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Chair of L.A. County sheriff oversight commission says he is being forced out

Chair of L.A. County sheriff oversight commission says he is being forced out

Yahooa day ago

The top official on the watchdog commission that oversees the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department is being terminated from his position, according to correspondence reviewed by The Times.
Robert Bonner, chair of the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission, wrote in a Wednesday letter to L.A. County Supervisor Kathryn Barger that he received a letter from her on May 13 that said he was being replaced.
Bonner wrote in the Wednesday letter that he had contacted Barger's office to request 'an opportunity to meet with you and to express 'my personal wish to be able to finish out the year.'' Barger's office said on May 15 that a scheduler would reach out to set up a meeting, but that never happened, according to Bonner's Wednesday letter. He added that he is 'involuntarily leaving the Commission' and that he would prefer to stay on to finish work that is underway.
Read more: Former L.A. County sheriff's oversight official faces retaliation investigation
'Given the length of time that I have been on the Commission, and that I am the current Chair of the Commission with another possible year as Chair, I expected as a matter of courtesy that you would want to speak with me and hear me out,' Bonner, 83, wrote.
Bonner and Barger, who chairs the County Board of Supervisors, did not immediately respond to requests for comment Wednesday morning. Bonner's Wednesday letter did not say when he will serve his final day as a member of the commission.
A former federal judge, Bonner began his second stint as chair of the commission in July. He previously served as its first chair for two years between 2016 and 2018. Chairs and officers of the oversight commission are elected to one-year terms each July and can only serve two consecutive years in those roles.
Bonner's letter stated that he has been working on several important issues that he was hoping to see through.
The initiatives included revisions to the Los Angeles County Code to help ensure the commission can serve as an independent oversight body; legal action to ensure the commission can review confidential documents in closed session; the shepherding of AB 847, a bill passed by the state Assembly on June 2 that would ensure civilian oversight commissions can review confidential documents in closed session; and efforts to eliminate deputy gangs and cliques.
'Hopefully,' Bonner wrote in his Wednesday letter, his colleagues on the commission 'will be able to implement these goals while I am attempting to improve my tennis game.'
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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'We need to find these people': L.A. immigration raids a sign of what's to come, officials say
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'We need to find these people': L.A. immigration raids a sign of what's to come, officials say

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‘We need to find these people': L.A. immigration raids a sign of what's to come, officials say
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WASHINGTON — When Donald Trump promised on the campaign trail to unleash the largest deportation campaign in U.S history, he said his second administration would start by going after people with criminal records. But now, disappointed with the pace of arrests, the Trump administration is following through on his campaign promise: targeting anyone deportable. Raids in California have taken place at courthouses, during scheduled check-ins with immigration authorities, at clothing factories, Home Depots, car washes, farms and outside churches. But officials say the state is hardly being singled out. Raids are coming for other sanctuary jurisdictions, too, said Tom Homan, President Trump's chief advisor on border policy. 'This operation is not going to end,' he told The Times. Across the country, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is stepping up new strategies and tearing down precedent to meet the White House's demands. Homan acknowledged the pace of deportations had not met expectations and that while the administration still prioritizes removing those who threaten public safety and national security, anyone in the country illegally is fair game. 'I'm not happy with the numbers,' he said. 'We need to find these people.' Arrests are being made in places previously considered off limits, and the administration earlier this year rescinded a policy that prohibited enforcement actions in hospitals, schools or houses of worship. Agents who typically focus on drug and human trafficking are seeing their duties shifted to immigration enforcement. The government is also now appealing to the public to help find and deport people in the country without authorization. The Department of Homeland Security, ICE's parent agency, released a poster on social media this week that depicts Uncle Sam urging people to call a hotline to 'report all foreign invaders.' And in Los Angeles, the National Guard and U.S. Marines were mobilized without the consent of state and local leaders — a tactic that Trump administration officials said could be repeated elsewhere. Trump claimed the deployments have been effective — 'Los Angeles would be a crime scene like we haven't seen in years,' Trump said Thursday — but local leaders have said the protests against ICE raids had not gotten out of control and that Trump's actions only inflamed tensions. As protests reached their seventh day in Los Angeles, incidents of violence lessened, though some tensions remained. Even so, White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller wrote Wednesday on X that 'America voted for mass deportations. Violent insurrectionists, and the politicians who enable them, are trying to overthrow the results of the election.' 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But other people — older people, folks who are disabled, young people — are going to be bleeding when Medicaid gets cut, when people are evicted from their homes.' While public attention has focused on the arrests of employees, the administration says it's also looking at employers who hire workers in the country illegally. 'It's not just about arresting illegal aliens, it's about holding employers responsible too — but there's a burden of proof,' Homan said. 'If we can prove it, then we'll take action.' One former Homeland Security official in the Biden administration said immigration laws could be enforced without escalating public tension. 'Why aren't they doing I-9 audits instead of just going after people?' said the former official, Deborah Fleischaker, of forms used to verify an employee's identity and eligibility to work in the U.S. 'There are ways to do this in ways that are less disruptive and calmer. They are choosing the more aggressive way.' In many ways, the current immigration crackdown reflects exactly what Trump said during the presidential campaign, when he declared that millions of people would be deported. The new expansive approach appears to be a response to a late May meeting, first reported by the Washington Examiner, in which Miller lambasted dozens of senior ICE officials, asking them 'Why aren't you at Home Depot? Why aren't you at 7-Eleven?' 'Well, now they're all of a sudden at Home Depots,' Fleischaker said. Homan said the agency has recently arrested around 2,000 people a day, up from a daily average of 657 arrests reported by the agency during Trump's first 100 days back in office. The increase is reflected in rising detention numbers, which have topped 50,000 for the first time since trump's first presidency, according to TRAC, a nonpartisan data research organization. Asked about complaints of overcrowding and substandard conditions in detention facilities, Homan acknowledged some facilities are overcrowded during intake. Some of the immigrants detained in California since Friday have been transferred to other states, he said. 'California has been pretty stringent and they want to shut down immigration detention,' he said. 'It doesn't mean we're releasing these people. The less detention space we have in California, the more action they take in not helping us with detention beds, then we'll just simply move them out of state.' The work of immigration agents — sometimes hours of surveillance for a single target — can be slow. Jason Houser, who was ICE's chief of staff under the Biden administration, said law enforcement agents, when given quotas, will always find the easiest way to fulfill them. Miller, he said, knows ICE 'doesn't have enough resources or staff to get them to a million removals' by the end of the year. Houser said that's where the military troops come in. Homeland Security officials said military personnel already have the authority to temporarily detain anyone who attacks an immigration agent until law enforcement can arrest them. Houser predicted that soldiers could soon begin handling arrests. Critics of the administration's tactics, including former Homeland Security officials, said the White House's strategy boils down to frightening immigrants into leaving on their own. It costs a few hundred dollars a day to detain an immigrant; deportation can cost thousands, and some countries are reticent to accept the return of their citizens. 'They arrest one, they scare 10,' said one former senior ICE official. 'That's a win.' The former official, who asked not to be named in order to speak freely, said that's an about-face from the Biden administration, during which agents answered to lawyers and precedent. 'Everything was vetted and vetted … to the detriment in some ways of the agency,' the former official said. 'But to see them just doing whatever they want when they want, it's a little stunning and it's like, look at all the things we could've done if we had that attitude. But they seem to have so little regard for consequences, lawsuits, media, public opinion — they have no constraints.' Homan said protests in Los Angeles have made enforcement actions more dangerous but have not prevented agents from making as many arrests as planned. 'If the protesters think they're going to stop us from doing our job, it's not true,' he said. 'We're going to probably increase operations in sanctuary cities, because we have to.'

Photographer captures Sen. Alex Padilla's takedown at Homeland Security press conference
Photographer captures Sen. Alex Padilla's takedown at Homeland Security press conference

Yahoo

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Photographer captures Sen. Alex Padilla's takedown at Homeland Security press conference

Times photographer Luke Johnson captured the moment when authorities tackled and handcuffed Sen. Alex Padilla on Thursday when he interrupted Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's news conference in Los Angeles. Johnson's images document many of the key moments of an encounter that has sparked controversy amid President Trump's immigration crackdown. The senator was standing near a wall on one side of the room, then tried to interrupt Noem to ask a question. 'I'm Senator Alex Padilla,' he said, as one agent grabbed his jacket and shoved him backward on the chest and arm. 'I have questions for the secretary, because the fact of the matter is that half a dozen violent criminals that you're rotating on your — on your ...' 'Hands off!' Padilla said, as three agents pushed him into a separate room. Videos from the press conference show agents forcing Padilla to his knees and handcuffing him. The senator later held a press conference to describe what happened. 'I was forced to the ground, and I was handcuffed,' Padilla said. 'I was not arrested. I was not detained.' If this is how the Trump administration treats a 'senator with a question,' Padilla said, with tears in his eyes, 'I can only imagine what they're doing to cooks, to day laborers out in the Los Angeles community.' Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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