logo
L.A. probation officer arrested, accused of supplying drugs to juvenile hall

L.A. probation officer arrested, accused of supplying drugs to juvenile hall

A Los Angeles County probation officer was arrested Tuesday afternoon on charges he smuggled drugs into a juvenile hall where a teen died of a drug overdose in 2023, prosecutors said.
Michael Solis, 59, allegedly conspired with two juvenile detainees to sell Xanax to people being held inside of Barry J. Nidorf Juvenile Hall in Sylmar between May and August of 2023, according to a criminal complaint filed last week.
Court records show Solis allegedly began conspiring to sell the drugs on May, 14, 2023, just five days after 18-year-old detainee Bryan Diaz died of a fentanyl overdose in the same building.
'Trafficking illegal drugs to juveniles is unconscionable under any circumstances, let alone as a government employee taking advantage of vulnerable youth in need of guidance and support,' Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Nathan Hochman said in a statement. 'Probation officers have as their primary duty the protection, health and safety of juveniles under their care. My office will not tolerate such an abuse of power, which endangers youth, undermines rehabilitation, and makes our communities less safe.'
The L.A. County Probation Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment. It was not immediately clear if Solis had legal representation or when he would be arraigned.
A spokesperson for the district attorney's office declined to say if Diaz's death sparked the investigation into Solis, who faces up to three years in prison if he is convicted.
Reports of increased drug use among teens held at the Secure Youth Treatment Facility at Nidorf, where Solis worked, had surfaced in the months before Diaz's death.
In April 2023, the L.A. County Inspector General's office detailed two incidents where youths were taken to local medical facilities or revived with Narcan after fentanyl overdoses. A March 2023 search of the unit where the teens overdosed uncovered pills laced with fentanyl and 'two large bindles of what appeared to be fentanyl' inside a dormitory, according to the inspector general's report.
Diaz died on May 9, 2023. Five days later, according to the criminal complaint, Solis began conspiring with two juveniles at Nidorf to bring Xanax into the jails. Court filings say he was caught on camera twice handing a juvenile — identified only as 'Co-Conspirator A' — small packages believed to be drugs inside Nidorf hall.
Solis, who the juveniles nicknamed 'Old Boy' in phone calls recorded by law enforcement, was charging as much as $400 per drug drop, according to the complaint.
The enterprise fell apart in August 2023, when 'Co-Conspirator A' was caught with 106 Xanax pills inside of Nidorf Hall, court records show.
'There is no room in this Department for anyone who violates the public trust and endangers the safety and wellbeing of the youth in our care,' Chief Probation Officer Guillermo Viera Rosa said in a statement Tuesday. 'We applaud the action taken by District Attorney Nathan Hochman, and remain steadfast in our commitment to holding our staff to the highest standards of professionalism, integrity, and accountability.'
Solis first came under scrutiny in October 2023 after another Secure Youth Treatment Facility resident, Nicholas Ibarra, was charged with bringing drugs into the facility. Ibarra told two probation officers — Reggie Torres and David Corona — that he could identify an officer bringing drugs into the facility, according to Tom Yu, an attorney representing both officers.
Torres and Corona were both placed on administrative leave a short time later for conducting an 'incomplete investigation,' according to Yu, who said the charges against Solis vindicated the officers.
'My guys were unlawfully f—ed with essentially, they were harassed and they were obstructed from doing their jobs,' Yu said. 'Solis was the target of the investigation.'
The probation department has not responded to Yu's allegations since he first made them in 2023.
The charges are the latest in a series of criminal investigations targeting probation officers. Earlier this year, a California Attorney General's office investigation into so-called 'gladiator fights' at Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall in Downey led to indictments against 30 officers. A probation supervisor also pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault in February, years after the Times published footage of him bending a teen in half inside Camp Kilpatrick.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New drug called "flysky" is spreading throughout the Pittsburgh area, authorities say
New drug called "flysky" is spreading throughout the Pittsburgh area, authorities say

CBS News

timea day ago

  • CBS News

New drug called "flysky" is spreading throughout the Pittsburgh area, authorities say

A new drug called "flysky" has been spreading throughout the Pittsburgh region, and officials are warning that it can be deadly. In Fayette County over the last few days, there have been at least two overdose deaths from the drug. The drug, as it is sometimes labeled on bags sold on the street, is heroin laced with medetomidine, a tranquilizer used in veterinary medicine. Fayette County District Attorney Michael Aubele says that users need to be aware that this drug can be lethal. "My understanding is that medetomidine is a drug that is not affected by Narcan. So if you overdose on medetomidine, Narcan is not going to save you," Aubele said. Aubele says that anyone who may have a bag of flysky can turn it into authorities at several places in the county, including local police stations and the Crime Stoppers office, with no questions asked. He also says that not only are local and state police working to get these drugs off the streets, but that his office will prosecute those who are responsible for delivering these drugs into their community. "We want people to be safe. We want everybody to be alive and to be healthy. You just don't know what you are getting anymore on the street," Aubele added. Not only is this drug popping up in Fayette County and the Pittsburgh area, but it is also being seen in places like Philadelphia and Chicago. For more information on this substance, click here.

Dallas family blames sheriff's office for overdose death of 21-year-old jail inmate
Dallas family blames sheriff's office for overdose death of 21-year-old jail inmate

CBS News

timea day ago

  • CBS News

Dallas family blames sheriff's office for overdose death of 21-year-old jail inmate

Quinnetta Brinkley's family knew she was coming home from the Dallas County Jail in July. No one thought they would reunite at a funeral home after investigators alledge said she was murdered after another woman smuggled fentanyl into the jail. Opal Brinkley, her 74-year-old grandmother, said the family was grieving without any answers from authorities. Opal Brinkley said she started raising Quinnetta Ariana Brinkley, known as Ari, when the girl was two years old. She also took in Ari's siblings due to parenting issues, and raised them in the Oak Cliff neighborhood of Dallas. Ari's family described her as having a strong independent streak with a knack for defending herself. Her uncle Reginald Brinkley said that is how she ended up in jail. "She wasn't there because of some, the way it makes it seem like that she is, like she was a drug addict," Reginald Brinkley said. He blamed her failure to return home on the Dallas County Sheriff's Office. "When she got out, she was coming back here," he said. "And she's not coming back here. And she's not coming back here. That's it for her." An arrest affidavit said Daisy Zuniga, 26, faces a murder charge in his Quinnetta Brinkley's death. Authorities say Zuniga confessed to hiding drugs in a body cavity so Dallas police officers would not find them during an arrest for trespassing. The drugs also got by the Dallas County Jail's X-ray scanner and a strip search, investigators said. Inside the jail, the affidavit said, at least four women including Zuniga took Xanax pills that contained methamphetamine and fentanyl. It's unclear if the women knew what was in the pills. All four women who took the pills had a second dose, after which they needed medical treatment. Ari Brinkley was found around 8:23 p.m. and pronounced dead less than an hour later. Her family said they got notice from the Dallas County Medical Examiner's Office but have not heard from the Dallas County Sheriff's Office. "I'm still waiting on it," Opal Brinkley said. "To this day, no one has talked to me from the jail." The Dallas County Sheriff's Office declind to comment due to the ongoing investigation. Dallas County Commissioner John Wiley Price, in an interview with CBS News Texas, said he believes Quinnetta Brinkley's next of kin was notified. Price said that as he awaits the outcome of the sheriff's investigation, he is standing with the officers because he's seen what they do. "Contraband is always a challenge for us," Price said. "It's not the fact that they missed anything. I mean, it was in her cavity, you know, it wasn't like she, you know, had it around her neck or in her hand." Price also said the death was reported to the Texas Commission on Jail Standards. In the meantime, the Brinkley family is dealing with a wound her uncle said is just starting to open. Plus, Ari had a one-year-old daughter who does not realize her mother isn't coming home. "Motto, to protect and serve went out the door," Reginald Brinkley said. "Now she's gone because somebody didn't do their job."

Body found in Broward Everglades canal identified as Hialeah man from Mexico
Body found in Broward Everglades canal identified as Hialeah man from Mexico

Miami Herald

time5 days ago

  • Miami Herald

Body found in Broward Everglades canal identified as Hialeah man from Mexico

Authorities are releasing new details on a body that surfaced in a Florida Everglades canal early Thursday morning. Broward County officials say Ramiro Gomez-Diaz, of Hialeah, was discovered hours after they found his car submerged underwater. Deputies responded to reports of a sunken vehicle near Krome Avenue and U.S. Highway 27 around 9 p.m. on Wednesday and found the 27-year-old's 2007 Chevy Tahoe underwater, the Broward Sheriff's Office told the Miami Herald. The agency's dive team, missing persons unit, marine patrol and drone unit were deployed to locate the SUV but saw no trace of the missing driver. A family member was the first to spot a lifeless Gomez-Dias after returning to the canal early Thursday morning, BSO reported in a statement released Friday afternoon. A GoFundMe page for the Hialeah man said he was originally from Chiapas, Mexico and migrated to the United States 'with dreams of building a better future.' The posting said proceeds would help pay for his funeral and transporting him back to his hometown in Mexico. Marshall Jones, owner of Mack's Fish Camp, an air boat tour business located on the same stretch of canal, was the first to phone authorities. He guided rescue crews to Gomez-Diaz's SUV after spotting tire tracks on Wednesday night. 'I saw fresh skid marks and disturbance on the side of the levy and bubbles in the canal,' Jones told the Miami Herald. An initial investigation by BSO's Traffic Homicide Unit showed that 'for unknown reasons, the vehicle veered off the roadway and into the canal.' after tire marks. The agency said it will continue looking into how the sunken car and its driver ended up in the canal.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store