header image

[Sign Up Now] to Receive Our FREE Daily SCVTV-SCVNews Digest by E-Mail

Inside
Weather


 
Calendar
Today in
S.C.V. History
November 29
1957 - Incorporation of Mint Canyon Chamber of Commerce; became Canyon Country Chamber [story]
Frontier Days


By Martin Macias Jr.

LOS ANGELES – Despite an attorney for a former Los Angeles County jail officer telling a federal jury Friday her client didn’t know his report about fellow officers beating a man inside a jail in 2011 was wrong when the FBI interviewed him, jurors wasted little time in finding him guilty of lying to investigators.

Byron Dredd was on duty at the Men’s Central Jail in February 2011 when LA resident Gabriel Carrillo was handcuffed for violating the jail’s cellphone policy. Jail officers then took Carrillo to a breakroom where they beat and pepper-sprayed him.

Dredd later told FBI investigators he saw Carrillo punch an officer in the chest with his right arm and attempted an escape by pushing other officers. Dredd said he saw the melee through a small, grated window looking into the breakroom.

But Carrillo testified his arms were handcuffed behind his back during the beating, a detail that was corroborated in testimony this week by Pantamitr Zunggeemoge and Noel Womack, two officers involved in the beating who later signed plea agreements with federal prosecutors.

Other officers who beat Carrillo served prison time after a federal investigation found they orchestrated a cover-up by saying the use of force was justified because Carrillo threw a punch.

Dredd, whose report did not say Carrillo’s hands were handcuffed, was indicted in October 2015 on charges he falsified his report and willfully lied to the FBI during the investigation. A jury acquitted him of falsifying the report but deadlocked on the other charge, and the Ninth Circuit refused Dredd’s request to order a federal judge to dismiss the charge, leading to this week’s retrial.

Dredd’s attorney Nina Marino said Friday that at the time of his FBI interview in July 2012, Dredd was still in the dark about the officers’ cover-up and still believes his report of the incident was accurate.

“There has been no evidence presented by the government that [Dredd] knew his report was wrong,” said Marino, who added Dredd was pressured by his sergeant, Eric Gonzalez, to write his report in line with the officers’ narrative.

Zunggeemoge and Womack also testified in this week’s trial before U.S District Judge Dale S. Fischer that Gonzalez orchestrated the cover-up.

But Justice Department attorney Veronica Dragalin said Friday personal phone records obtained in the federal investigation showed Dredd spoke with Gonzalez multiple times before his July 2012 FBI interview, including for a combined 380 minutes that month.

Dragalin said Dredd lied to the FBI in order to cover for his partners and to protect himself.

“[Dredd] went into the interview intending to mislead [FBI] investigators so that they would stop asking questions,” Dragalin said. “He was counting on the fact that his partners would stick to the code of silence.”

From the witness stand on Thursday, Dredd told Dragalin he knew nothing about an unwritten code of protecting fellow law enforcement partners and said that he never asked anyone if his incident report was accurate or not.

Marino said in her closing statement Friday that Dredd would never do anything to tarnish the reputation of his family, which includes notable black leaders in the city’s law enforcement and fire departments.

She said Dredd made a mistake by writing a report even though he had been distracted by his duty to look after 200 detained men in the jail’s visiting area.

But Dragalin said Dredd had several opportunities to do the right thing.

“(Dredd) is not a casual observer of a car accident, he is a deputy on the job,” Dragalin said. “(Dredd) had a choice when he saw the beating; he could have stayed out of it. Instead, he wrote a report to help cover it up. He made the wrong decision.”

Judge Fischer will sentence Dredd on May 20.

Previously in this investigation, five deputies who participated in the beating and cover-up were convicted and sentenced to prison, including former Sergeant Eric Gonzalez who is serving an eight-year prison term after being found guilty of violating the victim’s civil rights and falsifying reports, according to a Department of Justice news release.

This case is the result of an investigation by the FBI, and is the last in a series of cases resulting from an investigation into corruption and civil rights abuses at county jail facilities in downtown Los Angeles. As a result of the investigation, 22 members of the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department have now been convicted of federal charges.

Comment On This Story
COMMENT POLICY: We welcome comments from individuals and businesses. All comments are moderated. Comments are subject to rejection if they are vulgar, combative, or in poor taste.
REAL NAMES ONLY: All posters must use their real individual or business name. This applies equally to Twitter account holders who use a nickname.

0 Comments

You can be the first one to leave a comment.

Leave a Comment


SCV NewsBreak
LOCAL NEWS HEADLINES
Thursday, Nov 28, 2024
Jan. 25: Viva Las Vegas Fundraiser for Child & Family
Get ready for an unforgettable night of glitz, glamour and gambling when you join Child & Family Center for Viva Las Vegas on Saturday, Jan. 25, 6:30-10 p.m. at the Sand Canyon Country Club.
Thursday, Nov 28, 2024
Second Lot of Raw Milk Found with Bird Flu Virus
The California Department of Public Health is issuing a second warning to Californians to not consume raw milk produced and packaged by Raw Farm, LLC of Fresno County due to a detection of bird flu virus in a second retail sample.
Thursday, Nov 28, 2024
Painted Turtle Seeks Support on Giving Tuesday
The biggest global giving day of the year, Giving Tuesday, is on Tuesday, Dec. 3.
Keep Up With Our Facebook

Latest Additions to SCVNews.com
1957 - Incorporation of Mint Canyon Chamber of Commerce; became Canyon Country Chamber [story]
Frontier Days
LA Metro’s I-5 North County Enhancements Project recently held a Construction Update community meeting via Zoom. Officials presented an outline of recent and upcoming activities over the next 2-3 months
LA Metro I-5 North County Enhancements Project Construction Update
Get ready for an unforgettable night of glitz, glamour and gambling when you join Child & Family Center for Viva Las Vegas on Saturday, Jan. 25, 6:30-10 p.m. at the Sand Canyon Country Club.
Jan. 25: Viva Las Vegas Fundraiser for Child & Family
The California Department of Public Health is issuing a second warning to Californians to not consume raw milk produced and packaged by Raw Farm, LLC of Fresno County due to a detection of bird flu virus in a second retail sample.
Second Lot of Raw Milk Found with Bird Flu Virus
The biggest global giving day of the year, Giving Tuesday, is on Tuesday, Dec. 3.
Painted Turtle Seeks Support on Giving Tuesday
Princess Cruises, headquartered in Valencia, is setting sail on a wave of nostalgia and star power with its new global advertising campaign.
Princess Cruises Debuts New Love Boat Ad Campaign
Los Angeles County Treasurer and Tax Collector Elizabeth Buenrostro Ginsberg reminds property owners that the first installment of the 2024-25 Annual Secured Property Taxes becomes delinquent if not received by 5 p.m. Pacific Time or United States Postal Service postmarked on or before Tuesday, Dec. 10.
Dec. 10: Deadline for First Installment of L.A. County Property Taxes
1950 - CalArts grad Ed Harris ("A Beautiful Mind," "Apollo 13," "Westworld") born in New Jersey [link]
Ed Harris
The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health is advising people to avoid consuming raw milk the has been voluntarily recalled by Raw Farm, LLC due to a detection of H5 bird flu virus in a sample of milk sold in retail stores in Los Angeles County.
UPDATED: Recalled Raw Milk – H5 Bird Flu Detected in Raw Milk Sold in Santa Clarita
Princess Cruises, famously known as “The Love Boat,” celebrated the highly anticipated arrival of Caribbean Princess in Port Canaveral today, marking the launch of a new season of Caribbean cruises from this convenient Central Florida homeport.
Caribbean Princess Arrives in Port Canaveral for First-Ever Season of Cruises
The city of Santa Clarita is encouraging interested and qualified residents to apply for several positions serving on multiple commissions.  
Applications Now Being Accepted for City of Santa Clarita Commission Vacancies
Officers from the County of Los Angeles Department of Animal Care and Control will be conducting field pet licensing efforts in the unincorporated area of Castaic beginning on Jan. 2, 2025.
DACC to Conduct Pet Licensing Efforts in Unincorporated L.A. County
Miriam Udel, associate professor of German studies, and London Evans, director of the Tam Institute of Jewish Studies at Emory University, will discuss how to “build good kids” on Monday, Dec. 2, as part of the 12th annual Maurice Amado Foundation Lecture in Jewish Ethics.
Amado Lecture to Explore Twentieth-Century Jewish Children’s Literature
 Get ready for a sweet day of fun at the 17th annual Family Literacy Festival at the Santa Clarita Public Library, Old Town Newhall Branch, on Saturday, Dec. 7, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. 
Dec. 7: Sweet Adventures Await at the Santa Clarita Public Library’s 17th Annual Family Literacy Festival
Music can transform lives, help people deal with stress and overcome trauma. At its most basic level, it can temporarily transport a listener from the mundane circumstances of their lives to a world filled with joy and beauty.
CSUN’s Wind Ensemble to Perform Holiday Concert for State Prisoners
Senator Scott Wilk presented a $5,000 Barona Education Grant to Excelsior Charter Schools to fund a new lending closet at the School of Business and Innovation, which will provide essential clothing, hygiene products, and supplies for foster and homeless youth.
Wilk Awards $5,000 Grant to Excelsior Charter Schools
Robert Morgan Fisher will present A Night of Narrative: Holiday Story Songs on Thursday, Dec. 5 from 8-10 p.m. at The Main, 24266 Main St., Newhall.
Dec. 5: A Night of Narrative, Holiday Story Songs
Registration is still open for the next session of Nest Healing Art Studio, to be held on Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025 at ARTree Community Arts Center, 22508 6th St., Santa Clarita, CA 91321. Session runs from 2-3 p.m.
Jan. 5: Nest Healing Art Studio
Residential customers in Santa Clarita can properly dispose of their unwanted mattresses and box springs at no additional cost. These items, not to exceed two pieces per visit per day, may be dropped off at the Burrtec facility located at 26000 Springbrook Road, Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and the third Saturday of the month from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Free Mattress Recycling for Santa Clarita Residents
1941 - Funeral for "our" Remi Nadeau, whose Canyon Country deer park became North Oaks [story]
Remi Nadeau
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted 4-0 on Tuesday, Nov. 26, to supporting a motion to evaluate the feasibility of instituting a new department to spearhead the county’s efforts to tackle homelessness.
Supes Vote to Explore Creation of New L.A. County Homelessness Department
The California Institute of the Arts boasts two artists with CalArts connections earning spots on the Recording Academy list of nominees for the 67th annual Grammy Awards.
Two CalArtians Nominated for 2025 Grammys
The Performing Arts Center will host America's Got Talent top 12 finalist comedian Don McMillan's show, 7 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 21 at 26455 Rockwell Canyon Road, Santa Clarita, CA 91355.
Dec. 21: PAC Presents America’s Got Talent’s Don McMillan Show
The California Department of Transportation advises motorists to be extra cautious as a record number of Southern California residents are expected to travel for the Thanksgiving holiday.
Caltrans Warns of Delays Due to Record Thanksgiving Holiday Travel
SCVNews.com