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OPERATION PANDORA’S BOX GOES TO TRIAL: The Significance of Paul Tanaka Testimony at 2nd LASD Obstruction of Justice Trial

OPERATION PANDORA’S BOX GOES TO TRIAL: TANAKA TESTIFIES

Last December, seven members of the LA County Sheriff’s Department were indicted for conspiracy to obstruct justice pertaining to the alleged hiding of federal informant Anthony Brown from his FBI handlers, an assignment that came, unofficially, to be be known among those involved as “Operation Pandora’s Box.

In total, 20 members of the LA County sheriff’s department have been indicted as part of the FBI investigation into allegations of civil rights violations and corruption, a probe that U.S. Attorney Andre Birotte described last year as “ongoing and wide-ranging.”

In May of this year, Deputy James Sexton, one of the seven obstruction defendants, was tried separately. The result was a hung jury. He may or may not be tried again. The remaining six—deputies Mickey Manzo and Gerard Smith, sergeants Scott Craig and Maricella Long and lieutenants Greg Thompson and Stephen Leavins—are on trial now.


PAUL TANAKA & THE TRIAL THUS FAR

It was 11:40 am on Friday, June 6, and the second federal obstruction of justice trial involving six members of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s department was exactly at the halfway mark. The prosecution had just rested its case and the defense was preparing to call its first witness: former undersheriff Paul Tanaka, who is also a candidate for LA County Sheriff, having barely squeaked into a runoff with Long Beach Chief of Police Jim McDonnell.

As had been true in the first obstruction of justice trial a few weeks ago, word of Tanaka’s impending appearance caused the courtroom presided over by Judge Percy Anderson to go from half-filled to jammed.

Prior to Tanaka’s arrival, the trial had already proved to be a complicated one. The government was prosecuting six different LASD defendants at once, each of whom it accused of some variation on the theme of deliberately attempting to get in the way of a federal investigation into brutality and corruption in the county’s jails. This included but was not limited to: helping to hide federal informant and jail inmate Anthony Brown from his FBI handlers, attempting to threaten and intimidate FBI special agent Leah Marx at her home, and endeavoring to bully and cajole a sheriff’s deputy named Gilbert Michel into not cooperating with the FBI. This alleged intimidation occurred after Michel had been nailed by the feds for bringing a contraband cell phone into the jail and giving it to inmate Brown—whom Michel was unaware happened to be an FBI informant—in return for a healthy bribe.

Last month, the trial of a seventh LASD defendant, Deputy James Sexton, who was also accused of obstruction of justice in the hiding of Anthony Brown, ended in a mistrial when the jury declared itself “hopelessly deadlocked,” 6 to 6. The feds have yet to decide if they will come after Sexton again.

This second obstruction of justice trial is somewhat different than the first in that most of the defendants—which include two sergeants and two lieutenants, along with two deputies—are farther up the departmental food chain than was Sexton. There is also the fact that Sexton, unlike any of the six in this proceeding, had cooperated extensively with the FBI for more than a year.

Yet despite any dissimilarities in the two trials, the government’s lawyers appear to have drawn lessons from their losses in trial one, and have worked vigorously to shore up any weak points in their theory of the case.

Essentially, the prosecutorial theory is as follows: In August of 2011, members of the LASD learned that the FBI had launched an undercover investigation into brutality and other forms of wrongdoing by deputies inside the county’s jail system.

The LASD higher-ups learned of the undercover probe through the discovery of a contraband cell phone in the possession of an inmate named Anthony Brown. They then further discovered that the inmate was a federal informant, and that the phone had been smuggled to Brown as part of an FBI sting, brought by a jail deputy named Gilbert Michel who muled in the contraband phone then was compensated with cash payments, and whom the feds subsequently were trying to flip into becoming an informant. Upon learning of all this clandestine sleuthing, the department’s sole focus became, not cleaning up its own dirty house, but shutting out the FBI and any other federal agents from the jail and from contact with Brown and Michel, in doing so materially hampering the government’s undercover probe, at least according to the prosecution.

The defense is expected to counter that the six defendants, who are comparative underlings, were not obstructing anything but rather were just doing their jobs as legally ordered by those at this paramilitary organization’s very top.


WITNESSES FOR THE PROSECUTION

Thus far, the most dramatic testimony for the prosecution had been from Deputy Michel, who not only told the jury how he smuggled in the phone and other contraband for Brown, but also described the manner in which, when he first began working the 2000 and the 3000 floors of the notoriously troubled Men’s Central Jail, he’d learned as part of his initiatory training the “right way” to cover up unjustified beatings and abuse of inmates. In testimony that spread over two days, Michel went into harrowing and sometimes tear accompanied detail about some of the individual beatings of inmates he’d been present for, or administered himself.

His lengthy testimony portrayed, not merely his own mistreatment of prisoners, but pointed beyond itself to paint a picture of an entire subculture of deputies inside the jails who engaged in routine brutality against inmates. The brutality was accompanied, according to Michel, in many instances, by the falsification of criminal charges against those same inmates, when such charges were needed to cover deputy violence. Michel’s testimony further suggested that such behavior went on virtually unchecked by jail supervisors and LASD higher-ups.

This latter point seemed to be demonstrated when the prosecution played a recording of a jailhouse interview with Michel conducted by three of the defendants after it was discovered that Michel had smuggled the contraband cell phone to Anthony Brown. In the recording, Sgt. Maricela Long, Sgt. Scott Craig, and Lt. Steve Leavins acted remarkably concerned about Michel’s accepting bribes from Brown in return for the phone, a legal slip that they assured their interviewee “could happen to anybody.” They seemed far more concerned with frightening and hectoring the deputy out of telling the FBI anything about the ongoing brutality against inmates that he’d both witnessed and perpetrated.

The jury was also able to read an email from Leavins to his immediate superior, Captain William Carey, evidently written after Deputy Michel suddenly began blurting to investigators about the inmate beatings in which he’d taken part, admissions that LASD supervisors seemed to view as awfully inconvenient rather than useful. In the email Leavins wrote:

“That idiot Michel is confessing to beating handcuffed inmates with other deputies…Not looking good…They are still interviewing him….Will advise.”

In addition, the jury heard readings of the grand jury testimony by Sergeants Long and Craig in which both admitted—among other things—to being told by a judge that they had no legal jurisdiction to investigate FBI special agent Leah Marx, who was Brown’s main federal contact, prior to going to her house and falsely threatening her with arrest.

And, as they had in the Sexton trial, the prosecutors presented a string of witnesses who told of the byzantine methods the defendants and and others had employed to conceal Anthony Brown’s whereabouts from his FBI handlers.


TANAKA FOR THE DEFENSE

On Friday, it was the defense’s turn to present its view of events.

The defense—which, due to the plethora of defendants, consisted of nearly a dozen lawyers—originally planned to call the former undersheriff as their third witness. But, it seems that, after nearly a year of a campaigning to become the next LA County sheriff, Tanaka had planned to take a vacation the week of June 9, so hoped his testimony wouldn’t string over until Tuesday. (The court is dark on Monday.) To try to accommodate, the various defense teams shuffled their collective witness list to allow the former undersheriff to be first up on Friday morning.

Tanaka’s purpose as a witness was assumed to be to help the defense prove its theory, which was in simplest terms that A. anything that the defendants might have done wrong was done pursuant to orders by either the sheriff or the undersheriff, or both, and B. that none of this was unlawful.

Although Tanaka’s testimony was not completed on Friday (he will have to return on Tuesday morning after all) what he has said thus far will likely be helpful to the defense in some areas, less so in others.

Miriam Krinsky, the executive director of the Citizen’s Commission on Jail Violence and herself a former Assistant US Attorney, was also at the trial and explained it this way.

“I think the problem with alternative defenses, as well as the way that Mr. Tanaka’s testimony played out, is that the narrative doesn’t always hold together.

“This was a situation where the narrative and the explanation— that the inmate was moved around because Brown was a snitch and had to be kept safe from other inmates and deputies—isn’t fully consistent with the actions that were taken. If the concern was to keep Brown safe, its hard to reconcile why the sheriff deputies and supervisors would have terminated an interview between him and the FBI, and why they would have locked the FBI out of the jail. And why they would have gone to such great lengths to keep this cooperator away from another law enforcement bureau.”

Krinsky suggested that Tanaka’s testimony was more useful to the defense when he put either himself or Baca in the role of giving orders. Although he was careful to place himself, in most instances, as the one who conveyed the orders of his boss, Lee Baca, to others, not the one who originated them.

This stance was, by the way, an interesting contrast to a moment at the beginning of Tanaka’s testimony when, asked to describe his job as the undersheriff for the jury, speaking directly to the jurors, almost as if stumping for votes, he answered that the undersheriff is “the one who oversees the day to day operations of the department” while “the sheriff is more the face of the organization.”

When it came to the touchier matters of the trial, however, Baca was suddenly no frontman at all, but the primary nuts and bolts decider and giver of orders.

According to Krinsky, the part of Tanaka’s testimony that is most likely to cause the defendants some problems was his repeated attempts to distance himself from some of the more legally questionable actions of which the defendants are accused, acts which someone above the six had to have ordered. For instance, Tanaka said that he had no knowledge that members of the sheriff’s department were planning to approach an FBI agent at her home and threaten her.

“Tanaka also claimed to be unaware of the approach that was taken vis-à-vis deputy Gilbert Michel,” said Krinsky, “when members of the department were discouraging Mr. Michel, through the type of questions and statements they made, from ongoing cooperation with the federal government. In other parts of his testimony,” she said, “it was telling that Mr. Tanaka claimed that he was being briefed constantly and, then when pressed about one of the more troubling acts, he claimed to have no recollection, no recall, or no knowledge about whether he’d been told.”

And when the former undersheriff could not reasonably dodge knowledge of the actions of the defendants that were part of the prosecution’s theory of the obstruction charges, Tanaka carefully handed off actual authorship of the actions to those below him, claiming that he had only ordered that inmate Brown be kept safe, not how it was done. When asked if he “agreed” with this strategy or that one, he answered in the vaguest terms. “I don’t believe I disagreed,” he said repeatedly.


TANAKA IS REBUKED BY JUDGE

Two of the more startling moments in the Tanaka’s testimony came when he was rebuked twice by Judge Anderson for answering a question with a statement, when the inquiry properly required only a yes or no.

In the first instance, Tanaka slipped in his opinion that, “A cell phone introduced in custody is very, very dangerous,” nevermind that prosecutor Brandon Fox shot up to object immediately before the statement was fully out.

“Don’t volunteer information,” the judge instructed Tanaka. “Just answer the question, yes or no. And when Mr. Fox stands, you stop talking.”

Tanaka nodded that he would do so.

Sometime later, however, the incident repeated itself. In response to another yes or no question Tanaka answered with a full and decededly provocative sentence. It occurred when one of the defense attorneys asked Tanaka about a time when, sometime after the discovery of the cell phone, he had accompanied an angry Sheriff Baca to a meeting with U.S. Attorney Andre Birotte and other members of Birotte’s office.

In answer Tanaka said this:

“The sheriff was able to communicate to [the U.S. Attorney] that the FBI had committed a crime.”

Before the sentence had made it even half way out into everyone’s hearing, prosecutor Fox had flown to his feet to object.

Judge Anderson’s reaction was just as immediate. He quickly sustained Fox’s objection, then ordered the former undersheriff’s statement stricken from the record. After that, his head snapped around to look directly at Tanaka.

Don’t do that again!” Anderson said, visibly furious.

When I talked about the incident later with Krinsky, she told me that Judge Anderson’s reaction was extremely unusual.

“It takes a lot to get a federal judge to admonish a witness in front of a jury,” she said. “What the defense was clearly trying to do was to get from the witness confirmation of its main theories, which was that the FBI took it upon themselves to commit a crime as part of investigating a crime, and that the sheriff’s department was appropriately responding by taking dramatic steps to shut the FBI down.

“This is an incredibly professional and even-handed and even tempered judge,” Krinsky continued. “So for him to be sufficiently upset at the witness to have reacted as he did is not something you see terribly often in federal court and not from a judge who has the temperament of Judge Anderson.”

So why would the presumably legally savvy former undersheriff risk angering a federal judge?

“Witnesses will often try to get out an opinion if they have a vested interest in trying to get that message out,” said Krinsky. “Mr. Tanaka might well have viewed this as an opportunity to deliver his own argument as to why his conduct would justify his own actions as well as that of the defendants.

“It is, after all, highly unusual for a candidate for elected office to be the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation,” she said.

Krinsky was referring to the fact that, during James Sexton’s trial in May, prosecutor Fox made news when he asked Tanaka—–a candidate for sheriff—-if he was aware that he was the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation.


SO WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?

This trial is expected to conclude in the next week or so. Then late in June, the prosecution will announce whether or not it intends to refile on Deputy Sexton. Most trial watchers assume that the outcome of the present trial will have at least something to do with the Sexton decision.

Yet the other, larger question that cannot help but loom over this trial is, of course, whether or not the charges of obstruction of justice will ever travel farther up the department ladder. After all, during this and the Sexton trial we saw plenty of testimony that appears to make clear that orders for most of the acts that has caused seven department members to be federally indicted—and if convicted, to likely face prison time—originated with people who have, at this point, not been charged with anything.

When I asked Krinsky what she thought, the former assistant U.S. attorney sighed. It was “incredibly hard” to speculate, she said. “I think that the government is likely taking this one trial at a time. I think their focus right now is, appropriately, what they have in front of them. Then once these cases have made their way through the system, they’ll start to reassess where they are in terms of any further indictments.”

Yet she thought it significant, Krinsky said, that the prosecutors referred to this case as an ongoing investigation. “That sends a clear message that the book has yet to be closed by the government in regard to these acts.”

TO BE CONTINUED



EDITOR’S NOTE: STORIES ON OTHER TOPICS COMING LATER TODAY AND TONIGHT

For instance, we need to talk about the fact that, on Friday, while many of us were watching this trial, the word came down from the U.S. Department of Justice that the DOJ was so fed up with the way that LA County treats its mentally ill inmates inside the jails that it will likely seek federal oversight. More on that later.

In the meantime, while you’re waiting, here’s what the LA Times editorial board had to say on the matter on Sunday. Here’s a clip:

It should come as no surprise that Los Angeles County’s treatment of mentally ill jail inmates falls so short of acceptable standards that the U.S. Department of Justice is seeking federal court oversight. County officials did too little for too long to correct egregious problems. Recent efforts to improve jail management and to identify and better serve mentally ill and suicidal inmates came too late.

County leaders may be tempted to argue that Friday’s notice from the Justice Department shows that they were right to move ahead with a plan to raze the decrepit and rat-infested Men’s Central Jail in downtown Los Angeles and to build a more modern and humane facility in which mentally ill inmates would be better treated.

A better lesson would be that for nearly two decades, the county has moved at an unnecessarily glacial pace in responding to long-standing concerns about poor treatment of incarcerated people who more properly should have been treated as patients in medical and mental health treatment facilities.

41 Comments

  • This statement about former deputy Michel, “credibly painted a picture of an entire subculture of deputies” struck a chord. Now I’m no fan of a lot of the players in this mess but there is absolutely nothing remotely credible about Michel. He’s scumbag who was caught dirty and now he’s tossing whatever he can out into the wind seeing what will stick elsewhere. He was caught so now he’s trying to take down the rest of the hard working men and women at MCJ with broad statements and tears in his eyes? He’s the the lowest form in the whole mess. A snake in to grass out to save his ass. There’s nothing credible about him.

  • @1.With every truth there are some lies and with every lie there is some truth. Seeing that…….How do you explain the 3000 boys (literally) acting like frickin Junior High Shool punks. Especially fighting other deputies at the Christmas party. Totally embarrassing! The public see and knows that, if deputies does this among themselves, how much worse that it is for those who are incarcerated and to the public. Granted that 85 % of the deputies are good, there is still that 15% of idiots who don’t deserve to wear the sheriff’s star on their chest. Let’s KEEP IT REAL.

  • Generalhuthut:
    100% right. When I read that same line, I thought the same thing. Come on Celeste, your going to need to do better than that. Calling anything that idiot says, “credible”??? Please!?!

  • So what is being said, that there was not a subculture in Custody Div., that would dare to beat an inmate for no reason? Walking out of work in groups like a bunch of “thugs”, disrespecting your supervisors, amending work locations without your supervisor’s approval, intimidating sergeants, intimidating other deputies, that is not real, it is all made up? Sure, this guy Michael is a liar, unethical and has little credibility. However, where there is smoke there is fire, and somewhere along the lines there is some truth in what he has said and we all know it. You can’t cover the sun with your hand.

    In this scenario, the rotten core did not start at the bottom, but rather at the top. Example, example, example of how to be arrogant, lie and intimidate your fellow deputies. There was no accountability for bad behavior, and when a supervisor tried to hold an individual accountable, he was ignored or penalized. It is going to take years to clean up the department, just like it took years to smear it under the Baca regime.

  • Tanaka has openly admitted he still sports his Viking tattoo. The question is, will he reveal if he has or ever had the four letters “OGCF” inked to that tattoo, as so many of his Viking buddies have. If it is ever established that he did, or currently has those four incendiary initials on his ankle, it is all and I mean ALL over for Paul Tanaka. Perhaps the AUSA can put this all to rest.

  • I am really pissed at the way the liberals and others call these inmates “patients”. They are not in a medical ward or hospital outside of the jail walls. They are hardened criminals that have committed horrendous crimes and you want to treat them with kid gloves. The psychologists determine who is mentally ill not the deputies. The psychologists are few and overwhelmed so if you want to maybe fix the problem hire more psychologists. The deputies are doing their best as these inmates throw fecal matter, urine and other bodily fluids at them. There are also a lot of inmates faking mental illness so they can sit in a one man cell instead of being with the main population. Quit blaming the deputies and building a new jail will not solve the problem

  • EDITOR’S NOTE: Dear #1 and 3, this whole thing about Michel that you two find problematic is I suspect complicated and likely better suited to a longer back and forth conversation, if such a thing were magically accessible, rather than simply an editor’s note from me.

    All that said, I’m not sure my phrasing was ideal. So I tweaked it slightly to take out the word “credibly” as it didn’t accurately reflect why I—and most of the people who heard Gilbert Michel’s testimony—thought his testimony significant, apart from what we may or many not have thought about him personally.

    I hope that helps.

    C.

  • Yes Celeste it is significant and credible. That is exactly what goes on in the County Jail, and that is exactly how a new deputy is trained there. Pretty much exactly what Michel testified to. Whomever says otherwise is not being honest with themselves. So “credibly” accurately reflected that.

  • @#2 you are absolutely right. There are serious problems at the jails; many of which you brought up. I in no way want to minimize that. All I’m saying is let’s not lend too much credence to an ex deputy who betrayed the trust of the department and more importantly his partners for a few almighty bucks. To term this POS as credible is a stretch. He’s a dirty ex deputy, plain and simple. It’s funny, in most news articles I read you see the term “allegedly” a lot. “The police allegedly did this” or “the suspect allegedly did that.” Yet here, Michel’s statements are not alleging anything. They are termed credible.

  • #9: Thanks for the link; absolutely illuminative. It clarifies, on page four, what “OGCF” means (#5’s post).

  • #6 I am really troubled that the State of California continues to “dump” the mentally ill inside of the county jails. This mess all started years ago when then Gov. Reagan closed the mental hospitals because the state was going to open out patient clinics for those needing treatment. Since the mentally ill don’t vote, they don’t count and politicians continue to ignore them instead of trying to fix a very serious problem. (I am not speaking of felons who commit serious crimes). Meanwhile, the jails are charged with warehousing individuals who belong in mental hospitals receiving treatment instead of being in jail. Suddently, the Sheriff’s Department is the be all for these individuals who need help. The department was never supposed to handle these individuals in the first place.

  • If is establish that Tanaka sports the “OGCF,” he is toast. He will be forced to withdraw from the Sheriff’s race, he will be forced to resign as Mayor of Gardena and the AUSA will connect every dot imaginable of the Pattern and Practice of MCJ and beyond. Attention McDonnell and the AUSA, start probing this avenue. Not accusing him, just asking because he is running for public office and owes an explanation and an examination by a medical professional is the only way to put this to rest. Not by his denial.

  • Regarding former Deputy Michel, I’m assume he’s operating under an Immunity plea deal; which means that if they find one untrue word, misstatement, fabrication or outright lie, they can pin several years to his ultimate time in the federal pen… my point? POS or not, if he were stupid enough to lie or withhold the truth, he would be screwed. This is one of a myriad of reasons why I personally believe that what he is saying is true. Additionally, I don’t know where in the LASD rule book it somehow became okay to intimidate a federal employee and try to dissuade them from doing their jobs (as unsavory as this particular activity was). Anyone who can find it please let me know.

  • #12 I totally agree with you and wish there was a solution. TTCF is probably half capacity with mental inmates and from what I have heard they want the whole building to be a mental facility. There are not enough psychologists to diagnose the inmates already there and Patton State Hospital is over packed with 90 day observations. I don’t know where or how the State Prisons house there mentally ill but our system is not made for this. You would need more deputies and staffing to make this manageable.

  • #14….I agree with you. I believe that ex-deputy Michel got caught up in the mix working at CJ. One has to be strong to say no to the cliques that exists. This is a fact…There is a very thin line between a Coward and a Bully. Messing with FBI Agent Marx was cowardly and being a bully. (Would have been a different & difficult story, had it been a tenured male agent, as opposed to a female agent not too long out of the FBI Academy) The end story would have been the same, either way. …..LASD had their ASS checked by the FBI. I’m not a fan of the Fed’s, but I hate Cowards. The only ones that are pissed with Michel are the guilty one anyway. Those that are not included in his testimony don’t matter. On another note….IA & ICB has no credibility. That house has to be demolished and built from the ground up. The “TRUE” deputies are fed up with everything and everyone that resembles ROGUE COPS. In this day and time, there is No room for Dumb Asses, Jack Asses & Kiss Asses

  • Unbelievable! How does this stuff happen? OGCF? I can’t help but look at those guys whose names are on that list differently. Makes you wonder who else is branded with that hate statement.

  • It is very difficult for me to take anyone seriously that calls themselves “Sweet” that being said, Dulce, I’m just saying it is true, that’s the way way I was trained there.

  • First off Deputy Michel is a crook, he is one of many we missed. That being said he states he saw all this use of force by deputies which if true will come out in the lawsuits because if I am not mistaken the cameras were up and running at the time. Secondly there will be records of the force used, which he states were documented. As to the 3000 boys, a lot of you are totally off base. Of the picture at the christmas Party, none of the Deputies had a 3000 tattoo. in fact only two had tattoos at all. You are very confused. The tattoos at C.J. were 2000 floor tattoos 11 years ago. If a supervisor can’t handle some so called 3000 floor gangsters he should have been a lifeguard. Poor supervisors at C.J. led to this, Period.

  • @ Dulce, I made a challenge to you and your other smack talking, friends (Veritatem and Boomer) to reveal ourselves through Celeste, because it is so easy to talk smack while hiding. I guess you guys are just going to continue to ignore it.

    And, just so you and Celeste understand, I’m not looking for a confrontation, I’m looking to add some credibility to the commentary!

  • Pete if I am correct I don’t believe the cameras were being put into CJ and not active at this time. I could be wrong

  • Peacemaker, you are correct. Cameras were not up and running. They were still sitting in boxes in MCJ. Cameras were not installed until this information was disclosed during  CCJV testimony in  the summer of 2012.  They started installing soon after. Michael was arrested in Jan. 2012.

  • The cameras were not up and running at CJ until way after all of the problematic force had occurred. If everyone remembers, the cameras were lost in a no-man’s land in the captain’s office for almost a year while different departments fought over who would install them. and pete, you hit it on the head; poor supervision led to the gangster deputies thriving at MCJ… these are the same supervisors who were hand picked and personally protected by PT, who refused to get a handle on them … PERIOD.

  • Stuff #23. Just because YOU were trained that way doesn’t mean EVERYBODY is trained that way. Please give credit to the good,hard working deputies, that do the right thing. You come across as a self loathing deputy.

  • @Dulce: I made sure I stated I was “not” looking for a confrontation and my point of “credibility” was very clear. But, you proved my point anyway. It’s, cowardly and not very credible to post aggressive commentary when hiding in anonymity.

    And, in my younger days it was simply “the parking lot,” but the real point of calling someone out is to prove they are all talk.

  • The problem with too many of us good hard working deputies is that we don’t tell, and I don’t mean snitching. We don’t tell our errant peers to knock that shit off. In a perfect world, deps would be self regulating, but we aren’t. We bow down to the self appointed hard chargers (not to be confused with the real workers). And that percentage of assholes, no matter how miniscule, who screw over everyone. You know who I’m talking about — original monkey fighters, idiots who lie, no ack calls, and think their shit doesn’t stink. Years later, after the lawsuit(s), they’re working sweet DB jobs. And everybody whispers about it. Meanwhile, we still can’t live it down.

  • Yep. Same gunslingers that parked their patrol cars after briefing in 2004 instead of patrolling the communities they swore to protect!

  • I’m going to stick my nose in this, in Dulce’s words “juvenile” back and forth between Dulce and “Huh!,” with an observation. Since you claimed to have been on the grinder then why not just give your name to Celeste so you guys can all be judged by your standing and rep on the Dept. Otherwise, anyone can claim anything.

  • So I suppose your name is actually Kool-aid a Allergy! There isn’t one person using their true name. Idiot

  • To the honorable judge Anderson…U and the jury did an excellent job in hearing this case of bad corrupt sherrifs..And this sherriff should be punished for disrespecting the FEDERAL courts orders by answering ‘yes or no’and reading the article this under sherriff slash mayor of Gardena has no respect for a federal judge.The article says “The honorable judge Anderson nodds his head at the undersherriff mayor with an angry look”

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