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Probe is launched into alleged ‘deputy gangs’

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The civilian commission charged with oversight of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department has announced it will undertake a “full-scale investigation” into alleged deputy gangs operating within the agency.

“Deputy gangs have fostered and promoted excessive force against citizens, discriminated against other deputies based on race and gender, and undermined the chain of command and discipline,” Sean Kennedy, chair of the Civilian Oversight Commission and executive director of the Loyola Law School Center for Juvenile Law & Policy, said in a statement. “Despite years of documented history of this issue, the department has failed to eliminate the gangs.”

The news comes days after the county’s Inspector General, Max Huntsman, reported that he had identified 41 deputies who allegedly belong to active gangs within the department–11 belonging to the “Banditos” group at the East Los Angeles Station and 30 to the “Executioners” group at the Compton Station.

Sheriff Alex Villanueva has repeatedly denigrated Huntsman’s work as politically motivated at the behest of the county Board of Supervisors, with which the sheriff has often clashed on budget and policy issues.

He has long insisted that reports of such deputy “cliques,” as Villanueva has described them, have been overblown, and said he took firm steps after being elected to discipline and reassign deputies with ties to the alleged groups.

The sheriff’s department issued a statement in opposition Huntsman’s report claiming to have identified dozens of internal gang members, calling it part of “his unhealthy obsession to attack the department” and insisting Huntsman “has failed to provide any actual evidence or new information.”

The sheriff “remains committed to transparency and accountability,” according to the statement, which notes that Villanueva implemented a policy banning “deputy cliques.”

According to the Citizens Oversight Commission, its investigation will be carried out with a team of volunteer attorneys, and the panel “will use its full subpoena power” and gather testimony during regular monthly meetings. The probe will analyze “the continued existence and impact of deputy gangs and evaluate what is needed to eradicate them.”

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