‘Excessive force,’ ‘corruption’ and ‘sheriff’s gangs’: FBI charges 18 LA deputies for

Goober

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Jan 23, 2009
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18 LA sheriff's deputies face US charges
LA Sheriff's Deputies Arrested In Jail Probe
FBI:18 Current or Former LA Sheriff's Officers Charged with Cri - Los Angeles Local News | FOX 11 LA KTTV
‘Excessive force,’ ‘corruption’ and ‘sheriff’s gangs’: FBI charges 18 LA deputies for alleged jail-house abuses | National Post

LOS ANGELES — Federal officials have filed five criminal cases against 18 current and former Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies as part of an FBI investigation into allegations of civil rights abuses and corruption in the nation’s largest jail system.

The documents were unsealed Monday and the charges announced at a press conference, after 16 of 18 defendants were arrested earlier in the day. They’re expected to be arraigned Monday afternoon in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles.

Four grand jury indictments and a criminal complaint allege unjustified beatings of jail inmates and visitors at downtown Los Angeles jail facilities, unjustified detentions and a conspiracy to obstruct a federal investigation into misconduct at the Men’s Central Jail.

The arrests of lower to mid-ranking deputies by federal agents was confirmed to The Associated Press by a law enforcement official with direct knowledge of the arrests who wasn’t authorized to speak publicly and requested anonymity. The official said no assistant sheriffs or undersheriff had been arrested.

Federal authorities called a news conference Monday afternoon to announce criminal corruption and civil rights charges filed in the case.

The FBI has been investigating allegations of excessive force and other misconduct at the county’s jails since at least 2011. The official said the arrests were related to the abuse of individuals in the jail system and also allegations that sheriff’s officials moved an FBI informant in the jails possibly to thwart their probe.

Sheriff’s Department spokesman Steve Whitmore said he was aware of an indictment but referred calls to the FBI. He said Sheriff Lee Baca would provide a comment later Monday afternoon.

“We’ve cooperated fully with the FBI in their investigation and we’ll continue to do so,” Whitmore said.

A federal indictment filed Nov. 20 named seven deputies charged with conspiracy and obstruction of justice as part of an FBI investigation into inmate abuse and corruption at the nation’s largest jail system. It is unclear from the indictment whether they are currently employed by the department.
We’ve cooperated fully with the FBI in their investigation and we’ll continue to do so

Among those charged with conspiracy and obstruction of justice in the 18-page indictment obtained by The Associated Press are two lieutenants, one of whom oversaw the department’s safe jails program and another who investigated allegations of local crimes committed by sheriff’s personnel, two sergeants and three deputies.

All seven are accused of trying to prevent the FBI from contacting or interviewing an inmate who was helping federal agents in a corruption and civil rights probe. One of the investigations involved trying to see if a deputy would accept a bribe to provide the inmate with a cell phone, court documents show.

The indictment alleges the inmate was moved to hide him and false entries were made in the sheriff’s databases to make it appear as if he had been released.

In an attempt to find out more information about the investigation, one lieutenant and the two sergeants sought a court order to compel the FBI to provide documents, prosecutors said. When a state judge denied the proposed order, the two sergeants allegedly attempted to intimidate one of the lead FBI agents outside her house and falsely told her they were going to seek a warrant for her arrest, the indictment said.

Baca has acknowledged mistakes to a county commission reviewing reports of brutality, but he has also defended his department and distanced himself personally from the allegations.

He said he’s made improvements including creating a database to track inmate complaints. Baca has also hired a new head of custody and rearranged his command staff.

Retired sheriff’s Cmdr. Bob Olmsted, who is challenging Baca for the voter-elected position of sheriff in 2014, said in a statement Monday that the arrests “underscore the high level of corruption that has plagued the Sheriff’s Department.”

I knew I had to act, and as a result, I notified the FBI of the department’s culture and acceptance of excessive force, inmate abuse, sheriff’s gangs, and corruption

He said as a commander he tried “several times” to notify the sheriff and his command staff about “ongoing abuses and misconduct” in Men’s Central Jail, but his “concerns fell on deaf ears.”

“I knew I had to act, and as a result, I notified the FBI of the department’s culture and acceptance of excessive force, inmate abuse, sheriff’s gangs, and corruption,” Olmsted said.

The American Civil Liberties Union sued the Sheriff’s Department in 2012 claiming the sheriff and his top commanders had condoned violence against inmates. The organization released a report documenting more than 70 cases of misconduct by deputies.

Last month the county announced the appointment of veteran Los Angeles County prosecutor Max Huntsman to head a new office of inspector general that will oversee the Sheriff’s Department.

The county’s jails held more than 18,700 inmates as of Monday.
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
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here's the solution to police corruption and tyranny:








BRING ON THE HANGMAN!!!
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
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NO put them in general population with no supervision or protection and save the money
on having to buy rope.
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
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Minnesota: Gopher State
NO put them in general population with no supervision or protection and save the money
on having to buy rope.


When you think about it, the amount of money spent on ropes should be looked upon as an investment = we invest a few hundred on ropes and save millions in lawsuits from their victims by crucifying these tyrannical government fukkers before they do any more damage to our society.
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
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Put crooked lawyers in the general population too.....


Yeah, especially those crooked prosecutors who withhold evidence or manufacture it in order to get convictions like that SOB in Louisiana who sent innocent John Thompson to death row where he was inches from his life for 14 years. This is what society needs to do to the crooked cops, to prosecutors, and to judges:









First, kick them around, tar-and-feather, then the water torture, and best of all, the hanging tree.
 

DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
33,676
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Northern Ontario,
Yeah, especially those crooked prosecutors who withhold evidence or manufacture it in order to get convictions like that SOB in Louisiana who sent innocent John Thompson to death row where he was inches from his life for 14 years. This is what society needs to do to the crooked cops, to prosecutors, and to judges:









First, kick them around, tar-and-feather, then the water torture, and best of all, the hanging tree.
Then the same should happen to the DOJ prosecutors who held on to evidence in the Zimmerman trial ..huh?
 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
9,949
21
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kelowna bc
These days if we were to put crooked judges, lawyers, cops, parole officers and others
in the justice system in prison there would be no room the the criminals. No one should
expect to get justice from the justice system it is mere theatre at the expense of taxpayers.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Trying to bag a savage killer without decent evidence can be a real bitch, sometime you have to take uncouth measures to do so.