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Editorial: Justice finally catches up with Sheriff Lee Baca – who helped deny it to others

Former Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca talks with members of the media as he leads a tour inside the Men's Central Jail at the Twin Towers Correctional Facility in Los Angeles in 2004.

Former Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca talks with members of the media as he leads a tour inside the Men’s Central Jail at the Twin Towers Correctional Facility in Los Angeles in 2004.

(Damian Dovarganes / Associated Press)
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It is tempting to imagine disgraced former Sheriff Lee Baca — who now faces up to six months in federal prison — serving his time behind bars, itching to tell authorities of the abuse that he and other inmates routinely suffer at the hands of guards, trying to contact investigators with a phone they had managed to sneak in to him. He would be thwarted by prison officials, who have him shuttled between buildings to keep him from making contact with the outside world. When asked about the scheme, the head of the department would deny any knowledge of it. He would lie.

As the elected sheriff, he ran a complex of jails where brutality had become systematic and where would-be whistle-blowers were threatened with retaliation.

That’s what Baca did, and what he pleaded guilty to on Wednesday in the long-running federal investigation into excessive force at Los Angeles County jails and an attempted coverup by sheriff’s officials.

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As the elected sheriff, he ran a complex of jails where brutality had become systematic and where would-be whistle-blowers were threatened with retaliation. He helped hide inmate and FBI informant Anthony Brown, and he lied about it.

In prosecuting the matter that became known as “Operation Pandora’s Box,” the U.S. Attorney’s Office showed tenacity, yes, but also the true meaning of justice by not stopping with the convictions of a dozen or so lower-level players or with the ongoing prosecution of former undersheriff Paul Tanaka, who is due to face trial soon. Baca’s guilty plea is important. It is vindication for those who resisted the sheriff’s active mismanagement of the jails and a reminder to those who come later that no one is above the law — and most certainly not those who are entrusted with its enforcement.

Perhaps Baca will occupy the cell recently vacated by equally disgraced former Orange County Sheriff Michael Carona. And perhaps counties will now provide a level of oversight that is sufficiently muscular to ensure that it won’t be necessary, anytime soon, for the feds to come and clean up the sheriff’s mess.

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