December 27, 2018
VOL. 33, No. 97
BUTTS California MAYOR DEFENDS DESTRUCTION Will impact
2020
OF POLICE RECORDS LA Times Howard Blume
Presidential Race
Francis Taylor, Asst. Editor
California is determined to force 2020 Democratic presidential hopefuls to make some hard choices. The nation’s most populous liberal state has moved its presidential nominating contest to early in the 2020 calendar, a shift its leaders hope will give it maximum impact on the selection of a Democratic nominee and push candidates to address progressive issues such as climate change. The reshuffling means California voters, who can cast ballots weeks before primary election day, will be helping to determine a nominee at the same time as those in traditional early primary states such as New Hampshire. The shift to so-called “Super Tuesday” in March 2020 will change how campaigns structure their efforts and require tough decisions about allocation of resources, Democratic Party sources and strategists say. Competing in California, with its large, expensive media markets, may only be possible for the most deeppocketed campaigns. That factor alone might be enough to keep 2 some of the two
Inglewood Mayor James T. Butts, Inglewood Police (IPD) Chief Mark Fronterotta, and \ Paul D. Delacourt, Assistant Director in Charge of the Los Angeles FBI Office
IT’S OFFICIAL:
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nglewood Mayor James T. Butts Jr. recently defended his city’s decision this month to allow the destruction of years of investigative records involving police shootings. Many of those records would have become public for the first time under a new state law set to take effect Jan. 1, providing a window into a police department that for years was beset by allegations of excessive force, poor officer training and lack of transparency. Butts, a former Santa Monica police chief, told The Times on Sunday that there is no connection between the new law and Inglewood’s action. The Times broke the story a day earlier on the council’s decision. “This premise that there was an intent to beat the clock is ridiculous,” he said. City officials, he added, would have nothing to fear from these records in terms of liability or embarrassment. A staff report indicates that the records go back as far as 1991. “How would they be embarrassing to me?” said Butts, who became part of city government when he was elected mayor in 2011. “I wasn’t even here for those records. The records are what they are.” The city’s decision at2 tracted more than routine
134 FREEWAY HAS BEEN RENAMED
IT’S OFFICIAL: A portion of the 134 Freeway has been renamed after former President Barack Obama. The new President Barack H. Obama Highway starts at State Route 2 in Glendale and ends at Interstate 210 in Pasadena.
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