Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
National
Kate Mather

LAPD chief defends absence from heated Venice town hall

May 12--Los Angeles police Chief Charlie Beck defended his absence from last week's heated town hall meeting in Venice, telling reporters Monday that he also recommended the mayor not attend the community meeting convened after the fatal police shooting of a homeless man.

Several people who attended Thursday night's meeting faulted Beck and Mayor Eric Garcetti for not being there. Beck rebuffed the criticism of the mayor, saying it was "unfair" because previous mayors hadn't attended similar events in the past.

"I've been to a bunch of these meetings, town hall meetings, following a violent incident. I didn't go to this one, and if you want to criticize the chief for that, that's fine," Beck said. "But typically, the mayor does not go to these meetings. The prior mayor did not go to these meetings. And I recommended to the mayor that he not go to this one. So if there's criticism, it should be on me."

Beck said the town hall event -- which was attended by hundreds of people -- was organized and handled by a "very capable" deputy chief, Bea Girmala. The chief said he had "tremendous confidence" in Girmala's leadership and said he trusted she would report back to him "in totality."

Garcetti said that he has "heard a lot of the feedback," even without attending the meeting.

The remarks came during a news conference in which the mayor and chief discussed a weekend gun buy back event, one of a handful the city holds each year. But the conversation quickly turned to Tuesday's deadly encounter in Venice in which a police officer shot and killed an unarmed homeless man.

The shooting was captured by a security camera on a nearby building. Beck said last week that after reviewing the recording, he was "very concerned" about the deadly encounter.

Garcetti said Monday that he had not seen the video, which has not been released. The mayor said making the recording public could hurt the investigation into the officer's actions.

"When an ongoing investigation is underway, I think that it's important to make sure that, especially if things are going to go to a criminal jury ... that we not taint people one way or another," Garcetti said. "Because it can oftentimes result in an outcome other than what I think even the most ardent advocates would want to see in cases where we do find police abuse."

Beck cautioned that the video -- which sources said doesn't explain why the officer fired his weapon -- was only one part of the ongoing investigation and must be examined along with other evidence. "It can't be the totality on which you base a judgment," he said.

Both Garcetti and Beck stressed that the shooting death of Brendon Glenn, 29, would be thoroughly reviewed by the LAPD, the district attorney's office, civilian Police Commission and its inspector general.

"Will we have incidents throughout the city in which we have officers who are disciplined, fired and prosecuted? Yes. We see those," Garcetti said. "And I think every officer, just as every non-officer, knows that they have to obey the law."

Police said the deadly encounter began about 11:20 p.m. when police were called to a stretch of Windward Avenue just off the Venice boardwalk. A caller had reported a homeless man -- later identified as Glenn -- who was "harassing customers" outside a building, LAPD officials said.

The two officers talked to Glenn briefly, the LAPD said. When he walked toward the boardwalk, the officers returned to their patrol car.

Soon after, police said, the officers saw Glenn "physically struggling" with a bouncer outside a bar. The officers approached the man and tried to detain him, police said, leading to a "physical altercation" that ended with the shooting.

Glenn's death comes amid a heated national conversation about police officers and their use of force, particularly against black men. Glenn was black, as was the officer who shot him, according to the LAPD.

The two officers involved have been removed from the field.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.