Thursday, December 12, 2013

13-12-12 Los Angeles County, California - widespread corruption of the courts and law enforcement

 
Judge Alex Kozinski - Chief Judge of the 9th Circuit and Leroy Baca - Sheriff of Los Angeles County - two of a kind!

Suffice is to read the 2006 Rampart Reconsidered - Blue Ribbon Report, which concluded that corruption of the LA Superior Court was central to the Rampart Scandal, that corruption in LA County in 2006 was greater than corruption in Los Angeles County during the notorious Water Wars of the 1920s, and that unknown number (probably over 10,000 - the Blue Ribbon Panel was denied access to records) of people were still falsely imprisoned 8 years after the eruption of the Rampart Scandal, since judges of the LA Superior Court claimed that releasing them would cause "collapse of the justice system".

LINKS:
06-07-15 Rampart Reconsidered: LAPD's Blue Ribbon Review Panel Report (2006)

On Thursday, December 12, 2013 10:23:35 AM UTC+2, Joseph Zernik, Human Rights Alert (NGO) wrote:
The only problem in this story is that the person, who is "the chief administrator", so to speak, is Chief Judge Alex Kozniski himself!

Under his tenure, Los Angeles County was permitted to reach unprecedented levels of corruption, documented in the Human Rights Alert (NGO) submission to the first ever review of Human Rights in the United States, which concluded "corruption of the courts and the legal profession in California."

The US Court of Appeals, 9th Circuit, was involved in patronizing corruption of the courts and law enforcement in Los Angeles County at least since the Rampart Scandal (1998-2000), when it approved the hefty award to corrupt LAPD officers, who were convicted by jury and sentenced to prison terms, then freed by the corrupt California Judge Jacqueline Connor, who claimed she biased the jury in her erroneous jury instruction...  

Justice Kozinski was also personally involved in denying the habeas corpus petition of Richard Fine.

Typical of corrupt judges, from time to time they drip justice with great fanfare, only to generate massive corruption in their routine conduct.

In short
Kozinski should be held accountable for the deprivation of rights of all California residents through the establishment and patronizing of the corrupt California courts and law enforcement, as noted in the UN report.

JZ 



On Thu, Dec 12, 2013 at 7:45 AM, Arnie <arnie@arnierosner.com> wrote:


Isn't it obvious the problem is the responsibility of those in charge?  

When a failure is detected within a system, the chief administrator must be immediately suspended, charged with the defect, removed from control of the organization and independently investigated by the people.  There is no such thing as self monitoring or internal affairs.  Anyone foolish enough to accept such a notion does not have sufficient intelligence to even address such a matter.

On Dec 11, 2013, at 8:42 PM, Gary Zerman <gzerman@hotmail.com> wrote:

Ron:

Here is a follow up to your email.  GLZ.

9th Circuit Chief Judge-Kozinski Writes Scathing Dissent Warning of Epidemic of Brady Violations by Justice Department 
http://jonathanturley.org/2013/12/11/chief-judge-writes-scathing-dissent-warning-of-epidemic-of-brady-violations-by-the-justice-department/



Date: Wed, 11 Dec 2013 20:20:01 -0800
From: VictoryUSA@jail4judges.org
To: VictoryUSA@jail4judges.org; jail4judges@yahoogroups.com; JAIL-SoundOff@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Lawsters:20345] More and More Law Enforcement Engaged In Corruption


More and More Law Enforcement
Engaged In Corruption

In the past this author has been thrown into the L.A. Men's County JAIL on victimless crimes with repeated anal searches, deprivation of food, lack of medical care and sanitation needs such as toilet paper. He would  document such incidents and report them to the L.A. County Grand Jury charged with inspecting the Los 
Angeles County jails. The problem was, whenever the Grand Jurors came to inspect county jails, the sheriff's would clean up their act and present to the Grand Jury pristine inspection conditions. I wrote to the Los Angeles County Grand Jury and suggested they send through the jails a pretended criminal to inspect the jail system. Below is a current account of informants being sent through the jail system which resulted in around twenty L.A. Sheriff's Deputies being arrested and charged with corruption. Year after year, we find these very same taking place.

Ron Branson
National JAIL4Judges Commander-In-Chief



http://investigations.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/12/09/21835238-nearly-20-la-sheriffs-deputies-charged-in-corruption-inmate-abuse-probe?lite

Nearly 20 LA sheriff's deputies charged in corruption, inmate abuse probe

By Andrew Blankstein
NBC News
Nearly 20 current and former Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies were expected to be arrested Monday in connection with a two-year federal probe into corruption and inmate abuse in the county jail system.
Sixteen deputies, most still active in the department, were either arrested without incident or surrendered Monday to agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, according to law enforcement sources familiar with the investigation. Two others had not yet been arrested by Monday afternoon. None of those arrested ranked higher than lieutenant.
Four grand jury indictments and one criminal complaint allege the unjustified beating of inmates, unjustified detention and a conspiracy to obstruct a federal investigation.
“The five cases allege a wide scope of illegal conduct,” said André Birotte Jr., U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California. “This investigation started by focusing on misconduct in county jails, and we uncovered examples of civil rights violations that included excessive force and unlawful arrests.”
“Our investigation also found that these incidents did not take place in a vacuum – in fact, they demonstrated behavior that had become institutionalized. The pattern of activity alleged in the obstruction of justice case shows how some members of the Sheriff’s Department considered themselves to be above the law.”
The arrests seem to culminate an investigation that included allegations that deputies tried to hide an informant who was providing information to the FBI while locked up after the deputies discovered the informant had a cell phone.
Seven current and former members of the LASD were accused in an indictment that alleges a conspiracy to obstruct justice, after the deputies learned that an FBI informant was being held in the Men’s Central Jail. The deputies learned that the informant had received a cell phone from a deputy who allegedly received a bribe, and that the informant was assisting the FBI in investigating alleged corruption and civil rights violations.
The defendants then allegedly attempted to hide the informant from the FBI and the U.S. Marshals Service. Prosecutors say they altered records to make it look like the informant had been released from custody, and then rebooked him under a different name and told him he had been abandoned by federal law enforcement. Two sergeants named in the case allegedly confronted an FBI agent at her home in order to intimidate her into divulging details of the investigation.
Lieutenant Gregory Thompson, charged in the indictment, no longer works for the Sheriff’s Department. The other deputies named are Gerard Smith, Mickey Manzo, James Sexton, Scott Craig and Maricella Long.
In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, the informant said he had been using his phone to take photos and document excessive force inside Men's Central Jail. Anthony Brown told the paper that FBI agents regularly visited him in court and at the jail, where he supplied them with the names of allegedly corrupt and abusive deputies.
In another indictment, a sergeant and four deputies are charged with arresting or detaining five individuals, including the Austrian consul general, who was handcuffed, when they visited inmates at the Men’s Central Jail in 2010 and 2011. Lead defendant Eric Gonzalez no longer works for the department. The four deputies, Sussie Ayala, Fernando Luviano, Pantamitr Sunggeemoge and Noel Womack, are charged with participating in at least one of four incidents in which victims allegedly suffered civil rights violations. One incident left a victim permanently disabled after he suffered a broken arm and dislocated shoulder.
Two deputies are charged in a six-count indictment with making false statements and civil right violations. Bryan Brunsting is charged in relation to an incident in which an inmate was allegedly assaulted and injured. Broth Brunsting and Jason Branum are charged in another assault. The indictment alleges that Brunsting then used deputies he was training to file reports covering up the abuse.
Deputy Richard Piquette is charged in the fourth indictment with illegal building and possessing an assault rifle. The investigation is being handled by the ATF.
Another of the cases involves three LASD deputies who are brothers who allegedly used a “buy-and-bail” mortgage fraud scheme to help buy a home in Corona, Calif. Billy, Benny and Johnny Khounthavong allegedly made false statements to buy the home and then made more false statements to walk away from the property when the value of the home fell below what they owed on it. The brothers allegedly avoided more than $340,000 in mortgage debt via the scheme.
Sheriff Lee Baca called the arrests "a sad day for the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department."
"We do not tolerate misconduct by any deputies," said Baca. "This department is grounded in its core values, namely to honorably perform our duties with respect for the dignity of all people, and integrity to do right and fight wrongs. We have cooperated fully with the federal investigation and will continue to do so."
The arrests and jail abuse allegations represent the latest series of controversies to roil the administration of Sheriff Baca, who is seeking a fifth four-year term in next November’s elections. One of his chief rivals is Paul Tanaka, a former undersheriff and Baca confidant who retired from the department earlier this year amid a bitter falling out.
In June, the U.S. Justice Department found that deputies patrolling the Antelope Valley in northern Los Angeles County repeatedly harassed and intimidated Blacks and Latinos including using racial profiling and excessive force.
In 2012, a Sheriff’s captain at the Carson station was placed on administrative leave after the department alleged she was giving information to a suspected narcotics dealer.

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