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  • State probes group tied to L.A. County sheriff

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    Jan 29 2007

    State probes group tied to L.A. County sheriff
    Investigators are focusing on the body's charitable fundraising. Many
    of its members have donated to Lee Baca's campaigns.
    By Stuart Pfeifer, Times Staff Writer
    January 29, 2007


    A state attorney general's investigation of a private group
    associated with Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca is focusing on
    its charitable fundraising, according to documents obtained by The
    Times.

    Members of the Homeland Security Support Unit - made up of local
    businessmen, many of them contributors to Baca's political campaigns
    - have been asked to supply the attorney general with evidence of any
    payments made to the group or its leaders.

    Baca suspended the unit last year amid concern about identification
    cards that had been issued to members, a department spokesman said.

    The cards included Baca's name and made the group appear to be an
    official part of the Sheriff's Department.

    The attorney general's office, which oversees charity organizations
    in California, has sent group members questionnaires that ask whether
    they donated to Baca's group or to two similar civilian law
    enforcement support groups in Riverside and San Bernardino counties.
    The questionnaire, a copy of which was obtained by The Times, also
    asks for copies of any checks that were written to the groups or
    their directors.

    A spokeswoman for the attorney general declined to discuss the
    investigation. The agency has the authority to pursue monetary
    damages from charities that mismanage contributions.

    The Homeland Security Support Unit held fundraising events but was
    not registered as a nonprofit, tax-exempt organization, records show.
    Contributors at those events were asked to make checks payable to
    Armenian Vision Outreach, a nonprofit that is also a subject of the
    investigation, according to documents reviewed by The Times.

    Gary Nalbandian, owner of a Glendora tire store, served as director
    of Baca's Homeland Security Support Unit. Before he was named to that
    position, he had been instrumental in raising political contributions
    for Baca.

    The attorney general's questionnaire asks members whether they wrote
    checks or paid cash to Nalbandian or assistant directors Gary
    Jerjerian and Ramzi Bader while "believing that all or a portion of
    the money was to be used for charitable purposes, for example: for
    scholarships, grants, orphanages [or] equipment for law enforcement."

    Nalbandian declined last week to discuss details of the
    investigation.

    "The attorney general [investigators] are the experts. If there is
    something, they'll find it," Nalbandian said. "I have nothing to talk
    about."

    Baca said the homeland security group, which included many members
    from the Armenian American community, was intended to provide tips
    about potential terror threats and assistance with translating
    foreign-language documents.

    The group was one of more than a dozen citizens' groups that Baca
    launched to help the Sheriff's Department reach out to the community.
    It was not incorporated or authorized by anyone other than Baca.

    The attorney general's office, which opened the financial review last
    fall, also is preparing an opinion on whether law enforcement
    officials in California can issue souvenir badges or identification
    cards to civilians. State law makes it a misdemeanor to distribute
    badges to the public that could be confused with those issued to
    sworn law enforcement officers.

    In addition to Baca's homeland security unit, Nalbandian launched the
    civilian Bureau of Justice for San Bernardino County Dist. Atty. Mike
    Ramos and the Sheriff's Executive Council for Riverside County
    Sheriff Bob Doyle.

    Baca, Ramos and Doyle accepted thousands of dollars in political
    contributions from members of the groups. Ramos and Doyle issued
    badges to members but later revoked them.

    Baca did not issue badges; members of his group received laminated
    identification cards.

    Critics said the badges and identification cards appeared to be
    rewards for political contributions and had the potential for abuse.
    Two members told The Times last year that they flashed their badges
    to law enforcement officials, one to gain access to a secure area at
    Bob Hope Airport, the other when he became the subject of a criminal
    investigation.

    Raffi Mesrobian said he displayed both his Los Angeles County
    sheriff's ID card and Riverside County sheriff's executive council
    badge when state agents served a search warrant at his Glendale
    naturopathy office during a 2005 investigation. He was charged last
    year with grand theft, fraud and practicing medicine without a
    license. Mesrobian pleaded not guilty and is awaiting trial.

    The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department opened an internal
    affairs investigation of Nalbandian, who is also a volunteer reserve
    deputy, more than six months ago and has not decided whether to
    suspend him while the inquiries are pending, department spokesman
    Steve Whitmore said.

    Nalbandian also holds a sheriff's concealed weapons permit. The
    department has not tried to revoke that.

    "The Sheriff's Department wanted to wait until the conclusion of our
    own investigation and the attorney general's inquiry and then take it
    from there," Whitmore said of the concealed weapons permit.

    Concern about official-looking badges escalated last month when a
    Compton man was arrested on suspicion of impersonating a state
    official after flashing a badge that had been issued by the office of
    Assemblyman Mervyn Dymally (D-Compton). The man allegedly showed the
    badge, which identified him as an "assembly commissioner," to Redondo
    Beach police officers who were attempting to question him about
    playing loud music.

    In response to that incident, Assembly Speaker Fabian Nuñez (D-Los
    Angeles) this month banned the distribution of Assembly badges to the
    public.

    The attorney general's office, responding to a request from the
    Riverside County district attorney, is expected to issue a legal
    opinion this spring about whether sheriffs and police chiefs can
    issue badges to the public as Doyle and Ramos did.
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