When Sheriff Lee Baca said he didn’t know jailer brutality was a serious problem, this didn’t sit well with some critics. If sheriff’s command staff kept Baca in the dark, why weren’t their heads rolling now? And now Los Angeles Times has obtained clear evidence that Baca’s command staff knew jailer brutality was a problem, but the department is still saying that Baca never got the memo — literally. more › See more here: Sheriff Lee Baca’s Staff Knew Jailer Brutality Was a Problem, But He Never Got the Memo
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Sheriff Lee Baca’s Staff Knew Jailer Brutality Was a Problem, But He Never Got the Memo
Baseball Prospect Claimed He Was Just 16 to Get $1M Bonus
Are You ‘In Cahoots With Al-Qaida?’
LOS ANGELES — The American Civil Liberties Union sued the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department on Thursday, claiming the law enforcement agency is harassing news photographers and other people who take pictures in public places. The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, charges that sheriff’s deputies have harassed several photographers over the past two years. It states deputies have stopped people, frisked them and in some cases threatened to arrest them for taking photos near subways, courthouses and other public places. It names as defendants Los Angeles County, the Sheriff’s Department and several individual sheriff’s deputies. The action was brought on behalf of three photographers, one of them a reporter for the Long Beach Post news site who said authorities indicated they became suspicious when they saw him taking photos near a courthouse. Another of the plaintiffs said sheriff’s deputies asked whether he planned to sell his photos to the terrorist group al-Qaida. Sheriff’s spokesman Steve Whitmore said public safety requires that deputies question people who might be engaging in suspicious activity, but that it’s important they do it respectfully. “Obviously we have to ask questions. There are security issues that are always at large,” Whitmore said. He added that doesn’t mean his department believes the lawsuit, brought by the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California, has merit. “Lawsuits only tell one side of the story,” he said. “We look forward to telling the whole story.” The Long Beach Post photographer, Greggory Moore, said he was on a public sidewalk taking photos of passing cars for a story on Distracted Driving Awareness Month when eight deputies surrounded him. He said he was frisked and asked what he was doing. Moore said authorities told him later that his taking photos across the street from a courthouse signaled a possible terrorist threat, which was why he was stopped and searched. Photographer Shawn Nee said he was on his way home when he exited a subway station in Hollywood and decided to stop to photograph the new turnstiles there. He said a sheriff’s deputy asked him if he was “in cahoots with al-Qaida” before searching him. He said the deputy also threatened to arrest him when he wouldn’t identify himself or say what the photos were for. Mickey H. Osterreicher, general counsel for the National Press Photographers Association, said such instances of photographers being stopped, questioned and searched is becoming more common, not only in Los Angeles but across the country. He added that security shouldn’t be routinely used as a “pretext” to stifle free expression rights. “Photography is not a crime. It’s protected First Amendment expression,” said Peter Bibring, senior staff attorney at the ACLU of Southern California. “Sheriff’s deputies violate the Constitution’s core protections when they detain and search people who are doing nothing wrong. To single them out for such treatment while they’re pursuing a constitutionally protected activity is doubly wrong.” The lawsuit asks that the court declare the actions of the Sheriff’s Department unconstitutional. It also seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive damages. More: Are You ‘In Cahoots With Al-Qaida?’
ACLU Sues Sheriff’s Department For Repeatedly Harassing Law-Abiding Photographers
The Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department harasses law-abiding photographers, threatening to put them on an FBI “hit list,” accusing them of terrorist conspiracy and detaining them for completely lawful activities, according to a lawsuit filed by the ACLU. Photographers have been stopped and harassed for taking pictures on the sidewalk, on the Red Line and near oil refineries. more › More: ACLU Sues Sheriff’s Department For Repeatedly Harassing Law-Abiding Photographers
Firefighters Rescue, Perform Mental Health Check on Man Who Got Stuck Inside Tree Trunk
Sheriff’s deputies received a call from passers-by yesterday morning who reported that someone in a dry riverbed in Laguna Hills was screaming, according to the Orange County Register . They arrived to find the head and arms of a man — who so far remains nameless — sticking out of a hollowed-out tree. more › Read more: Firefighters Rescue, Perform Mental Health Check on Man Who Got Stuck Inside Tree Trunk
Sheriff’s Deputy Turns Himself in For Molesting Teen Girl He Met On Duty
Kenneth Alexander was a Los Angeles County Sheriff’s deputy, assigned to patrol out of the Marina del Rey Sheriff’s Station when he met a 15-year-old girl who he ultimately met up with again off-duty and allegedly molested her. more › Read more from the original source: Sheriff’s Deputy Turns Himself in For Molesting Teen Girl He Met On Duty
Suspect Shot After Wild Police Chase In Modesto, California – Modesto News
Just after midnight a police officer in downtown Modesto, California heard the sound of shots being fired near Maze Blvd. He then observed a pickup truck coming from the direction of the shot sounds. The officer attempted a traffic stop on the vehicle. The suspect in the truck did not stop for the officer but, instead drove onto Highway 99 and proceeded to drive south on the freeway at speeds of over 90 miles per hour. The Modesto Police Department stayed with the vehicle as the Stanislaus County Sheriff’s Department and the California Highway Patrol joined in the pursuit. The suspect drove to Turlock, California where he took an exit. He drove for a few minutes around Turlock before getting back onto Highway 99 and driving northbound back toward Modesto. The suspect was able to avoid at least 3 attempts by police to use spike strips and made his way back into Modesto, California. The suspect began to slow the vehicle for an unknown reason to about 40 miles an hour while on the freeway and after a few minutes took the Toulumne Blvd. exit and started driving west. The officers in pursuit were given authorization at this time to use a PIT maneuver to facility a felony stop. Now, what happened next will be under investigation for a while to come but, according to the radio traffic; soon after the suspect turned onto Toulumne Blvd. an officer called over the radio that the suspect was attempting to ram officers with his vehicle and then shortly after that a call came out of …