In October 1969, LASD deputies bungled a drug
raid in
Whittier along with officers from the
California State Bureau of Narcotics and one officer from
nearby Vernon. The team went to the wrong
address. In the confusion, the
Vernon officer, Detective Sergeant Frank Sweeny, fired his rifle. The bullet went through the floor of the apartment and killed Heyden Dyer who lived downstairs. On February 11, 1989, deputy sheriffs in riot gear invaded the family home of
GLOW professional wrestler
Emily Dole, also known professionally as Mt. Fiji, in
Cerritos, California during a
bridal shower for Dole's sister, Melinda. Much like the
Rodney King incident two years later, the event was videotaped by a neighbor, Doug Botts, showing the sheriffs beating the family. Despite her imposing physique, Dole remained in a passive stance with her arms folded in the middle of the street, where the video showed her being beaten to the ground with
police batons and
flashlights. All 34 members of the party, all Samoan, were beaten and arrested. The
Samoan-American community was angered, contending the incident was
racist in nature. The family sued the Sheriff's Department and won a $23 million settlement. In 2006, an investigation into
corruption at the department collapsed due to "the intimidation tactics of the LASD". A summary of the allegations claimed that captains in the department were ordered to collect $10,000 from each towing contractor doing business with the department. The payments were used as contributions to political causes favored by the sheriff. In December 2009, the
L.A. Times reported that L.A. County Auditor-Controller Wendy L. Watanabe's office found 348 deputies worked more than 900 hours of
overtime between March 2007 and February 2008. This would equal an extra six months of full-time work. The audit found that over the last five years, the department had exceeded its overtime budget by an average of 104 percent for each year. In September 2009,
Mitrice Richardson was observed in a
Malibu, California, restaurant experiencing an apparent mental health crisis. She made statements regarding being from
Mars and avenging the death of
Michael Jackson, and was unable to pay her restaurant bill. Out of concern for her mental health, restaurant staff called sheriff's deputies, who arrested her. She was subsequently released by deputies at 12:38 a.m., with no means of accessing her car, phone, money, or any means of caring for herself. Her naked skeletal remains were discovered approximately 11 months after her disappearance. The county settled with the family for $900,000. According to the
Los Angeles Times, in 2010, the department hired almost 300 new officers. The department later discovered about 100 of the new hires had lied on their applications. Fifteen of the new deputies cheated on the department's
polygraph test. About 200 of the new deputies and guards had been disqualified by other
law enforcement agencies for misconduct or having failed qualification tests. The department launched an investigation of how the media found out about the flawed hiring process. In September 2010, three deputies (Humberto Magallanes, Kenny Ramirez and Lee Simoes) pleaded no contest to charges related to their beating of a prisoner in 2006. The three men were sentenced to various periods of parole and resigned from the department. In December 2010, members of a widely known gang-like group of L.A. County Sheriff's Deputies known as 'The 3,000 Boys' were involved in a violent fight in the
parking lot of the Quiet Cannon Restaurant in
Montebello. An anonymous call made to the Montebello police department reported three Sheriff's Deputies were holding down a fourth, beating him severely. Montebello Police arrived on the scene and broke up the fight; however, no arrests were made. The '3,000 Boys' is a name referring to a gang of L.A. County Sheriff's Deputies and Jailers who have been involved in the beatings and organized fights of inmates in the 3,000 block of the
Men's Central Jail in
Downtown Los Angeles. In May 2011, six deputies were suspended without pay (pending termination and criminal prosecution) for the beating of Evans Tutt, an inmate who had been filing complaints about living conditions within the jail. In January 2011, Deputy Patricia Margaret Bojorquez was sentenced to a year in custody for making a false police report against her husband and recklessly firing a gun in her home. In April 2011, Deputy Sean Paul Delacerda was convicted of breaking into a woman's home kidnapping, assaulting her with a handgun and falsely imprisoning her. In July 2011, the department agreed to pay a half million dollars to the family of 16-year-old Avery Cody Jr. Cody was shot by Deputy Sergio Reyes in 2009. Reyes made several statements under oath that were disproven by video of the incident. The department then agreed to settle, but admitted no guilt. In October 2011, Deputy Mark Fitzpatrick was convicted of an on-duty
sexual assault and
false imprisonment during a May 2008 traffic stop. Fitzpatrick has a long history of similar complaints against him during his career with the LASD. The department agreed to pay the woman $245,000. In January, 2012 Jazmyne Ha Eng was shot and killed by Deputy Brian Vance outside a mental-health center in
Rosemead, where she was a
patient. Vance said Eng charged him and the other three deputies on the scene with a
hammer, making them fear for their lives. Eng was 40 years old, weighed 93 pounds and stood five feet one inches tall. An internal investigation ruled the killing justifiable, but in February 2014, the county agreed to pay $1.8 million to settle the matter. In May 2012, part of the Gang Enforcement Team was accused of being a
clique called "Jump Out Boys" after a pamphlet was discovered indicating that members would receive a tattoo after being involved in a shooting, glorifying the incident. It drew comparisons to the problematic
Rampart Division of the
LAPD in the 1990s, who had the same tattoo. In June 2012, Deputy Rafael Zelaya was sentenced to six months in jail for stealing drugs from someone while on duty. In July 2013 Eugene Mallory was fatally shot in his house while the police alleged that he ran a
meth lab, no such drugs were found in his house. In July 2013, a federal jury awarded $200,000 to a 69-year-old man who had his
rib broken by two sheriff's deputies attempting to arrest him in 2009. The jury also ordered Deputy Mark Collins to pay punitive damages of $1,000. In October 2013, Deputy Mark Eric Hibner, was convicted by a jury of two counts of
domestic violence and three counts of making threats. In December 2013, Deputy Michael Anthony Grundynt was sentenced to three years probation for a fleeing the scene of an accident in 2011. He had been driving while drunk. In March 2014, Deputy Jose Rigoberto Sanchez pleaded no contest to one count each of rape under color of authority and soliciting a bribe. He was sentenced to eight years and eight months in prison. His rapes happened in 2010 while he was on duty. In July 2014, six correctional officers (two deputies, two sergeants and two lieutenants) were convicted by a
federal court of interfering with a
federal grand jury investigation of the county jail. In 2011, the officers obstructed an
FBI undercover operation which was using an inmate informant to report on brutality and misconduct by jail deputies. == Personnel, programs and equipment ==