Pubdate: Tue, 29 Feb 2000
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2000 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  Times Mirror Square, Los Angeles, CA 90053
Fax: (213) 237-4712
Website: http://www.latimes.com/
Forum: http://www.latimes.com/home/discuss/
Author: Nicholas Riccardi, Antonio Olivo, Times Staff Writers
Bookmark: MAP's shortcut to Rampart items:
http://www.mapinc.org/rampart.htm.

LATINO LEADERS RELATIVELY QUIET ON RAMPART

The epicenter of Los Angeles' Latino power structure may be the bustling
immigrant neighborhoods patrolled by the Los Angeles Police Department's
Rampart Division.

The Pico-Union, Westlake and Echo Park districts are represented by what
reads like a Who's Who of rising Latino political stars: Assembly Speaker
Antonio Villaraigosa, state Senate Majority Leader Richard Polanco, Rep.
Xavier Becerra and County Supervisor Gloria Molina.

For the past six months, these leaders have been repeatedly pounding on
their core issues--improving access to health care, extending rail to the
Eastside and solving the turmoil in the school district.

What they have said little about is the worst LAPD scandal in city history,
which has unraveled right in their backyard.

"Some people say, 'You guys haven't been outspoken enough' " in response to
the tales of LAPD officers framing, shooting and deporting residents,
acknowledged one Latino official who represents the area. "But we don't want
to fan the flames of a problem."

Latino leaders' muted response to the Rampart scandal contrasts sharply with
the increasing public outrage from a handful of white and black liberals,
and has become a sore point for some activists.

"This lack of leadership from our elected representatives is exactly what
perpetuates the intolerable conditions in which we must live, and why we
continue to be victimized by law enforcement and the judicial system," said
Hector Carreon, an activist and former county commissioner of real estate
management.

Latinos Part of Power Structure

The reasons for the relative silence are manifold, analysts say, and reflect
how Latinos have become part of the power structure in Los Angeles.

Some officials and activists say that families in the district are more
concerned with access to health care and education.

Others cite the struggle over Los Angeles school Supt. Ruben Zacarias'
firing last fall as having distracted them. But there may be a broader
reason.

"The Latino officials are really establishmentarian officials [now]. . . .
Maybe in their younger years they were trying to break down doors," said
Gregory Rodriguez, a fellow at the Pepperdine Institute for Public Policy.
But that is no longer the case, he said, citing the "constructive" style of
the new leadership.

Indeed, many Latino leaders bristle at the assertion that they have been
quiet on the Rampart scandal, saying they have a responsibility not to
exploit the situation for political gain.

"I'm not an ambulance chaser, so I'm not just going to do a press conference
to get a line," said Villaraigosa, who spoke forcefully about the scandal's
implications for the justice system in an interview Monday. The speaker
denied that he has been quiet, saying he wrote an opinion article on the
scandal last fall and has spoken with Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer and Dist.
Atty. Gil Garcetti.

Becerra said, "I'm not interested in bashing the people who are there to
protect my wife and children day to day just because there are some truly
bad apples in the department.

"We need to root out the problem, but that doesn't mean you have to
constantly get out and speak on the thing" Moreover, although leaders said
in interviews said that they are horrified by the allegations, they
expressed confidence in the response of the system so far.

"You have a police chief who indicates he's willing to be responsive, a D.A.
who indicates that he wants to prosecute," said Assemblyman Gil Cedillo
(D-Los Angeles), who also represents the areas patrolled by the Rampart
Division.

Some questioned whether Rampart should be viewed as a Latino issue because
many officers at the station who are accused of wrongdoing are of Latino
descent, including Raphael Perez, whose confessions of corruption revealed
the scandal. "Now," said a legislative aide, "if that'd been a white guy . .
. "

Personal dynamics may also have something to do with the quiet.

Immediately after the 1992 riots, Latino elected officials--who are
predominantly U.S.-born--were criticized for their slow response to the
needs of immigrant neighborhoods like Pico-Union. The exception was Los
Angeles City Councilman Mike Hernandez. But Hernandez remains low-profile on
Rampart, Loyola Marymount professor Fernando Guerra and others say, having
been arrested by LAPD officers on drug charges two years ago.

Hernandez said Monday that he has been active on Rampart issues, "doing my
work on the council floor" supporting the Police Commission's investigation.

Guerra also said that speaking aggressively about the scandal carries risks
for the two candidates for Los Angeles mayor who represent the
district--Villaraigosa and Becerra--at a time when coalition-building is
crucial to winning a citywide election.

"If you take on the LAPD you're going to be tagged as a radical," Guerra
said. "A Latino's already suspect on public safety issues."

With allegations of an improper relationship between Rampart officers and
federal Immigration and Naturalization Service officials, Latino officials
have been expressing greater outrage.

Polanco (D-Los Angeles) met with LAPD Chief Bernard C. Parks to chastise him
for not investigating those charges aggressively enough.

"This issue goes beyond city policy and speaks to the constitutional rights
of all city residents," he said in a news release, though he did not return
calls for comment Monday. Nor did Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard, who last week
called for a federal investigation of the INS matter.

But the response has still disappointed some activists.

"The Latino elected officials have very strong links to the police," said
Carlos Ardon, head of a Central American immigrant-rights group called the
Assn. of Salvadorans of Los Angeles.

For years, Ardon said, he has fruitlessly tried to get elected officials to
respond to complaints of police abuse from Central American and Mexican
immigrants in the Pico-Union area.

"The Police Department is malfunctioning because the elected officials have
put no real attention to what is going on here," Ardon said. "They've known
about these problems for several years now."

Nonetheless, Ardon and others chided themselves for remaining silent for so
long.

"There is no excuse," said Carlos Vaquerano, executive director of the
Salvadoran American Leadership Foundation, who said he has been preoccupied
during the past few months with U.S. Census and Latino leadership programs
run from his office near Pico-Union.

Political leaders say that their constituents note the background of some of
the Rampart victims.

"They aren't the pillars of the community," said Supervisor Gloria Molina,
who has not spoken much publicly about the issue but said she is outraged by
the alleged LAPD corruption.

For Some, a 'Lonely Battle'

People outside the district have led the criticism.

Molina's Westside colleague, Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky--whose huge district
stretches into the Rampart region--has been more vocal about the need for
such a probe.

Assemblywoman Gloria Romero (D-Los Angeles), whose Eastside district does
not include Rampart, held a news conference Friday to propose tightening
state laws regarding perjury.

And state Sen. Tom Hayden (D-Los Angeles) has been the loudest voice of
outrage thus far, holding news conferences in front of the Rampart station.

"I have to tell you, it's been a lonely battle," Hayden said.

Civil rights attorney Connie Rice said she was not surprised by the
relatively quiet response by Latino leaders, saying black and white leaders
are equally guilty.

"If you're seen as defending gang members, you're out of the loop," Rice
said. Only wealthy liberals like Hayden, she said, can risk alienating the
financial establishment by fighting for accused criminals' civil rights.

There may be other reasons why Westside liberals are more likely than newly
ascendant Latino leaders to criticize police, said political analyst
Rodriguez.

"You have to be a wealthy white to believe you have to tear down the system,
because you already belong to it," he said.
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MAP posted-by: Don Beck