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Tag: officer

  • Officer uses chain to strangle man in solitary confinement as guards watch, lawsuit says

    Officer uses chain to strangle man in solitary confinement as guards watch, lawsuit says

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    A Georgia corrections officer strangled a pretrial detainee in solitary confinement and other officers watched, according to a federal lawsuit.

    A Georgia corrections officer strangled a pretrial detainee in solitary confinement and other officers watched, according to a federal lawsuit.

    Screengrab via Wukela Communications on YouTube

    Inside a solitary confinement jail cell in Georgia, a pretrial detainee restrained to a chair freed his right arm from a restraint.

    When he did, four Appling County Jail corrections officers entered Tremar Harris’ cell to secure him again on Jan. 29, 2022, according to a new federal lawsuit. That’s when one of them used a chain to strangle him, the suit says.

    Officer William Rentz wrapped an unused leg restraint around Harris’ neck and pulled it against his throat for about four seconds before letting go, according to a complaint filed April 16 in the Southern District of Georgia.

    The complaint includes a photo from jail surveillance footage showing the chain around Harris, who had his eyes closed and mouth open. Rentz is seen standing over him, holding the chain around his neck, according to the complaint. The photo shows three other officers looking down at Harris.

    As Rentz choked Harris, he’s accused of saying: “Gonna put you back in the cotton field with the other boys” in an apparent reference to slavery, according to the complaint.

    Meanwhile, corrections officers Daydan Brannon, Cannon Mcleod and Ansley Fennell watched and didn’t try to stop or report the “unlawful use of force,” the complaint says.

    Rentz was fired after the incident, according to the complaint. And the next month, he was arrested on charges of aggravated assault, violation of oath of office and one count of battery in connection with assaulting Harris as he was restrained, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation announced in February 2022.

    In March 2023, Rentz was indicted on charges of simple battery and violation of oath by a peace officer, according to the indictment provided to McClatchy News by Cheryl A. DiPrizio, the executive assistant for the Brunswick Judicial Circuit’s district attorney’s office.

    His criminal case is still pending, records show.

    Four months ago, Harris sued Rentz in federal court over the strangulation incident, accusing him of cruel and unusual punishment in violation of his constitutional rights, according to a complaint filed Jan. 19.

    Now, Harris’ latest lawsuit names Brannon, Mcleod and Fennell, who are all employed by the Appling County Sheriff’s Office, as defendants. He accuses them of also violating his rights by failing to intervene on Jan. 29, 2022.

    The Appling County Sheriff’s Office didn’t respond to a request for comment from McClatchy News on April 17. Information regarding Brannon, Mcleod and Fennell’s legal representation wasn’t available.

    Patrick T. O’Connor, an attorney defending Rentz in the civil case, told McClatchy News on April 17 that his client “did not choke Mr. Harris.”

    “Mr. Rentz never made the offensive comments falsely attributed to him,” O’Connor also said in an emailed statement.

    Harris’ most recent lawsuit says he feared he could potentially die as Rentz choked him.

    At the time, Harris was detained at the Appling County Jail on a misdemeanor charge, specifically possession of a drug related object, his attorney Harry M. Daniels told McClatchy News.

    In jail, Rentz is also accused of “excessively” shocking Harris inside his cell with a “shock shield” that delivers electrical shocks, according to the complaint.

    Rentz did so hours before strangling Harris, according to the separate complaint filed against Rentz in January.

    After Harris was repeatedly shocked, he was restrained in the restraint chair and left alone in his cell for hours, the complaint says.

    The status of the criminal case

    In December, Rentz pleaded not guilty to the charges against him in the criminal case in Appling County Superior Court, records show.

    He was due in court for a calendar call on April 2, according to court records.

    This “is often the last court date before jury selection at trial,” according to the Turner Law Firm in Savannah.

    McClatchy News contacted defense attorneys representing Rentz in the criminal case for comment and didn’t receive an immediate response.

    It’s unclear when Rentz is due back in Superior Court.

    As for Brannon, Mcleod and Fennell, Harris’ lawsuit says “they had the ability, opportunity, skill and time to prevent and immediately stop Officer Rentz from strangling (Harris).”

    “Instead of doing their jobs stopping this unlawful, hateful and sadistic act, they chose to stand and watch as their fellow officer tortured a fellow human being,” Daniels said in an April 17 news release.

    Julia Marnin is a McClatchy National Real-Time reporter covering the southeast and northeast while based in New York. She’s an alumna of The College of New Jersey and joined McClatchy in 2021. Previously, she’s written for Newsweek, Modern Luxury, Gannett and more.

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    Julia Marnin

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  • Sheriff: AR-15 was used to kill deputy and officer in Salina

    Sheriff: AR-15 was used to kill deputy and officer in Salina

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    SYRACUSE, N.Y. (WSYR-TV) — The death of two law enforcement officers has shaken the community, and will be felt for, “Days, weeks, months and years,” said Syracuse Police Chief Joe Cecile.

    A briefing was held on Monday, April 15, about the Sunday, April 14, shooting that killed Syracuse Police Officer Michael Jenson and Onondaga Sheriff’s Lieutenant Michael Hoosock.

    The Syracuse Police Department, Onondaga County Sheriff’s Office, Mayor Ben Walsh, Onondaga County Executive Ryan McMahon and President of the Syracuse Police Benevolent Association, Joe Muran, were all in attendance.

    “More than just remembering them, we will honor them,” said Chief Cecile about the fallen heroes.

    The incident happened around 7 p.m. on Sunday when Officer Jensen and another officer observed a gray Honda Civic in Tipperary Hill that they deemed suspicious.

    They attempted a traffic stop, but the suspect, 33-year-old Christopher R. Murphy of Salina, fled. Cecile says Murphy was going at speeds of over 100 mph.

    Officer Jensen and his partner used Murphy’s plate and registration to track him to a home on Darien Drive in Salina.

    When they arrived at the home, they were greeted by the Onondaga County Sheriff’s Office and Lieutenant Deputy Michael Hoosock.

    They were all inspecting the vehicle when they heard, “A gun being manipulated,” according to Cecile.

    That gun was Murphy’s AR-15, a semi-automatic firearm.

    Hoosock went behind a maple tree in a neighbor’s yard to take cover when he was “Ambushed,” said Shelley. Murphy began shooting at the officers from his back deck, which is where he killed Hoosock.

    He then moved to the front yard, where he shot and killed Officer Jensen, and it was after that officers shot and killed Murphy.

    “This is something you can never prepare for,” explained Onondaga County Sheriff Toby Shelley

    “Two of our brothers gave the ultimate sacrifice,” said Shelley.

    Officer Michael Jensen of the Syracuse Police Department had served for over two years.

    Jensen thought he was going to do what he signed up for which was to enforce the law, but, “Unfortunately an evil demon took him away,” said Muran.

    According to Cecile, Jensen quickly made a difference in the environment around him.

    Syracuse Police Officer, Michael Jenson 

    Lieutenant Deputy Michael Hoosock joined the Onondaga County Sheriff’s Office in 2007. He was a Watch Commander, a Bomb Squad Commander and a recipient of commendations and medals, including the Medal of Valor in 2020.

    On top of that, he was part of the Critical Emergency Management Department, a Field Director for fire service and a volunteer firefighter at the Moyers Corner Fire Department.

    Lieutenant Hoosock leaves behind a wife, and three children, ages three, five and seven.

    Onondaga County Sheriff’s Lieutenant, Michael Hoosock.

    Syracuse Mayor Walsh thanked first responders and hospital staff who were, “Nothing short of heroic.”

    At the emergency room after the incident, over 100 officers and deputies showed up to honor the fallen. Muran said you could hear a pin drop.

    “We have officers in this room right now that are grieving. We have officers that are in their homes right now that are grieving. We have officers out on the streets continuing to protect them while they’re grieving. Please wrap your arms around them and lift them up,” said Walsh.

    Onondaga County District Attorney Bill Fitzpatrick says they are working on the what right now.

    “Who fired what, where were they, who actually killed Murphy, we already know who killed Hoosock and Jensen,” said Fitzpatrick.

    Their next step is to find out the why.

    “How does a guy go from DEFCON 5 to DEFCON 1 over a bunch of traffic tickets,” explained Fitzpatrick.

    Fitzpatrick says that Murphy warned his friend to get out of the house, leading police to believe this incident wasn’t spontaneous, but rather that he was looking to kill cops.

    The sheriff’s office also took a man named Shawn Kinsella into custody, who they say is a friend of Murphy’s. No charges have been filed at this time.

    Watch the full press conference in the media player below.

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    Megan Hatch

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  • San Francisco man arrested after allegedly vandalizing mosque, leaving community ‘living in fear’

    San Francisco man arrested after allegedly vandalizing mosque, leaving community ‘living in fear’

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    A San Francisco man suspected of vandalizing a Nob Hill mosque was arrested Wednesday evening while visiting the scene of his alleged crime for the second time in as many days.

    San Francisco resident Robert Gray, 35, was booked on one felony count of vandalism with damage of more than $400 and a misdemeanor violation of civil rights by damaging another property. He currently sits in a county jail.

    Neither Gray nor a representative were reached for comment.

    San Francisco Police officers responded to a call from congregants of Masjid al-Tawheed mosque around 7:55 p.m. on Wednesday. Mosque-goers told police that Gray was the man who had vandalized their sanctuary on April 4, having recognized him for security footage.

    Arriving officers detained Gray after they concluded he matched the description of the suspect wanted in the attack.

    “Through the course of their investigation, officers developed probable cause [for] arrest,” Police spokesperson Paulina Henderson said in a statement.

    Henderson said the investigation was still active and police were looking for more information.

    Surveillance video obtained by the San Francisco Standard shows a man with a skateboard smashing multiple mosque windows on April 4.

    The man returned to the mosque, according to the Standard, on Tuesday and Wednesday. During the latter incident, mosque congregants confronted Gray and distracted him long enough to call police, who arrived in time to arrest him.

    “Community members were living in fear for the last two weeks,” said Yemeni American Aseel Fara, 24, a Masjid al-Tawheed mosque member and a San Francisco Immigrant Rights Commissioner.

    Fara said the incident shocked many community members who emigrated to San Francisco because of its pluralistic society.

    He said he received a call from another Bay Area mosque that suffered similar vandalism incident wanting to review surveillance footage to see if Gray was involved.

    “You don’t expect this here,” he said. “This has been very divisive and hopefully we can begin to heal thanks to this arrest.”

    The news of Gray’s arrest was celebrated by the Council on American-Islamic Relations Bay Area chapter.

    “We are relieved that an arrest has been made in these distressing incidents,” CAIR Bay Area Executive Director Zahra Billoo said in a statement. “It’s important for our community to see tangible actions being taken to protect our places of worship, where everyone has the right to feel safe and secure.”

    Billoo said that the number of complaints of Islamophobia made nationwide is at a 30-year high.

    There were 8,061 reports received by CAIR last year. The organization said nearly half of those complaints took place in the last three months since the Oct. 7 Hamas’ assault on Israel that sparked a war, resulting in the killing of 30,000-plus Palestinians by Israeli forces. That number of Islamophobic complaints represents a 56% increase in incidents from 2022 to 2023, according to the organization.

    “This arrest sends a clear message that hate-driven behaviors will not be overlooked and serves as a reminder of the ongoing challenges we face in combating Islamophobia,” Billoo said.

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    Andrew J. Campa

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  • Officer Hired As Sheriff’s Deputy Despite Involvement In Fatal Manuel Ellis Arrest Resigns – KXL

    Officer Hired As Sheriff’s Deputy Despite Involvement In Fatal Manuel Ellis Arrest Resigns – KXL

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    SEATTLE (AP) — A former Tacoma police officer who was hired as a sheriff’s deputy in a neighboring county — despite his involvement in the violent fatal arrest of Manuel Ellis in 2020 — has resigned his new job after just two days.

    Thurston County Sheriff Derek Sanders said in a written statement Wednesday that he failed to anticipate the community’s strong objections to the hiring of Deputy Christopher Burbank, which Sanders said included death threats to Burbank’s family. Burbank resigned effective immediately, Sanders said.

    Burbank and two other officers — Timothy Rankine and Matthew Collins — were each cleared of criminal charges by a Pierce County jury last December in the death of Ellis, an unarmed Black man who was shocked, beaten and hog-tied facedown on a sidewalk as he pleaded for breath.

    Rankine was charged with manslaughter, while Collins and Burbank were charged with manslaughter and second-degree murder. Their attorneys argued that Ellis died from a lethal amount of methamphetamine as well as a heart condition, not from the officers’ actions. The Pierce County Medical Examiner ruled the death a homicide and said it was caused by a lack of oxygen during the physical restraint.

    The U.S. attorney’s office in Seattle is still investigating and could bring prosecutions for federal civil rights violations. A wrongful death lawsuit against Tacoma is pending.

    “When I made the decision to hire Deputy Burbank, I failed to consider the greater community impact and instead made the decision based on business needs to remedy TCSO’s staffing crisis,” Sanders wrote. “Furthermore, I entirely misjudged community perception on the investigation and jury process that Deputy Burbank completed. I recognize the harm this has caused to marginalized communities, and I was wrong.”

    Among those who criticized the hiring decision was Matthew Ericksen, an attorney for Ellis’ family, who said in an email Tuesday he would be scared if he lived in Thurston County. He noted that video evidence showed Burbank using his Taser on Ellis three times, including while another officer was choking him.

    On Wednesday, Ericksen said the family was relieved Burbank had resigned. Between the outpouring of criticism over the hiring and the Washington Legislature’s decision this year to bar police from hog-tying suspects — a legal change made in response to Ellis’ death — the family has more faith that he won’t be forgotten, Ericksen said.

    “It’s obvious that the public still remembers Manny and the horrific things that happened to him,” Ericksen said. “Manny’s death was 100% preventable, and the people of Washington know it.”

    Like many law enforcement agencies nationwide, the Thurston County Sheriff’s Office has struggled with understaffing; the Facebook post announcing the hire noted that Burbank would “provide immediate relief in our patrol division.”

    The sheriff responded to criticism of the hire on Tuesday by saying Burbank had undergone a two-month background check, including a polygraph. Sanders stressed that his office has strived to improve its crisis response by incorporating mental health co-responders, adding that dashboard and body-worn cameras help provide transparency.

    But by Wednesday it became clear that the hiring wasn’t going to work out, and Sanders apologized.

    “Trust is gained in drops and lost in buckets,” he wrote. “For those who have lost confidence in me, or what we’re trying to accomplish at TCSO, I apologize for letting you down.”

    Ellis, 33, was walking home with doughnuts from a 7-Eleven in Tacoma, about 30 miles (50 kilometers) south of Seattle, on March 3, 2020, when he passed a patrol car stopped at a red light, with Collins and Burbank inside.

    The officers claimed they saw Ellis try to open the door of a passing car at the intersection, and he became aggressive when they tried to question him about it. Collins testified that Ellis demonstrated “superhuman strength” by lifting Collins off the ground and throwing him through the air.

    But three witnesses testified they saw no such thing. After what appeared to be a brief conversation between Ellis and the officers — who are both white — Burbank, in the passenger seat, threw open his door, knocking Ellis down, they said. Rankine, who arrived after Ellis was already handcuffed face-down, knelt on his upper back.

    The witnesses — one of whom yelled for the officers to stop attacking Ellis — and a doorbell surveillance camera captured video of parts of the encounter. The video showed Ellis with his hands up in a surrender position as Burbank shot a Taser at his chest and Collins wrapped an arm around his neck from behind.

    His death came nearly three months before George Floyd’s murder at the hands of Minneapolis police would spark an international outcry against police brutality.

    The Tacoma Police Department found that the officers did not violate its use-of-force policy as it was then written — it had been subsequently updated — and the three officers were each paid $500,000 to resign.

    Pierce County, which is home to Tacoma, settled its portion of a federal wrongful death lawsuit brought by the family for $4 million. The case is still pending against the city.

    The trial was the first under a five-year-old state law designed to make it easier to prosecute police accused of wrongfully using deadly force.

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    Grant McHill

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  • Sheriff’s deputies fatally shoot man who they say drove van toward officers in East L.A.

    Sheriff’s deputies fatally shoot man who they say drove van toward officers in East L.A.

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    Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies shot and killed a man late Saturday in East Los Angeles after he allegedly drove a van toward one of the officers after fleeing the scene of a crime, authorities said.

    Deputies responded to a domestic assault call shortly before midnight in the 1500 block of North Herbert Avenue, according to the sheriff’s department.

    Deputies saw the alleged assailant leave the area in a green van, according to the department.

    They found the man driving west on the 3900 block of Snow Drive and tried to stop the van, officials said. The deputies got out of their vehicle and drew their guns. The man made a U-turn in a cul-de-sac and then started driving toward one of the deputies, according to the sheriff’s department.

    The driver was shot in the torso, about 11:47 p.m. The sheriff’s department did not immediately report how many deputies shot the man or how many times he was shot.

    The unidentified man, reported to be between 40 to 45, was taken to a hospital, where he died, officials said.

    A deputy was taken to a hospital and treated for a related injury. No one else was injured.

    As of late Sunday morning, the sheriff’s department had not released the name of the man or further details surrounding the shooting.

    This is a breaking news story based on preliminary information provided by law enforcement. It will be updated if more information becomes immediately available.

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    Jaclyn Cosgrove

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  • Jurors award $11.5 million to former LAPD K9 handler who claimed discrimination over Samoan heritage

    Jurors award $11.5 million to former LAPD K9 handler who claimed discrimination over Samoan heritage

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    A jury this week awarded $11.5 million to a former Los Angeles police K-9 handler who sued the city alleging that his supervisors retaliated and discriminated against him in part because of his Samoan ancestry.

    The officer, Mark Sauvao — pronounced “su-VOW” — alleged he was unfairly punished after he reported some of his colleagues had called him names such as “cannibal” and “barefoot coconut tree-climber.” One supervisor also reportedly referred to him as being Tongan; Sauvao took the comment as an affront given the bitter early history of war and enslavement between Samoa and Tonga.

    Sauvao, who is still with the department, also alleged that officers spread false rumors that he tried extorting fellow K-9 handlers by refusing to train them unless they gave him their overtime hours.

    The city can still challenge the size of the jury award.

    From 2005 to 2017, Sauvao was assigned to the department’s elite bomb detection K-9 unit. The 30-year LAPD veteran said his troubles began several years after his promotion to dog trainer, which came with extra pay and benefits.

    After learning of the rumors about him, Sauvao said, he demanded that the unit’s commander, Lt. Raymond Garvin, intervene and launch an investigation into the officers spreading them. Neither happened, he alleged.

    Another colleague testified in a deposition that Garvin relayed the overtime allegations against Sauvao to other officers at a roll call held at a nearby bagel shop. Someone in the group accused Sauvao of being the “ringleader” of a faction within the K-9 unit that called itself the “P.M.-Watch Mafia,” according to the testimony. Sauvao denies these claims.

    Garvin previously filed his own lawsuit against the city alleging that a department higher-up conspired to kick him out of the unit, which led to a $700,000 settlement.

    Sauvao said he eventually brought the matter up to Capt. Kathryn Meek of the Emergency Services Division, which oversees the K-9 unit and the bomb squad. Instead of investigating his reports, Sauvao said, internal affairs detectives showed up to search his locker several months later, which he believed was in retaliation for making his earlier complaints.

    Sauvao said his request to contact a police union representative after the search was denied.

    He was later ordered to undergo psychiatric testing and eventually transferred to a less desirable assignment that caused him to be separated from his police K-9 named Pistol, according to the lawsuit.

    Sauvao’s attorney, Matthew McNicholas, said the award was the latest he has won in cases involving members of that K-9 unit. Two other cases from around 2008 led to jury awards of $3.6 million and $2.2 million, respectively, he said. That the same unit continues to have problems 15 years later suggests a lack of oversight, he said.

    “It tells me that command continues to do what it wants and that unless somebody like me digs in, they get away with it,” McNicholas said. “Ninety-eight percent of the department are hard-working people that just go to work, do their jobs and go home; the unfortunate thing is that the other 2% have a lot of power.”

    The city attorney’s office didn’t immediately respond to an email seeking comment, and an LAPD spokeswoman said the department would not discuss the case.

    Sauvao’s claims were similar to those of another K-9 handler who worked in the unit at the time, Alfredo Franco, who also sued the city for discrimination and retaliation he reportedly faced after standing up for Sauvao.

    Several of Sauvao’s former colleagues testified on his benefit in depositions filed in the case, with one saying he had an “unblemished” reputation and another describing the respect he commanded within the niche community of police K-9 trainers nationally.

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    Libor Jany

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  • A man who went into a Wells Fargo and said he had explosives is shot by officer, police say

    A man who went into a Wells Fargo and said he had explosives is shot by officer, police say

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    An ordeal at a Fullerton Wells Fargo bank on Tuesday evening began with a possible robbery attempt in which a man threatened witnesses with an “explosive device” and ended when police shot the individual outside the bank’s doors, according to law enforcement officials.

    In a statement on social media, the Fullerton Police Department said officers responded to reports of a possible bank robbery in the 100 block of West Bastanchury Road around 5:09 p.m. and began evacuating employees.

    The Orange County sheriff’s bomb squad also responded to the scene.

    “While inside the bank, witnesses stated the suspect produced what appeared to be an explosive device. Upon exiting the bank, an officer involved shooting occurred,” the department wrote.

    Police spokesperson Kristy Wells declined to provide additional details on the incident, citing an ongoing investigation.

    It is unclear whether the suspect was killed, though CBS News reported the unidentified suspect died at the scene.

    KTLA reported that the suspect was shot after exiting the bank, and that officers then sent in a robot and drone to investigate items surrounding the unresponsive suspect.

    No employees or officers were injured, the Police Department said.

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    Hannah Wiley

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  • Funeral for NY National Guard member killed in border helicopter crash

    Funeral for NY National Guard member killed in border helicopter crash

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    SCHUYLERVILLE, N.Y. (NEWS10) — Friday was a full day of events that culminated in mourners saying goodbye to Chief Warrant Officer 2 Casey Frankoski at Saratoga National Cemetery in Schuylerville. Frankoski was killed in a helicopter crash on March 8 in Texas.

    The day started with a funeral mass at Saint John the Evangelist and Saint Joseph’s Church in Rensselaer. More remembrance took place at the cemetery with a 21-gun salute, a policeman playing taps on trumpet, and a helicopter flyover.

    Frankoski had many ties to the Capital Region. She was born in Albany. She graduated from Columbia High School in 2013 and earned her associate degree in social science from SUNY Schenectady.

    Frankoski enlisted in the Army National Guard in 2016. She became a Chief Warrant Officer in 2019. The same year, she was deployed to Kuwait. And then in 2021, she was promoted to Chief Warrant Officer 2.

    In lieu of flowers, the departed’s family is requesting donations to a scholarship fund in her name. 

    A second New York Guardsman, John Grassia, of Schenectady, was also killed in the crash. A third member, Jacob Pratt, was severely injured and continues to recover in a Texas hospital. The cause for the crash remains under investigation.

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    Zion Decoteau

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  • LAPD officer kept shooting after suspect was down, but court says law protects her

    LAPD officer kept shooting after suspect was down, but court says law protects her

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    Ruling on one of the most controversial and closely watched LAPD shootings in recent years, a federal appellate court said Thursday that the legal doctrine of qualified immunity protects officer Toni McBride from federal claims in the fatal 2020 shooting of Daniel Hernandez.

    McBride is shielded by the law regardless of whether she used excessive force when shooting Hernandez six times, the last two when he was already badly wounded and on the ground, the court said.

    “[A]lthough a reasonable jury could find that the force employed by McBride was excessive, she is nonetheless entitled to qualified immunity,” Judge Daniel P. Collins wrote for the unanimous three-judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

    McBride shot Hernandez after she and other officers arrived at a chaotic scene where Hernandez, on methamphetamine, had crashed his truck into multiple other vehicles and was brandishing a box cutter — which he refused to put down as he walked toward the officers, despite their commands for him to do so.

    McBride fired in three volleys of two shots each — all in less than seven seconds. She fired the first volley as Hernandez advanced toward her, making him fall to the ground; the second as he got back to his hands and knees; and the third as he rolled on the ground.

    McBride was cleared of any criminal wrongdoing, but the Hernandez family sued in civil court, seeking damages based on the claim that McBride’s actions had violated Hernandez’s rights.

    Collins, an appointee of then-President Trump, wrote that the family’s claims lacked a “pre-existing precedent” that made it clear that McBride’s actions violated established law. Without a previous case to reference “that squarely governs the factual scenario” of Hernandez’s shooting, Collins wrote, McBride could not be held liable.

    The decision — in which Collins was joined by Judge Milan D. Smith Jr., a President George W. Bush appointee, and Judge Kenneth K. Lee, another Trump appointee — upheld an earlier dismissal of the federal claims by a lower court.

    Separately, the appellate panel reversed the lower court on the question of whether Hernandez’s family has potentially viable claims of assault, wrongful death and civil rights violations under California law. The lower court had also rejected those claims, but the appellate panel found they could proceed because the final set of shots that McBride fired at Hernandez could be deemed excessive by a reasonable state jury.

    “Because the reasonableness of McBride’s final volley of shots presented a question for a trier of fact, the district court erred in dismissing these state law claims based on its determination that McBride’s use of force was reasonable,” Collins wrote.

    The ruling will result in a new state case in Los Angeles County Superior Court. In federal court, it further cements qualified immunity across the American West as a powerful shield for police officers who have been accused of excessive force — even when, like McBride, they have been found to have violated police department policies.

    Narine Mkrtchyan, an attorney for Hernandez’s now 18-year-old daughter Melanie, said the ruling was a “half victory” for her client given that it preserved her state claims, but a “dangerous” precedent for future excessive force cases overall.

    “The judges are really, really tightening on qualified immunity,” she said. “It’s very disheartening. I’m very concerned, seriously, about our civil rights.”

    Arnoldo Casillas, an attorney for other Hernandez family members and Hernandez’s estate, said the ruling showed qualified immunity is a “sham for negligent cops,” but that he looks forward to pursuing justice for Hernandez’s family in state court.

    McBride’s father, Jamie McBride, a prominent leader of the Los Angeles Police Protective League, the union that represents rank-and-file LAPD officers, said, “anybody with any type of police experience” knows that his daughter’s shooting of Hernandez was completely justified.

    He praised her actions and rejected the finding of the Los Angeles Police Commission that she had violated department policy not with the first four shots, but with her final two. An independent forensic pathologist retained by Hernandez’s family theorized it was those last shots that killed Hernandez.

    McBride noted that Hernandez was on drugs and had ignored police commands.

    “You can’t fix stupid,” he said, of Hernandez’s actions.

    McBride said his daughter would not be commenting on the latest court decision. The LAPD also declined to comment. Attorneys representing the younger McBride and the city did not respond to a request for comment.

    McBride, a social media influencer and “Top Shot” police academy graduate who touts her prowess with firearms in online videos from shooting ranges, shot Hernandez on April 22, 2020 — about a month before George Floyd was killed by a Minneapolis police officer. The Hernandez shooting sparked protests in L.A. and became one of many cases cited by activists at the larger demonstrations in the months that followed.

    The incident was captured by McBride’s body camera and by witnesses with smartphones.

    Then-Chief Michel Moore defended McBride’s actions, but the civilian Police Commission ruled in December 2020 that her last two shots violated department policy. California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta’s office later sided with Moore and cleared McBride of wrongdoing.

    The appellate panel on Monday found that McBride’s first two volleys of shots were justified, but that the final two shots “present a much closer question” — and could be interpreted differently by reasonable jurors.

    That wasn’t enough to clear McBride’s qualified immunity protections in federal court, the panel ruled, but was enough to justify another look in state court, where qualified immunity doesn’t apply.

    Joanna Schwartz, a UCLA law professor, said it was “precisely the kind of case that should be decided by a jury,” given the dispute over the final shots.

    And yet, “what qualified immunity did in this case,” Schwartz said, was remove that decision from a federal jury, even “after the judges had concluded that a reasonable jury could have found that this conduct was unconstitutional.”

    Schwartz said the decision was “emblematic” of two major problems with qualified immunity.

    First is the idea that, to get around it, the Hernandez family would have had to put forward a previous case in which a court had ruled that another officer’s actions in a “virtually identical” set of circumstances were unconstitutional, Schwartz said.

    “Those prior cases are hard to find simply because the same things don’t happen in precisely the same ways,” Schwartz said.

    Second is the notion that such a prior decision would have served as a warning for McBride and other officers.

    That is absurd, Schwartz said, because it “bears no relationship to how officers are actually trained.”

    “They don’t read hundreds or thousands of cases and then recall the facts and holdings of those cases while they are doing their jobs,” she said. “Officers are trained about the general contours of the law — like the notion that you are not supposed to use deadly force against a person who is not a threat.”

    It is that concept that McBride’s actions should be judged against, Schwartz said, not the “illogical” construct of qualified immunity.

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    Kevin Rector

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  • Man in critical condition after being shot by police in South Los Angeles

    Man in critical condition after being shot by police in South Los Angeles

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    A man whom police shot after he allegedly pointed a weapon at officers in South Los Angeles was hospitalized in critical condition, the Los Angeles Police Department announced Saturday night.

    Just before 1 p.m. Thursday, police got a radio call for a possible assault with a deadly weapon near 54th Street and Manhattan Place after a man reportedly pointed a handgun at an unidentified person.

    Officers from the LAPD’s 77th Street Community Police Station were responding to an unrelated radio call about three blocks west, near 54th Street and Gramercy Place, when they saw a man walking in Chesterfield Square Park and “recognized him as the possible suspect” of the assault with a deadly weapon call, the department said in a statement.

    The LAPD identified him as Jose Robles.

    When officers spoke to Robles, he “did not comply with officers’ commands to drop the handgun he was holding” and pointed it at them, the statement reads.

    Police shot Robles, who “dropped the handgun, and fell to the ground,” the statement reads. He had multiple wounds.

    Paramedics took Robles to a local hospital. No one else was injured.

    A BB gun with a removable magazine was recovered at the scene, according to the LAPD statement, which said it had “the appearance of a semi-automatic pistol.”

    The department’s Force Investigation Division is investigating the shooting. No further details were provided.

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    Hailey Branson-Potts

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  • Mayor Karen Bass’ plan for rebuilding the size of the LAPD has fallen short so far

    Mayor Karen Bass’ plan for rebuilding the size of the LAPD has fallen short so far

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    When Mayor Karen Bass laid out her budget proposal for the Los Angeles Police Department last year, she had big plans for rebuilding the size of that agency’s workforce.

    The mayor’s budget called for the LAPD to end the 2023-24 budget year with about 9,500 police officers — a target that would require the hiring of nearly 1,000 officers over a 12-month period.

    Now, a new assessment from City Administrative Officer Matt Szabo — the city’s top budget analyst — shows the department is falling well short of its staffing goal. By June 30, the end of the fiscal year, the department is expected to have 8,908 officers, according to Szabo’s projections.

    That would leave the LAPD with its lowest sworn staffing levels in over two decades.

    Szabo’s report, issued Tuesday, is likely to fuel calls for the council to scale back the LAPD’s hiring goal. Even before it was released, some at City Hall had begun arguing that the annual budget calls for hundreds of officer positions that have little to no chance of being filled.

    “I do not think 9,500 is realistic,” Councilmember Hugo Soto-Martínez said Wednesday. “We can’t be in denial about this. It is not realistic. And the reason it’s not realistic is because … people who are entering the workforce do not want to be police officers.”

    Soto-Martínez has long argued for the idea of shifting certain duties out of the LAPD and into agencies with unarmed responders. He asked for the LAPD’s 12-month hiring projections last month, just as the council began the process of cutting an as-yet-unknown number of civilian city positions — part of a larger effort at reining in a budget shortfall.

    Meanwhile, police staffing is continuing its year-to-year slide.

    The LAPD had about 10,000 officers in 2019, the last full year before COVID-19. In June 2020, not long after the murder of George Floyd, the City Council voted to scale back the deployment to about 9,750.

    Bass took office in 2022. By the time her first budget went into effect, the number of officers had fallen to 9,027. In an attempt to reverse those trends, she negotiated a four-year package of pay increases and higher starting salaries.

    That deal, approved in August, is now a major contributor to the city’s budget shortfall, which could reach as much as $400 million in the coming fiscal year.

    De’Marcus Finnell, a spokesperson for Bass, said Wednesday that the salary agreement with the police officers’ union is producing results, helping to spur recruitment and lower attrition.

    “According to conversations with LAPD, retirement rates could’ve been much higher if we hadn’t taken the action we did,” Finnell said in an email.

    Councilmember Nithya Raman, who voted against the salary agreement last year, has been offering a different assessment, calling the police contract financially irresponsible. Raman, now running for reelection with support from the mayor, has repeatedly warned that the police raises will leave the city with insufficient funds for other government programs.

    “I thought that the size of the raise would be so much that it would create significant budget deficits going forward,” she told an audience last month, adding: “So far, the data has proven me correct.”

    Others on the council say they still support the police raises.

    Councilmember Katy Yaroslavsky, in an interview, said attrition has “slowed significantly” at the LAPD since the contract was approved. The contract, she said, is “doing what we needed it to do.”

    Bass, as part of her budget, had been hoping to hire 780 new officers during the current fiscal year. She also had been looking to bring 200 retirees back to the department.

    So far, only 15 retirees have come back, Szabo said.

    The decrease in LAPD staffing is producing at least one benefit — cutting costs in the city budget.

    The city’s financial analysts are currently projecting an $82-million shortfall in the LAPD’s sworn salary account this year. Had the department had been successful in reaching the mayor’s hiring goals, that number would have grown to more than $118 million, Szabo said in his report.

    Meanwhile, some categories of crime continue to fall.

    Homicides have decreased by nearly 6% compared with the prior year, according to LAPD figures covering the period ending Jan. 27. Burglaries decreased by nearly 7% over the same time frame.

    Other types of crime are on the rise. Assaults have gone up by 12% compared to the same period last year, according to LAPD figures. The number of shooting victims is up 29% so far this year.

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    David Zahniser

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  • VIDEO: ‘I’ll kill you. Put the gun down,’ Arlington cop says before shooting armed driver

    VIDEO: ‘I’ll kill you. Put the gun down,’ Arlington cop says before shooting armed driver

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    An Arlington officer who killed an armed driver police said failed to comply with orders during a traffic stop on Interstate 20 shot the man three times and yelled “I’ll kill you,” according to bodycam footage Arlington police released in a news conference Tuesday.

    The Arlington motorcycle cop, whose name has not be released pending criminal and internal affairs investigations by the department, pulled over 49-year-old Sean McKay on Thursday afternoon on I-20 near Green Oaks Boulevard for driving erratically, police say.

    McKay had a criminal history, including a capital murder charge, weapon violations, and drug charges, according to Arlington Police Chief Al Jones.

    The officer originally intended to conduct a traffic stop due to illegal plates that McKay had on the black Cadillac he was driving, Jones said at the news conference. As seen in the bodycam video, the officer — who was on a motorcycle — directed McKay to pull over to the right of the freeway. Instead, McKay swerved across several lanes on the highway and pulled over on the left shoulder.

    When the officer also pulled over to the left shoulder, he was heard yelling at McKay to get out of the car. He told McKay to keep his hands on the steering wheel and said, “You don’t do that kind of bull [expletive] with me.”

    A Kennedale police officer also pulled over to assist the Arlington officer, according to Jones.

    McKay responded to the Arlington officer by apologizing and said he crossed several lanes on I-20 as he was trying to help someone. He is heard in the video repeatedly apologizing to the officer.

    As McKay is explaining himself to both officers about why he crossed the lanes, the Arlington officer is heard in the video saying, “I told you to go across that way and you went ahead this way… Your vehicle smells like weed. You got a gun in the car? Do you have any weapons in the car?”

    McKay shook his head as the Arlington officer asked a second time if he had a weapon in his car. The only other occupant in his vehicle was a dog he had in the back seat, according to Jones.

    Jones could not confirm at the news conference whether drugs were found in McKay’s vehicle.

    “You should’ve done what you were told man,” said the officer, to which McKay replied, “I didn’t see you.”

    The Arlington officer then tells McKay to turn the car off and to give him the keys. Instead, McKay turns his car on, according to the video.

    “I just told you to turn the car off and give me the keys,” the Arlington officer said in the video. The officer then tells McKay to step out of the car and attempts to grab the driver.

    “Don’t do that. Don’t touch me,” said McKay.

    The Arlington officer is heard in the video repeatedly telling McKay to turn the vehicle off and to step out of the car, to which the driver refuses.

    “I’m not doing anything wrong, sir,” McKay said after refusing to comply.

    “You just turned the car on when I told you to turn it off,” said the Arlington officer.

    Both officers attempted to get McKay out of the vehicle and the Arlington officer told him, “You got a gun in the car? Quit reaching around.”

    McKay is then seen in the video moving over to the passenger seat and grabbing a handgun. The Arlington officer aimed his gun at McKay and ordered him to put his hands up. McKay repeatedly says “don’t do it” while holding his gun, the video shows.

    Both officers are heard asking McKay multiple times to put his hands up. At one point, the Arlington officer is heard yelling, “I’ll kill you. Put the gun down.”

    McKay said, “I know you will, don’t do it” as he again refused to put his gun down. He then said, “step away from my car,” just before the Arlington officer fired his gun at him three times.

    The driver was taken to a local hospital, where he was pronounced dead, police said Thursday.

    The Kennedale officer did not fire her weapon, according to Arlington police. Neither of the officers were injured. The dog that was inside McKay’s vehicle was not injured.

    “This is a very stressful situation,” said Jones at the conference. “They’re [officers] put in these unfortunate situations. We’re asking our residents to comply with us so that we don’t have these types of outcomes.”

    When asked by a reporter about the Arlington officer telling McKay he would kill him, Jones said he does not think that was the officer’s intention.

    “I’m sure the officer wasn’t thinking that he wanted to kill Mr. McKay. What he wanted Mr. McKay to do was to comply with the orders that he’s given. Mr. McKay had several opportunities… Those two officers pretty much begged him to drop the weapon several times and he failed to comply,” Jones said.

    Jones added that the situation could not have de-escalated when a weapon was drawn by the driver.

    “When they saw that gun, that became a deadly situation. There is really not that much room where they could have de-escalated,” said Jones.

    Officers do not have to wait for someone to point their gun at them before they fire their weapons, according to Jones.

    “It’s an unfortunate situation that I wish could have had a better outcome and that’s why it’s important to comply,” Jones said.

    The officer, an eight-year-veteran with the department, has been placed on paid leave per department policy.

    Related stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Nicole Lopez is a breaking news reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. She graduated from the University of Texas at El Paso, where she studied multimedia journalism. She also does freelance writing.

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    Nicole Lopez

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  • L.A. police fatally shoot man near Skid Row

    L.A. police fatally shoot man near Skid Row

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    Los Angeles police fatally shot a man near Skid Row on Saturday afternoon, according to the Police Department.

    A statement from the LAPD said the shooting occurred after officers responded to a call about a man threatening employees at a manufacturing business.

    The man, described as a male in his late 30s or early 40s, had a stick and was “possibly under the influence,” according to police.

    City News reported that the shooting took place around 2 p.m. in the 600 block of Towne Avenue.

    The police shot the man after a less lethal munition was deployed, the LAPD statement said. Paramedics brought the man to the hospital, where he died, police said.

    An officer was treated for a hand injury at the scene, police said.

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    Dakota Smith

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  • LAPD investigating gunfire at graffitied skyscraper in downtown L.A.

    LAPD investigating gunfire at graffitied skyscraper in downtown L.A.

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    Gunshots rang out just before midnight Friday at a vacant skyscraper that taggers recently covered in graffiti across the street from Crypto.com Arena in downtown Los Angeles, authorities said.

    Officers responded to Oceanwide Plaza on Figueroa Street late Friday night after receiving a call of shots fired but found no victim or suspects, according to LAPD Officer Jader Chaves.

    Police recovered two spent bullet casings at the scene and the investigation is continuing, he said.

    The incident comes after vandals spray painted at least 27 floors of the skyscraper this week, judging by aerial video of the building.

    Early Tuesday morning, officers responded to a vandalism call on South Figueroa Street, the site of the unfinished and long-idle Oceanwide Plaza development, according to the LAPD.

    The department’s Air Support Division reported seeing more than a dozen suspects trespassing and possibly spray painting the building.

    By the time more officers arrived, all but two suspects had fled the location, authorities said. The two — L.A. residents Victor Daniel Ramirez, 35, and Roberto Perez, 25 — were arrested and transported to the Central Area station, where they were cited for trespassing on private property and released.

    Two days later, officers returned to the construction site in the early afternoon to respond to another vandalism call, this time involving spray painting on the 30th floor, according to the LAPD. Officers were told by the site’s security guards that the suspects fled the building in a car.

    Police found a car matching the description they’d been given and told the driver to stop, but the driver didn’t yield, the department alleged. Officers eventually found the vehicle a short distance away and the driver was cited for failure to yield to an officer. The investigation is still ongoing.

    Oceanwide Plaza was once one of the biggest real estate development projects in Los Angeles, but construction was halted five years ago when its Chinese developer ran out of money. The $1-billion mixed-use project was supposed to feature hotel and retail space as well as luxury apartments and condominiums.

    The buildings have remained unfinished ever since in the popular LA Live complex, which includes shops, restaurants and the Grammy Museum. Crypto.com Arena anchors the complex and will host the 66th Grammy Awards on Sunday.

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    Ben Poston

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  • Two arrested in connection with tagging graffiti-covered L.A. skyscraper across the street from Grammys venue

    Two arrested in connection with tagging graffiti-covered L.A. skyscraper across the street from Grammys venue

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    Two people were arrested, cited and released this week in connection with spray painting graffiti across more than two dozen stories of an unfinished skyscraper in downtown Los Angeles, according to authorities.

    On Tuesday around 12:43 a.m., Los Angeles Police Department officers responded to a vandalism call on South Figueroa Street, the site of the unfinished and long-idle Oceanwide Plaza development, the department said in a news release. The LAPD’s Air Support Division reported seeing more than a dozen suspects trespassing and possibly spray painting the building.

    By the time more officers arrived, all the suspects except for two had fled the location, authorities said. The two — Los Angeles residents Victor Daniel Ramirez, 35, and Roberto Perez, 25 — were arrested and transported to the Central Area station, where they were cited for trespassing on private property and released.

    Two days later, officers returned to the construction site around 12:52 p.m. to respond to another vandalism call, this time involving spray painting on the 30th floor, according to the news release. Officers were told by the site’s security guards that the suspects fled the building in a car.

    Police found a car matching the description they’d been given and told the driver to stop, but the driver didn’t yield, the department alleged. Officers eventually found the vehicle a short distance away and the driver was cited for failure to yield to an officer.

    The investigation is still ongoing.

    Taggers spray painted at least 27 floors of the building this week, judging by aerial footage of the building.

    Oceanwide Plaza was once one of the biggest real estate development projects in Los Angeles, but construction was halted five years ago when its Chinese developer ran out of money. The project was supposed to feature hotel and retail space as well as luxury condominiums and apartments.

    The buildings have remained unfinished ever since in the popular LA Live complex, which includes shops, restaurants and the Grammy Museum. Crypto.com Arena anchors the complex and will host the 66th Grammy Awards on Sunday.

    Nella McOsker, president and chief executive of the Central City Assn., condemned the taggers in a statement.

    “We are disturbed by the images of the vandalism of Oceanwide Plaza,” said McOsker, whose organization advocates for businesses and nonprofits in downtown Los Angeles. “This is a representation of the very real neglect that DTLA has gone through over the past decade. We see it every day with the number of unhoused Angelenos experiencing mental health crises in the streets, the shuttered businesses we walk past and lack of public safety that we hear of too often.”

    Not everyone condemned the graffiti as senseless crime, however.

    Stefano Bloch, a former graffiti writer and a professor of geography at the University of Arizona, expressed admiration for the taggers making use of abandoned space.

    “It’s graffiti writers who find value in these spaces and enliven them,” he said. “That’s not to romanticize it as art or to demonize the crime. Someone was making use of this building and it wasn’t the builder or the occupants.”

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    Summer Lin

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  • Granada Hills man, 79, and the family members police say he killed are identified

    Granada Hills man, 79, and the family members police say he killed are identified

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    Four Granada Hills residents who died over the weekend in a suspected triple homicide and suicide have been identified by the L.A. County medical examiner.

    Authorities still have not released a motive in what one officer called a “horrific” incident.

    Just before 7 p.m. Saturday, Los Angeles police responded to a call from a home on Lerdo Avenue, in the foothills of the Santa Susana Mountains, where they found the body of an older man, his wife and two of their adult children.

    Police said the family patriarch — identified in medical examiner records as 79-year-old Rodrigo De Leon — killed himself after killing Arabella De Leon, 80; Merceditas De Leon, 49; and Rodrigo De Leon, 53.

    The medical examiner listed the septuagenarian’s death as a suicide caused by a gunshot wound to the chest, and the other three deaths as homicides caused by multiple gunshot wounds.

    When officers first arrived at the sprawling home on Saturday, they forced their way in and were met by a woman who had survived the gunfire by barricading herself in a room and calling for help. The woman — later identified by CBS News as the couple’s adult daughter with special needs — directed the officers to another part of the house, where they found several bodies, authorities said.

    During a briefing for reporters Saturday night, LAPD Capt. Kelly Muniz said that “the only positive point is that you at least have one witness who has survived this incident.”

    “I don’t know how much more terrifying and horrific of a scene it could be,” Muniz added.

    Neighbors described the family as “quiet” and said they had not caused problems, keeping to themselves. Some said they were surprised to hear of such violence in the affluent community.

    “This is a nice neighborhood,” said Richard Asperger, 62. “To think that a triple homicide or a shootout can happen, that’s not what we moved here for.”

    It’s not clear when a funeral or vigil might take place, and on Tuesday evening the remaining family did not offer comment to The Times.

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    Keri Blakinger

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  • A San Diego high schooler threatened a shooting. Cops found explosives, ghost guns at teen’s home

    A San Diego high schooler threatened a shooting. Cops found explosives, ghost guns at teen’s home

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    The investigation started with reports of a student making threats. Then officers found what appeared to be a stockpile of explosives and other deadly weapons.

    San Diego police took a Poway high schooler into custody Friday after fellow students alleged that the teen threatened to shoot up their school.

    But the teen’s father also became entangled in the criminal investigation soon after, when officers found illegal explosives, untraceable guns and other weapons at the family’s home, police said.

    In response to the reported threats, police obtained a gun violence restraining order against the teen, giving them the power to secure any firearms to which the student might have had access, the San Diego Police Department said in a news release. When police searched the home Tuesday morning, officers found the weapons — lots of them, and many illegal ones, officers said.

    The teen’s father, 45-year-old Neal Anders, was later arrested on suspicion of possessing illegal firearms, manufacturing assault weapons and possessing a destructive device. The alleged arsenal included untraceable guns, commonly referred to as ghost guns, which do not have a serial number and are often assembled by purchasing parts sold without background checks. NBC San Diego reported that the confiscated cache also included rocket-propelled grenades and other explosive devices.

    San Diego police officials said teams continue to work to ensure the safety of the community and students at Rancho Bernardo High School in Poway, where the threat was first reported Friday.

    The teen was apprehended soon after other students reported “another student showing concerning videos and making threatening statements against others and the school,” according to an email sent to Rancho Bernardo families from Principal Hans Becker over the weekend.

    Becker praised the students who reported the incident for acting responsibly and said that although the school remains safe, San Diego police would be on campus this week “providing a reassuring presence.”

    The San Diego Metro Arson Strike Team assisted with the retrieval and seizure of the explosives from the family’s house.

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    Grace Toohey

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  • Family blames emergency dispatchers in deaths of El Monte officers during ambush

    Family blames emergency dispatchers in deaths of El Monte officers during ambush

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    The family of a slain El Monte police officer blames two emergency dispatchers for failing to tell the officer and his partner that they were on their way to confront a possible armed suspect high on PCP before the gunman ambushed and killed them.

    Officer Joseph Santana and Sgt. Michael Paredes were responding to a domestic violence call on June 14, 2022, when they were ambushed by Joseph Flores, a felon out on probation, who was living at a motel with his wife.

    The officers were aware of the basics of the call: A woman may have been stabbed by her husband. What the officers were not verbally told was that the suspect had a history of violence with his wife, was armed with a gun and was high on PCP, according to reporting by the Los Angeles Daily News. The incident is still under investigation by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and the district attorney’s office.

    “Having that information could have allowed them to be aware of the threat that they were facing, potentially even sparing their lives,” Santana’s sister Bianca Santana said Monday outside the El Monte police station during a protest.

    Friends and family wore black T-shirts emblazoned with Santana’s face, and his father, Joe Santana, held a sign that read, “My Son’s Life Mattered.” The protesters demanded the Police Department fire the two emergency dispatchers who took the 911 call and relayed the information to the officers in the field.

    Paredes and Santana were fatally shot at the hotel in what police describe as an ambush. Flores ended up taking his own life during a shootout with officers in the motel parking lot.

    The 911 call that set off the series of events was made by Maria Zepeda, Flores’ mother-in-law, according to an audio recording obtained by the Daily News. Zepeda told the dispatcher that Flores stabbed her daughter and he had recently abused her.

    “He’s on PCP. He has a gun,” Zepeda told emergency dispatcher Ruth Bonneau, according to the news outlet.

    When the officers got the call shortly before 5 p.m. dispatcher Kristen Juaregui did not relay information about the suspect possibly being armed. But she did enter that information into the call report, which the officers would have read from inside their police cruiser, the Daily News reported. Santana’s family were not aware of those details until the news story broke over the weekend, said Satana’s wife, Sasha Santana.

    Santana’s twin 3-year-old boys, Jakob and Joshua, joined their family while carrying protest signs along with their stuffed animals.

    “I don’t want anyone else to go through what we go through,” she said, renewing her call for the department to reprimand the dispatchers and terminate their employment. “I do not want them to set foot in another police department. I am angry. My husband would not have been knocking nonchalantly on that hotel door if he was aware of what was going to happen. If he was aware that there was a man in there armed and on PCP.”

    Family members said they believe the officers are unfairly being partly blamed for their own deaths, because pertinent details about the 911 call were fed to the officers in a written update while they were racing to the motel. Sasha Santana said that the officers would have not had the time to read that update.

    It has felt as though the department has ignored the family’s well-being, Joe Santana said.

    “No one came to us and said, ‘We messed up, we’re sorry,’” Joe Santana said as he sobbed in front of the station. “I know my son was new, but he was proud to be part of the El Monte PD family.”

    Paredes, 42, was sworn into the El Monte Police Department in 2000. Santana, 31, joined the department about a year before the shooting.

    Santana’s family does not condemn all the officers with the Police Department, but believes leadership have concealed vital information that led to the two officers’ deaths.

    “We might appear strong as we stand here seeking justice, but internally we are filled with anger and pain,” said Santana’s sister Jessica Santana as her voice broke. “And it’s that pain that fuels us to fight for the truth.”

    The shooting and response to the incident is part of an ongoing investigation by the Sheriff’s Department and the district attorney’s office, according to a statement from El Monte Police Chief Jake Fisher.

    “Together we are moving forward as we collectively continue to grieve and recover from the horrific event,” the statement said.

    After interviewing witnesses, reviewing police camera footage, reports and call logs, Fisher said, the Sheriff’s Department and district attorney’s investigators have found there was no “wrongdoing by our police officers or civilian personnel.” But the investigation has not concluded, and it’s unclear when the findings will be made public.

    “We fully anticipate this finding to hold and that our D.A. will officially clear all involved officers and close the investigation,” the statement said.

    Wyatt Reneer, president of the El Monte Police Officers Assn., attended the protest in support of the Santana family, but also in support of the officers and dispatchers with the department.

    “Our dispatchers, our officers, everyone here is doing their job to the best of their ability, and they’re doing the right thing,” Reneer said.

    Santana’s mother, Olga Garcia, said: “There has been no worse feeling in my life than losing my son. Learning a year later that there was information he did not have that could have saved his life, information he could have used to protect himself and his partner, it shatters my heart each day that goes by.”

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    Nathan Solis

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  • Lawyer in Black Lives Matter ‘swatting’ case demands answers after LAPD searches his home

    Lawyer in Black Lives Matter ‘swatting’ case demands answers after LAPD searches his home

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    An attorney for Black Lives Matter-Los Angeles leader Melina Abdullah is demanding that the Los Angeles Police Department return or destroy any privileged attorney-client records officers may have photographed while searching his Hollywood home this week. He is also demanding answers about the reason for the search, which he says was unjustified.

    A police spokeswoman said the search is now the subject of an internal affairs investigation.

    Dermot Givens, 67, represents Abdullah in a lawsuit in which she accuses the LAPD of badly mishandling a 2020 “swatting” incident, when heavily armed officers in tactical gear surrounded her home based on a false report of an emergency there.

    Givens said his first thought when he saw similarly armed LAPD officers swarming his townhome Tuesday was that he was being “swatted” himself.

    “I go, ‘Are you all swatting me?’” Givens said in an interview Friday with The Times. “And they said, ‘Who are you?’ And I said, ‘I live here!’”

    A squad car outside Givens’ home.

    (Dermot Givens)

    Givens said armed LAPD officers showed him a warrant that listed his address but not his name, then “ransacked” his home. He said officers left without finding whom and what they told him they were looking for: a much younger Black man and an Apple AirTag they said was pinging in the vicinity of the home, among other items.

    What the officers did take, Givens said, were photographs of documents from Abdullah’s case that happened to be on his kitchen table. He was initially escorted outside but walked in on officers photographing the documents, he said.

    “I had everything out,” he said of the documents.

    By Friday, the matter was before a judge in Los Angeles Superior Court, where Erin Darling — another attorney for Abdullah — filed for an emergency order requiring the LAPD to return or destroy any “attorney work product” they’d taken or captured in the pictures, as well as provide a copy of records supporting the search warrant.

    “The LAPD has trampled on [Givens’] attorney work product,” the filing states.

    Darling said a judge granted the order, but he had not received any of the materials as of Friday evening. Online court records show that the order was granted.

    Capt. Kelly Muniz, a spokeswoman for the LAPD, said in a statement to The Times late Friday that the department could not comment on the incident “since it is an open criminal case as well as an open internal affairs investigation.”

    Abdullah said she learned of the matter Friday and found it concerning.

    “The first thing [I thought] was, like, ‘Oh, that’s crazy that they swatted the attorney who is suing them on my behalf for swatting me,’” she said. “Along with, ‘Is Dermot OK?’”

    Givens said he was fine but shaken, embarrassed and angry — and full of questions.

    He said it made no sense that a judge would grant a warrant for police to search his home, even if they did believe that an AirTag — a trackable electronic device that can be attached to luggage or other property — was inside.

    “If you’re doing an investigation to find somebody’s stolen property, wouldn’t you go and find out who lives in the house and talk to the person who lives in the house?” he said.

    If they were looking for a younger Black man, whom he said they referred to as “Tyler,” why wouldn’t they accept what he told them when they arrived: that he had lived at the home for more than 20 years, alone, and didn’t know “Tyler”?

    Givens said the officers refused to give him a full copy of the warrant, providing only the last two pages of the four-page document. Those pages — which were included in Darling’s court filing — said the warrant was to search for firearms and ammunition, any “identity theft and forgery-related materials,” cameras, lock-picking equipment and cellphones and other communication devices.

    Givens called the incident “absolutely crazy” — and terrifying.

    If he hadn’t seen the officers rolling onto his block in multiple vehicles and walked onto his balcony, would they have busted in on him? They had a battering ram, so breaking into his home if necessary seemed part of their plan, he said. That’s how Black men like him get killed, he said — for making a “furtive movement.”

    Givens said the officers “ransacked” his home, leaving it in disarray, with items taken out of closets and left on the floor. He worries what his neighbors think.

    “It’s totally f— embarrassing,” he said.

    A bedroom following an LAPD search.

    Givens said LAPD officers “ransacked” his home.

    (Dermot Givens)

    Givens said he has represented many clients suing the police and wonders if the search was a matter of “retaliation and intimidation.”

    “I’m not a conspiracy theorist,” he said. “But this is something that was planned.”

    He said he is eager to see what Darling’s filing produces — including what was the justification for the warrant.

    “Our justice system is supposed to get us to the truth,” he said.

    Darling said he was equally interested in that information.

    “What did they actually give to the judge for that judge to grant a warrant for a property that is actually the home of Mr. Givens?” Darling said. “In theory, it’s a high standard. They have to have probable cause that a crime has been committed, or that something related to a crime is going to be in someone’s home.”

    Abdullah has been swatted — in which someone calls in a false emergency to draw armed police to a location — at least three times.

    The first incident occurred in August 2020, after a summer of protests against police brutality that Abdullah helped organize as a leader of Black Lives Matter. According to 911 calls reviewed by The Times, the caller claimed to be holding people hostage at Abdullah’s home to “send a message” that “BLM is a bunch of retards.”

    In September 2021, Abdullah filed suit against the LAPD, alleging that its actions during the incident — when she was drawn out of her home at gunpoint — constituted unlawful seizure, false imprisonment, excessive force and assault and negligence, among other violations of her rights.

    The day after the lawsuit was announced, Abdullah was swatted a second time. Within days, she was swatted a third time.

    Swatting is considered highly dangerous for the targets; such incidents have been deadly.

    Authorities have been investigating the incidents against Abdullah and said they believe the person responsible had made false calls to other U.S. police departments.

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    Kevin Rector

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  • Assemblymember Wendy Carrillo pleads no contest to driving under the influence

    Assemblymember Wendy Carrillo pleads no contest to driving under the influence

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    State Assemblymember Wendy Carrillo pleaded no contest Friday to driving under the influence of alcohol.

    Carrillo, a Los Angeles Democrat who is running for a hotly contested Eastside City Council seat, was arrested Nov. 3 after she crashed into two parked cars in Northeast Los Angeles. Her blood-alcohol level was at least twice the legal limit, according to Los Angeles police.

    Under the plea agreement, Carrillo must attend a three-month driving-under-the-influence program. Her driver’s license will be restricted so that she can drive only to work and the program.

    Carrillo was not present at the Metropolitan Courthouse when her attorney, Alex Kessel, entered her plea to the misdemeanor charge. Deputy City Atty. Adam Micale agreed to drop a second charge of driving with a blood-alcohol count of .08% or higher.

    In addition to the three-month state-licensed program, Carrillo must attend a Mothers Against Drunk Driving class and perform 50 hours of community service. She must also pay about $2,000 in restitution.

    Carrillo has been attending Alcoholic Anonymous meetings since her arrest, Kessel said.

    He said the plea agreement was typical and that his client was “not getting any benefit from the norm.”

    “Today, Assemblymember Carrillo, through her attorney, pled no contest to the charges she faced,” said a statement released by Carrillo’s Assembly office. “From day one, she has accepted responsibility for her actions and is committed to following the judge’s orders.”

    Outside the courtroom, Kessel told reporters that Carrillo has wanted to “accept responsibility” since that night.

    “This incident was an aberration in her life and shouldn’t stop her from doing the good work of what she always has done for the people of California and now for the city of Los Angeles,” Kessel said.

    Micale declined to comment.

    In a cellphone video obtained by Fox11, Carrillo appears to slur her speech and briefly lose her balance as two officers conduct a field sobriety test after responding to the scene on Monterey Road around 1:30 a.m.

    “I’m sorry, I sneezed and lost [control] of the vehicle,” she told the officers.

    Before the test was completed, one of the officers explained to bystanders “in the interest of transparency” that the LAPD has a policy that allows for this type of investigation to be conducted in a private location when a dignitary or elected official is involved.

    LAPD Chief Michel Moore said he directed a review of body worn video, and the officer’s actions did “not appear to be inappropriate.”

    One witness at the scene of the car crash said he heard a loud bang just as the collision occurred.

    Carrillo’s car had struck another car, which then hit his, said the witness, who declined to provide his name out of privacy concerns. The man said he spoke with Carrillo, then called 911. “She had very slurred speech and was very disoriented,” the witness said.

    Kessel said the subject of sneezing has not come up in his conversations with Carrillo.

    “She felt completely fine, and there were some road issues,” said Kessel, who defined those issues as “curves in the road” and the late hour.

    “As far as drinking and driving, she understands that she shouldn’t have,” he said. “But she accepted responsibility because there was a measurable amount of alcohol in her system. And she shouldn’t have had any alcohol while driving. And she 100% recognizes that.”

    Kessel said that prior to that night, Carrillo had never been in trouble with the law.

    “If there’s a personal issue with alcohol, I don’t think for the court process that makes a difference, because for that night in question, there was alcohol in her system,” he said. “And I think she’s addressing that. I’m not here to comment on her personal life.”

    Carrillo, 43, was booked into jail at 4:07 a.m. and released that afternoon wearing a black suit and flip flops.

    “I’m sorry, I’m going to get my ride,” she responded when a Times reporter asked if she had been drunk driving that night.

    Carrillo’s opponents in the race to represent Council District 14 include incumbent Kevin de León, who faced widespread calls to step down in the wake of last year’s audio scandal, and Assemblymember Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles).

    Another candidate, geriatric social worker Nadine Diaz, said Friday that the programs Carrillo will complete as part of her plea agreement are “a start” but that Carrillo should drop out of the election to focus on her health.

    “I hope she gets help in regards to the situation. I think it’s serious,” Diaz said. “And I think at this point, she needs to be evaluated, her plan of action in regards to running, I hope — for mental health reasons, for self care.”

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    Cindy Chang

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