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S.C.V. History
May 1
1927: First major competition, second annual rodeo, at new Baker Ranch arena (later Saugus Speedway). Overflow crowd more than fills 18,000-seat arena. Entire SCV population was ~3,000 [story]
1927 Baker Ranch Rodeo


Sheriff Lee Baca

In former Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca’s obstruction trial, a prosecutor likened efforts to obstruct the FBI investigation to a chess match in which Baca was the king, and his underlings were pawns. In contrast, Baca argued that his involvement in the scheme was non-existent, not even amounting to a game of checkers.

Now Baca is almost out of moves. A jury convicted him on Wednesday for leading an obstruction scheme that over five years of legal battles has led to the convictions of nine sheriff deputies and commanders, including Baca’s closest aide, Undersheriff Paul Tanaka.

The former sheriff, dressed in a brown suit and wearing a black and yellow striped tie, stared without emotion as the clerk read the verdict at 2 p.m. Wednesday. His wife Carol Chiang was also in court as the verdict was read.

Baca said to his attorney after the verdict, “It is what it is.”

Jurors began deliberations at around 2:45 p.m. on Monday. Prosecutors said the 74-year-old retired lawman conspired with those under his command to thwart an investigation into inmate abuse at two jails by hiding inmate-informant Anthony Brown within the jail system. That was after deputies cracked open a covert FBI operation into Men’s Central Jail and the Twin Towers Correctional Facility in the summer of 2011 when they pulled a smuggled cellphone out of a Dorito’s bag among Brown’s belongings.

File photo: Baca at SCVTV

The discovery led to a series of foolhardy maneuvers over the course of six weeks in August and September 2011. Obstruction trials would expose corruption in one of the largest law enforcement agencies in the nation.

Officials conspired to keep Brown from testifying before a grand jury, rebooking him within the jail system under different aliases. Internal Criminal Investigations Bureau deputies Scott Craig and Maricela Long approached FBI Agent Leah Marx outside her home and threatened her with arrest, taping the encounter on video for good measure.

In another brazen move, Craig asked Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge John Torribio to sign off on a warrant to sweep the FBI’s offices in Los Angeles. The state court judge calmly explained that neither he nor the sheriff’s department has the power to investigate a federal agency.

Baca, according to prosecutors, had a view of the entire board and moved all the pieces.

But in the first trial, persuading a jury that Baca was the lynchpin of efforts to obstruct – or that he even had direct involvement – proved problematic. That explained, at least in part, why all but one juror voted to acquit the congenial former official just before Christmas last year.

On the one hand, Baca was vocal in his disdain for the FBI, telling presenters on the television show “Good Day LA” in the summer of 2011 that the department could police itself and that he was investigating the feds for smuggling a phone into the Men’s Central Jail. Never mind that the FBI’s move to smuggle the phone to Brown was entirely lawful. To Baca, it represented an unconscionable intrusion and a criminal act.

In Sept. 26, 2011, letter to then-U.S. Attorney Andre Birotte, Baca wrote: “I am extremely displeased with the conduct of the FBI in causing the introduction of a cellphone into the jail system as illegal, unethical, and irresponsible. The Sheriff’s Department will be conducting an investigation into this breach of security of the jail system and will be examining inmate Anthony Brown’s allegations that he received a cellphone from a deputy who received it from an FBI agent.”

Baca’s attorney Nathan Hochman, on the other hand, framed Baca’s conduct as the furious reaction of an experienced official who knew only too well the dangers of allowing a cellphone into his jails. Though the FBI said it only wanted Brown, a violent felon, to use the phone to report to Marx at the FBI, Hochman said it was far from benign. The concern for Baca was that any cellphone could be used to plan a drug deal or even a hit on another inmate.

Hochman said it was federal officials who kept Baca in the dark and Tanaka who obstructed the FBI behind his boss’ back, leaving Baca to worry about what would happen if deputies or other inmates exposed Brown as an FBI snitch. The agency had let Marx, a “rookie,” lead the investigation. Baca was never secretive, and was always “open, transparent and direct” as evidenced by his appearance on “Good Day LA” and the letter to Birotte, Hochman told the jury on Monday.

Moreover, Hochman argued there was little direct evidence of contact between Baca and other officials in phone records and emails.

“This isn’t chess. It’s not even checkers,” Hochman said during his closing argument.

But Assistant U.S. Attorney Lizabeth Rhodes offered a sharply different portrait of Baca in her final pitch to jurors this week.

Rhodes said phone records, emails, documents and witness testimony from convicted deputies, including Mickey Manzo, Thomas Carey and Greg Thompson, showed that while Baca had placed Tanaka in charge, he had called the shots.

“He knew what was going to happen and when it was going to happen because he ordered it,” Rhodes said.

Lingering in the background was testimony about deputy-on-inmate violence in Men’s Central Jail. Over the course of the legal battles, jurors have heard testimony about a marauding gang of deputies on the 3000 floor who brutally beat inmates then covered up the abuses.

The outcome could have been so different. About a year ago, Baca had entered into a plea agreement admitting that he had lied to prosecutors at the April 2013 meeting. The government had recommended six months in jail.

But Anderson rejected the deal, leaving Baca with a dilemma: accept a potential five-year sentence or withdraw from the agreement and face a trial.

Baca’s gambit failed. The retired official could now see out his twilight years in a federal prison.

The former sheriff stared without emotion as the clerk read the verdict, dressed in a brown suit and wearing a yellow and black striped tie. His wife Carol Chiang was also in court as the verdict was read.

Baca said to his attorney after the verdict, “It is what it is.”

Comment On This Story
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12 Comments

  1. Fred Salinas Fred Salinas says:

    Throw the book at him and lock him up!

  2. Sally Mehr Sally Mehr says:

    Yessssssssssssssssssssssss

  3. Well drive Miss Daisy home!!! A friend of our family used to drive Baca around said he was like driving Miss Daisy.

  4. SCgal says:

    JUSTICE; hope it’s a long, well deserved sentence.

  5. I bet he doesn’t spend one year in jail.

  6. RJ Acosta RJ Acosta says:

    Book his ass in his old jail

  7. Chuck Urso Chuck Urso says:

    Very sad that a man who spent decades in law enforcement and rose to the top to lead one of the biggest law enforcement agencies has to end up like this. Convicted of a crime and facing a sentence. Very sad

  8. Nadiya Littlewarrior says:

    Thank you.

Leave a Comment


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