
6 minute read
LA breaks ground on Ballona Creek Safe Clean Water project
By City News Service
Two former sheriff’s deputies who were involved in a muchdebated fatal shooting in Gardena pleaded not guilty Thursday to federal charges in a separate case alleging they falsely imprisoned a 23-year-old skateboarder in their patrol car, which crashed during a subsequent chase, injuring the man.
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By City News Service
Los Angeles city officials broke ground Thursday on a Safe Clean Water project on the Ballona Creek Watershed, designed to address pollution with a specific focus on bacteria water quality objectives.
The Ballona Creek Total Maximum Daily Load project is the first regional project funded by the Los Angeles County Safe Clean Water program to begin construction in the city of Los Angeles. This watershed-wide, multi benefit project consists of the construction of two low-flow treatment facilities — one in the Sepulveda Channel, in Council District 11, and the other in the city of Culver City.
“This Safe Clean Water project is an investment in the future for all Angelenos including those who live on the Westside,” said Councilmember Traci Park.
“I commend the work Los Angeles Sanitation and Environment and the other city departments have done to make critical projects like this a priority.”
City officials alongside LASAN, the Bureau of Engineering and the Bureau of Contract Administration, announced these facilities will treat and release dry-weather flow locally, in addition in conveying water to the Hyperion Water Reclamation Plant for treatment and reuse/ recycling.
“Improving the quality of the Ballona Creek watershed by removing pollutants will protect both public health and local ecosystem,” said Barbara Romero, LASAN director and general manager. “The construction of these two low-flow treatment facilities bring us closer to the ambitious water quality goals set forth by the city.”
Some of the specific benefits of the project include water quality improvement, improved downstream wetlands and enhanced conditions in the Ballona Creek ecosystem, as well as community investment opportunities including job creation and environmental education.
The Ballona Creek Watershed encompasses approximately 128 square miles and drains into Santa Monica Bay. Construction is anticipated to last until spring 2025.
OC sheriff’s sergeant accused of illegally eavesdropping on inmate calls
By City News Service
An Orange County sheriff’s sergeant is being accused of breaking the law by deliberately eavesdropping on several of an inmate’s calls to his defense attorney, according to a motion filed Wednesday in a drug and weapons case.
Orange County Assistant Public Defender Scott Sanders, who represents Brittany Shahbakhti, filed a motion alleging that Orange County Sheriff’s Sgt. Matthew LeFlore listened in on calls made in 2017 between Taylor Camuferguson and his attorney Jon Andersen. Sanders is seeking personnel records for LeFlore in what is known as a Pitchess motion because LeFlore is the lead investigator in Shahbakhti’s case.
The county was rocked by a scandal in 2018 when it was discovered that the company providing phone service for jail inmates had been improperly recording what are meant to be confidential phone calls between inmates and their attorneys.
“In 2019, (sheriff’s officials) were confronted with compelling evidence that LeFlore repeatedly eavesdropped upon calls between Camuferguson and Anderson, based upon an audit of inmate phone calls to their attorneys that had been accessed by OCSD personnel,” Sanders wrote in the motion.
An audit of the phone calls following the scandal “included a log of law enforcement notes about the accessed calls,” Sanders said.
Those records showed LeFlore “accessed seven calls to Andersen, and according to his own log entries, listened to five of Camuferguson’s calls to Andersen,” Sanders wrote.
Sanders said sheriff’s officials did not investigate LeFlore, but instead promoted him and assigned him “to the same jail where the eavesdropped calls were made.”
Carrie Braun, a spokeswoman for the Sheriff’s Department, said, “The department takes any allegation of misconduct seriously. We are reviewing the motion and are committed to investigating, if discovered, any instances of misconduct.”
Kimberly Edds, a spokeswoman for the Orange County District Attorney’s Office, referred calls to the county counsel’s office.
“We don’t respond to Pitchess motions,” she said. “That is handled by county counsel so you need to contact them as we don’t have a role.”
According to Sanders, it appears from the calls in question that Andersen suspected LeFlore was listening, as he and his client mocked LeFlore with advisements that it is illegal for law enforcement to listen in on privileged attorney-client conversations. They even personally insult LeFlore on the calls.
Sanders argued that LeFlore retaliated against Camuferguson by resurrecting an investigation of a burglary that led to additional charges for the defendant.
The indictment also alleges the former Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department deputies, Miguel Vega, 32, and Christopher Hernandez, 37, obstructed justice in various ways to conceal and cover up the unlawful detention three years ago.
According to court papers, Jesus Alegria was in an enclosed skate park at Wilson Park in Compton on April 13, 2020, when the deputies arrived and contacted two young Black males outside the park.
After Alegria yelled at the deputies to stop bothering the youths, one or both defendants pulled the skateboarder through an opening in the park fence and placed him in the back of their vehicle, according to the indictment.
The victim remained confined in the back of the vehicle during a subsequent chase, which ended when Vega crashed and Alegria was injured, federal prosecutors allege.
Vega and Hernandez, both of whom were assigned to the Compton Sheriff’s Station, pleaded not guilty at their arraignment in Los Angeles federal court.
A sheriff’s department representative told City News Service that the department initiated criminal and administrative investigations against Vega and Hernandez in response to Alegria’s allegations.
“As a result of the internal investigation, both employees are no longer members of the department,” the representative said. “The department assisted federal agencies on the criminal investigation which contributed to the indictment.
“The sheriff’s department is committed to holding employees accountable for their actions and expects them to exhibit the highest moral and ethical standards when serving our communities.”
The five-count indictment, which was unsealed Thursday morning, charges both defendants with conspiracy, deprivation of rights under color of law, witness tampering, and falsification of records. Vega alone is charged with an additional count of falsification of records.
“The indictment alleges that these two deputies violated a young person’s constitutional rights by willfully and illegally detaining him without just cause,” U.S. Attorney Martin Estrada said in a statement.
“Officers who abuse their power must be held accountable, and my office is committed to prosecuting violations of civil rights by those who violate their oaths and victimize those who they were sworn to protect.”
The indictment alleges that Vega and Hernandez locked Alegria in the back of their patrol car without handcuffs and without a seatbelt — a violation of department policy — and never told him he was under arrest or advised him of his rights.
According to the indictment, after leaving the park, Vega, who was driving the patrol car with Hernandez in the front seat, allegedly told Alegria — who was not a gang member — that the deputies were going to drop him in gang territory and he would be beaten up, prosecutors allege.
Not far from the skate park, while Alegria was still locked in the back of the patrol vehicle, Vega began pursuing a young male on a bicycle down an alley, where Vega crashed the car into a wall and another vehicle, causing Alegria to sustain a cut above his right eye, according to the indictment.
Following the collision, Vega removed Alegria from the vehicle and told him to “get the (expletive) out of here,” or words to that effect, the indictment alleges. Prosecutors say Alegria then went to a nearby home to seek help.
According to the indictment, after the collision, Vega reported over sheriff’s department radio that a person purportedly with a gun, whom Vega described as wearing clothes similar to Alegria’s attire that day, had fled through the alley near 130th Street and Mona Boulevard.
The indictment alleges that, even though Vega also reported the traffic collision, neither Vega during the radio calls, nor Vega or Hernandez during a subsequent conversation with their supervisor, disclosed that Alegria had been in the patrol vehicle during the collision in the alley.
It was only after Alegria had been stopped on a neighboring street by other deputies as the purported gun suspect that Vega informed his supervising sergeant that Alegria had been in Vega’s patrol car during the crash, falsely reporting to his supervisor that the skateboarder had been detained because he was suspected of being under the influence of a controlled substance, according to the indictment.
Alegria was taken to a hospital to receive treatment for the injury he sustained from the collision, and the indictment alleges that Hernandez directed a deputy at the hospital to issue Alegria a citation for being under the influence of methamphetamine.
If convicted as charged, both former deputies face decades in prison.
Vega and Hernandez were also involved in the June 2020 killing of 18-yearold Andrés Guardado, who was shot five times in the back by Vega as the deputies pursued him in Gardena after he allegedly displayed a handgun, according to court records.

The shooting led to widespread protests, and a wrongful death lawsuit filed by Guardado’s family against the county was settled last year for $8 million.
No criminal charges were filed in that case.
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