that would leave me either making a categorical denial or invoking the fifth.

But I’ll tell you what: These days, when it comes to the prospect of volunteering myself for some cutting-edge lie detection technology, I’d feel pretty confident about going up against many of the LASD upper echelon and coming out looking pretty damn good by comparison.

In the meantime, we will have to take Baca at his word when he says he really didn’t know what was going on in the jails. If he was truly ignorant of the sordid incidents, then at least he should be savvy enough to recognize that confession is good for the soul.

And contrition is great for the polls.

Direct Link: http://www.policemag.com/Blog/Patrol-Tactics/Story/2011/10/LASD-s-Chickens-Come-Home-to-Roost.aspx

 

Criminal Cops: Foxes in the Chicken Coop?
Allegations against a Los Angeles County station captain could just be the tip of a very dirty iceberg.
September 15, 2011
by Dean Scoville

While the chronology of our careers within the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department overlapped, I don’t know Bernice Abram. The first time that the Carson Station captain registered on my radar was in a recent Los Angeles Times article detailing an operation in which federal agents heard a woman’s voice—allegedly Abram—discussing marijuana transactions with drug traffickers.

The sheer imagery of the scene is intriguing: Federal agents sitting around looking like so many dogs in those old RCA logos—heads canted, listening intently, more than a little curious as to what the hell they’re hearing, and hopefully incredulous of it. Once saddled with their concerns, these investigators brought them to the attention of LASD and Abram was placed on leave as of last April (the matter has only belatedly come to light after news media inquiries were made into it).

I’m sure that Abram would be pleased to know that I extend her the same benefit of the doubt that I would to, say, a “person of interest.” I mean, sometimes cops do screw up; that is, the cops doing the investigations. LAPD Chief Charlie Beck’s assertions regarding the arrest of Giovanni Ramirez for the beating of San Francisco Giants fan Bryan Stow certainly had me convinced they had a case: Where do I sign the booking slip? But Ramirez was later revealed to be innocent, at least of the Stow attack.

At the same time, I know that agencies tend to be even more cautious of the prospect of screwing up when it concerns one of their own. And face it, when you’re dealing with an African-American female captain, you’d better be damn sure that you have your ducks in a row, especially since you’ve already had millions of dollars in civil suits awarded against you.

Regardless of the merits of Abram’s case, there are few things more terrifying than the thought of a captain of a patrol station playing both sides of the fence. The question isn’t whether or not your captain had your best interests in mind but how far would he or she go to protect his or her criminal contacts?

That LASD may have a fox in its chicken coop hardly surprises me. It takes all kinds to do the job, and God knows Los Angeles County has a history of hiring and promoting them, a practice that found me working alongside people who turned out to be everything from embezzlers to murderers.

Such sociopathology is the stuff of convoluted plotlines and bad cop movies, only played out in real life. Stories of corruption at all levels of the department have made the rounds for years, with many regarded as open secrets among its personnel.

A curious sensation of schadenfreude has always found me locking onto those associated with certain members of the department’s upper echelon. The following is a quick and by no means complete list:

The female sergeant busted for pot who successfully had her prosecution shit-canned because she had videotapes of various administrative members in her bed.

The various chiefs and commanders responsible for felony DUIs and hit-and-runs.

The back door dealings of helicopter parts and stolen firearms.

The falsification of charges against a detective who went snooping into affairs deemed not to be of his concern (the department paid only about a million on that fiasco, a bargain given the particulars)
I am not one to minimize the implications of the above transgressions, but surely there is nothing worse than working on the front lines of narcotics interdiction and having a captain engaging in the trafficking of narcotics. Does a captain like that have your back? Or does that captain have your back zeroed in?

As a bleeding heart cop advocate, I’ve been taken to task for defending what some deem indefensible. Whether any remorse is warranted on those fronts is debatable. But I do know that I’d feel like a twerp if I failed to acknowledge the elephant in the room: To what extent have the cartels and their ilk gotten their talons into the sides of administrators, not only within LASD, but LAPD and elsewhere?

Maybe that’s a specious speculation. I hope it is. Maybe the culprit is something else—LASD’s promotional policies and practices (often NOT one and the same) and the hazards of quota-based promotions. I guess we in the peanut gallery will just have to wait and see.

At least we’re one up on Lady Justice on that score. But while she may be blind, I just hope that when it comes to Abram’s guilt or innocence and the taped evidence, that Justice isn’t deaf, too.

Direct Link: http://www.policemag.com/Blog/Patrol-Tactics/Story/2011/09/Foxes-in-the-Chicken-Coop.aspx

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