Posted on October 17, 2008

Black Supervisors Punished a Deputy Out of Racism, Jury Finds

Victoria Kim, Los Angeles Times, Oct. 17, 2008

Black supervisors in the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department were acting out of racism when they called a group of Latino deputies the “Mexican Mafia” and disciplined a member, jurors found Thursday.

Angel Jaimes, a 19-year veteran of the department, was harassed because of his Mexican origin by his supervisors, who, according to testimony, said the station “was run by Mexicans and they were going to change that,” the panel concluded.

But jurors also said they did not find the supervisors’ conduct to be “outrageous.”

After the verdict was reached, attorneys settled the lawsuit for $432,000 in lost wages and punitive damages—far less than the roughly $6 million that Jaimes had sought.

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Jaimes’ attorney, Arnoldo Casillas, told jurors that the Regulators were singled out by supervisors and likened to the Mexican Mafia because of a stereotype that pegs male Latinos as likely gang members.

But attorneys for the county said serious allegations were raised against the group. To supervisors, the Regulators called to mind another notorious sheriff’s clique, the “Vikings.” In the early 1990s, white deputies who belonged to the Vikings were accused of brutalizing minorities, making bogus arrests and engaging in wrongful shootings.