Board of Supervisors’ silent sign-off on $25-million payout fails accountability test

Board of Supervisors’ silent sign-off on $25-million payout fails accountability test
LOS ANGELES, CA – APRIL 22: Rosa Padilla Cervantes, mother of shooting victim Isaias Cervantes, talks with attorneys at a press conference at the Hall of Justice on Thursday, April 22, 2021 in Los Angeles, CA. Isaias Cervantes, an autistic and deaf man, was shot by Los Angeles Sheriffs deputies at his Cudahy home on March 31 and is now paralyzed. (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
(Brian van der Brug/Los Angeles Times)

Board of Supervisors’ silent sign-off on $25-million payout fails accountability test

Editorials

The Times Editorial Board April 14, 2024

The Board of Supervisors is the guardian of Los Angeles Countys budget and has oversight over county policies and actions. So it is disappointing, to say the least, that the supervisors asked no questions and engaged in no discussion last week when they signed off on a $25-million settlement for Isaias Cervantes, a Cudahy man who was shot in his home by sheriffs deputies on March 31, 2021.

They were responding to a 911 call by Cervantes sister, who advised the dispatcher of her brothers disabilities and said he had become aggressive with their mother. She asked if deputies could take him to the hospital.

When the two deputies arrived, Cervantes was seated inside on a couch. He declined to go outside to speak to the deputies but invited them in. They entered and told him he was not under arrest but they would have to handcuff him. When he resisted, they scuffled, and one deputy said Cervantes tried to grab his gun. The other deputy shot him.

Its not that county taxpayers should begrudge the payment to Cervantes. He was paralyzed in the incident, exacerbating existing conditions that include deafness and autism.

But in approving the settlement, the board in effect signed off on the Sheriffs Department Summary Corrective Action report that includes no real corrective action, apart from admonitions to sheriffs personnel to follow existing policy by including senior personnel and a Mental Evaluation Team when responding to calls to assist people experiencing a mental health crisis.

Corrective action reports are integral to county legal settlements. They are supposed to lay out what went wrong in an incident

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and why, and how policies and procedures or discipline will change to ensure that something similar does not happen again. Legal settlements are costly, but ideally they lead to improvements and efficiencies that save money and produce better service.

That didn’t happen with the Cervantes report. And the settlement sends a message to the public that, even though the county will pay a stunning amount of money, no one did anything wrong, no procedures need to change and no one will be held accountable. And if the same thing happens again, the county will likely pay all over again.

The payout comes in the wake of a February report from county Inspector General Max Huntsman that sharply criticizes the sheriffs Risk Management Bureau, which prepares the departments corrective action reports and also helps defend against lawsuits.

There may be an inherent conflict between those two tasks, as Huntsman believes. Building a legal defense requires selecting and presenting facts that suggest the Sheriffs Department and its personnel did nothing wrong, and that its policies and procedures are in no need of fixing. Identifying failures, in order to prevent recurrence, requires the opposite critical examination of policies and actions.

The conflict is so great, the inspector general said, that the sheriffs Risk Management Bureau should be dissolved.

Sheriff Robert Luna pushed back on Hunstman’s report, calling his criticism gratuitous attacks on the department. Luna correctly noted that it is common for law enforcement agencies to combine risk management and legal defense. But

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doesn’t mean the arrangement is healthy.

Separately, the Office of County Counsel wrote that it does not rely on the sheriffs Risk Management Bureau to formulate litigation strategy. Still, it said, the bureau is needed to gather documents and witnesses.

County legal liability is not limited to the Sheriffs Department, although it is typically responsible for more than half the money paid out in any given year. Last year, the county paid $257 million in judgments and settlements.

So how will this fundamental dispute over county legal defense and huge payouts be resolved, and in what forum will it be discussed?

The Board of Supervisors created a Civilian Oversight Commission to investigate problems within the Sheriffs Department, and the commission would be an appropriate place to begin the conversation. But in the end it is the supervisors who are accountable for county policy, county wrongdoing and county spending.

Their swift approval of the Cervantes settlement came

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hours and 23 minutes into their April 9 meeting, so they are accustomed to spending time discussing at least some issues. They should also discuss the adequacy of corrective action reports, especially those that fail to explain huge settlements such as the one in the Cervantes case.

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