D.A. memo details investigation into L.A. County sheriff's captain [Google+ hangout]
Times reporter Robert Faturechi will join city editor Shelby Grad at 1:30 p.m. in a Google+ hangout to discuss a district attorney's memo that describes how the L.A. County Sheriff's Department came to believe one of its up-and-coming leaders was betraying the agency and shows the efforts officials pursued to prove it.
[Updated: Discussion has been moved from 1 p.m.to 1:30 p.m.]
Prosecutors recently declined to file charges against Bernice Abram, saying they could prove nothing illegal in her dealings with a Compton gang member, but an FBI investigation is continuing.
The trap was set. All that was left for Los Angeles County sheriff's
investigators to do was wait and see if the unthinkable was true.
Suspicions had grown that one of their colleagues — a respected captain
with more than 150 deputies under her command — was funneling secret
information to an alleged Compton drug trafficker. So investigators sent
out a phony plan as bait, according to records and interviews,
detailing their intention to do surveillance on a house near the
suspected trafficker's home.
A few minutes after receiving the fake plans, Capt. Bernice Abram was
heard on a phone tap placing a call to Dion Grim, the suspected drug
dealer.
Authorities listened in as she tipped him off about the location of the planned surveillance. Stay away, she warned.
That day, in April 2011, sheriff's officials placed Abram on leave, and
for more than a year afterward her ties to Grim were investigated.
Prosecutors recently declined to file charges against Abram, saying they
couldn't prove the captain knew that Grim, a documented gang member,
was involved in illegal activities.
ALSO:
Search ends for teen after family swept into sea looking for dog
FAA: Helicopter hit gas pump canopy in Corona airport explosion
Unions hail demise of Riordan pension-reform ballot measure effort







