Gangs? Cliques? Subgroups? Call Them What You Will — There've Been 18 (Yes, 18) In The LA Sheriff's Department
At least 18 secret subgroups have operated within the L.A. Sheriff's Department over the past 50 years, according to a report by Loyola Law School's Center for Juvenile Law & Policy. Some have operated as "deputy gangs," encouraging violence against local residents, jail inmates and even fellow deputies who challenge them, according to the report.
The report, which cites reporting done by KPCC/LAist, identified 11 "deputy gangs" and seven "subgroups." Some have tattoos, hand signals, and rituals that are similar to a criminal street gang, it said.
Many of the groups "foster a culture of violence and escalate uses of force against community members," said Loyola Law School Professor Sean Kennedy, who led the study and sits on the L.A. County Civilian Oversight Commission, the watchdog group for the agency. The department has "a longstanding, broad institutional problem in need of serious reform," he said.
Some of the groups, including one comprised of Black deputies, appear to have been more benign, the report said.
The Sheriff's Department said in a statement that it is "aware of the non-peer reviewed report containing non-academically acceptable citations and unproven allegations as a primary basis for content," adding that the report would "extrapolate anything that would be helpful."
Villanueva "was the first and only Los Angeles County sheriff to ever successfully implement a policy banning the formation and participation in cliques and sub-group," the statement said.
Ron Hernandez, the president of the Association of Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs, told KPCC's Larry Mantle that he wore the tattoo of one of the groups but that it engaged in no wrongdoing. He would not say which group. Nonetheless, he favored the elimination of all subgroups within the department.
Civil rights groups have long been concerned about deputy subgroups operating inside the department. Most recently, several East L.A. deputies filed a lawsuit detailing how they'd been harassed and physically attacked in 2018 by colleagues who call themselves the Banditos.
Villanueva recently said 26 deputies face discipline in connection with the attack, which prompted him to write a new policy outlawing such cliques. But critics have said he's done too little to enforce it, and Villanueva has previously minimized them as social groups, referring to bad behavior as "hazing run amok."
The Loyola report makes a series of recommendations. Among them:
TOP RECOMMENDATIONS
- The LASD should enforce its new policy prohibiting deputies from participating in subgroups that violate the rights of others or have violated the rights of others in the past.
- The LASD should periodically require existing employees to fill out its "tattoo image form" that it currently requires of applicants.
- Los Angeles deputy district attorneys should affirmatively ask sheriff's deputies expected to testify as prosecution witnesses whether they belong to a deputy gang or clique and, if they do, disclose this affiliation to the defense prior to trial pursuant to Brady v. Maryland.
- Judges should allow defense counsel to cross-examine deputies regarding their tattoos and affiliations with deputy subgroups and require prosecutors to affirmatively disclose this information to defense counsel.
- The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors should direct its counsel to stop requesting protective orders and non-disclosure agreements as a condition of settlement in civil suits because such tactics facilitate hiding deputy gang misconduct from the public.
At least seven deputy groups appear to be currently active, according to Kennedy.
BELIEVED TO BE ACTIVE
Banditos - East L.A. Station. Tattoo depicts a skeleton with a bushy mustache wearing a sombrero and bandolier, and holding a pistol. According to the report: "They regularly use gang slang, such as referring to longtime members as 'OGs' and passing on information that they 'heard on the yard.' Banditos leaders refer to themselves as 'shot callers,' a term borrowed from the leaders of prison gangs."
Cowboys - Century, Palmdale and other stations. Tattoo depicts a skull in a cowboy hat with sequential numbers. In 2018 a deputy in the Palmdale station claimed the Cowboys tattoo signified "that no person has less rights than any other person" and that "you treat the public equally and without bias."
Executioners - Compton Station. Tattoo depicts a skull wearing a Nazi helmet with "CPT" on front and rifle encircled by flames that is sequentially numbered. Deputy Austreberto Gonzalez, who has filed a civil rights lawsuit against the department, said in a recent deposition that the Executioners are a "violent gang" that dominates the station and that has assaulted other deputies.
Grim Reapers - South L.A. Station. Tattoo depicts a black-hooded skeleton holding a scythe, reminiscent of the medieval symbol of death. The Grim Reapers came under heightened public scrutiny after Sheriff Villanueva reinstated Caren Carl Mandoyan, a former deputy with a Grim Reapers tattoo. After the Office of Inspector General (OIG) started investigating Villanueva's rehiring of Mandoyan -- including his ties to the Grim Reapers -- the LASD restricted the OIG's electronic access to all internal personnel records.
Rattlesnakes - Palmdale and Lancaster Stations. Tattoo is of a skull and a snake. The U.S. Department of Justice in 2013 issued a report finding that deputies "engaged in a pattern or practice of discriminatory and otherwise unlawful searches and seizures... against African Americans" and that "Some Antelope Valley deputies wear tattoos or share paraphernalia with an intimidating skull and snake symbol as a mark of their affiliation with the Antelope Valley stations."
Regulators - Century Station in Lynwood. An early source describes the Regulators tattoo as "a skull-faced man holding a shotgun, fire screaming from its barrels." A later report compiled by the District Attorney's office describes a similar "station tattoo" as a skeleton in a "cowboy type hat" and a "trench coat" holding a double-barreled shotgun with smoke emitting from the barrels. The Regulators dominated the Century station from 1999 until at least 2014.
Spartans - Century Station. Tattoo unknown. In 2019, the Los Angeles Times reported that the FBI had opened an investigation of several LASD deputy gangs, including the Spartans.
UNKNOWN IF ACTIVE OR PREVIOUSLY ACTIVE
Buffalo Soldiers - Group of Black Deputies Across Stations. "One LASD source stated that the Buffalo soldiers arose in response to prejudice at the Century station after then-Sheriff Baca transferred nine African American deputies there in 1999 to diversify the station and improve relations with the community," the report states.
Cavemen - East L.A. Station. Tattoo depicts a hairy-headed cartoon caveman holding a club with "ELA" tattooed on his belly. Sheriff Alex Villanueva has publicly acknowledged the existence of the Cavemen while he worked at East L.A. Station but said he was not a member.
Jump Out Boys - Operated out of Gang Enforcement Team (GET). Tattoo depicts a red-eyed skull wearing a bandana with the letters "O.S.S." (Operation Safe Streets Bureau) and holding a revolver next to an ace of spades and an 8 of spades, the so-called "dead man's hand" in poker. In 2012, LASD management obtained a pamphlet that states a "black book" containing all member information and dates of shootings be kept "off site."
Little Red Devils or Red Devils - East L.A. Station. Tattoo depicts a little red devil. In 1973, LASD management learned of the Little Red Devils during an investigation of alleged misconduct by two deputies affiliated with the clique.
Pirates - Firestone Station (which closed in 1993). Tattoo depicts a traditional skull-and-crossbones. Ron Hernandez, the current president of the Association of Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs (ALADS), appears to have a Pirates tattoo near his ankle. In 2019, Hernandez publicly admitted that he had a tattoo but he claimed "it signified a fellowship of hard workers, not a rogue clique."
Posse - Appears to have operated inside Twin Towers Jail Mental Health Ward. It is unknown whether Posse members had a common tattoo. The Posse resisted reforms aimed at treating inmates with severe mental illness more like patients. On August 10, 1998, eight members of the Posse beat a mentally ill inmate so severely that he was left with flashlight marks on his back and boot prints on his side. Then-Sheriff Sherman Block fired these eight employees and publicly acknowledged the existence of the Posse.
Tasmanian Devils - Temple City Station. Tattoo is of the Warner Brothers cartoon Tasmanian devil. There is little public information about this subgroup. While press accounts and other sheriff's deputies on social media sometimes mention the Tasmanian Devils as one of the LASD cliques, they never elaborate.
Three Thousand Boys - 3000 Cell Block Men's Central Jail. There is conflicting evidence whether 3000 Boys members have a common tattoo, but there is a widely circulated internet photo of the back of a bald man's head with a tattoo depicting vertical bars above the words "3000 Boys."
Two Thousand Boys - 2000 Cell Block of Men's Central Jail. Tattoo on the calf depicting the Roman numeral "II." They earned their tattoo by beating inmates in their custody and then filing false reports to cover up the abuse.
Vikings - Lynwood Station (now closed). Tattoo depicted a Viking head, sometimes with the number "998," which is the radio code for "officer-involved shooting." In 1990, U.S. District Judge Terry Hatter characterized the Vikings as "a neo-Nazi, white supremacist gang" that operated under leaders who "tacitly authorize deputies' unconstitutional behavior."
Wayside Whities - Peter J. Pitchess Honor Rancho (previously called Wayside Honor Rancho). It is unknown whether Wayside Whities members had a common tattoo, but some did employ "W" hand signals to signify their membership.
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