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April 04, 2025

LAPD Joins Its LAFD Brethren in Laying Fallen Hero to Rest

United in the common cause to protect and to serve and the preservation of life, LAPD officers joined their Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD) brothers and sisters in escorting the coffin of fallen firefighter, Brent A. Lovrien, to the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels where memorial services were held this morning.  Funeral services followed at the Calvary Chapel Downey.

Lovrien_2 Public safety personnel from throughout the state of California also paid tribute to their departed colleague and lined the streets of Los Angeles with their fire trucks and equipment as a symbol of solidarity.  Above the somber procession hovered the LAFD Air Operations in missing man formation, the single pilot breaking away in aerial salute to their deceased comrade.

Assigned to the 'A' Platoon at Fire Station 95 since October 2005, Firefighter Brent A. Lovrien was a ten-year veteran of the LAFD.  In a tragic accident on Wednesday, March 26, 2008, Firefighter Lovrien was killed by an electrical explosion that rocked the community of Westchester.  Firefighter Engineer Anthony J. Guzman was also injured by the blast.

The LAPD wishes Firefighter Guzman a quick and full recovery and extends its deepest sympathy andLovrien_4 condolences to the Lovrien family, the LAFD, and Firefighter Lovrien’s friends and colleagues.  They are not alone in their heartache.  The LAPD also bands its badge in mourning as the City grieves the loss of another great hero who bravely made the ultimate sacrifice.

Murder Suspect Involved Shooting with Police

Los Angeles: A murder suspect wanted by the LAPD was shot by Glendale police officers.

On Monday, March 31, 2008, at around 7:15 PM, uniformed police officers assigned to Northeast Division responded to a shooting call in the 1400 block of Avenue 51 in the Highland Park community of Los Angeles. Detectives’ investigation revealed that the victim, 29-year-old, Jose Edwardo Garcia, had received multiple gunshot wounds.  Garcia was taken to Huntington Memorial Hospital, where he underwent emergency surgery and was listed in stable condition. 

On April 1, 2008, at around 2 AM, Garcia died from his injuries.

While conducting a follow-up investigation, detectives learned that the suspect from the Garcia shooting used a .45 caliber handgun, the same caliber weapon used by the suspect involved in a Glendale Officer-Involved Shooting, which occurred about 2 hours later in Glendale.  A bullet casing comparison test was conducted and tentatively, both casings matched.

With the test results and other collaborating witness statements, it is believed the suspect to the Garcia shooting, Daniel Gonzalez, age 29, was the same suspect in the Glendale shooting.

Gonzalez is a documented local street gang member.

Anyone with information regarding this incident is asked to call Northeast Homicide Detective Jose Carrillo at 213-847-4261.  After hours and on weekends, call the 24-hour toll free at 1-877-LAW-FULL (1-877-529-3855).

April 03, 2025

Crowd Control Strategies and Changes to SWAT selection criteria

Los Angeles: Los Angeles Police Chief William J. Bratton announced the Department’s strategy for crowd management at the upcoming immigration rights demonstration on May 1, 2008, and changes to selection process for Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT).

Training Group Commanding Officer Sandy Jo MacArthur provided a comprehensive review of the Department’s ongoing efforts to improve crowd management/control policies and procedures. Since the previous May Day event on May 1, 2007, the LAPD has:

  • Made a thorough examination of the 2007 May Day event, including pre-event planning and training;
  • Created an Incident Management and Training Bureau (IMTB) under the leadership of Deputy Chief Michael Hillman, who is a nationally recognized expert on crowd management and control techniques;
  • Developed, through the IMTB, refined critical incident management strategies, tactics and training for immediate and future use. The training, known as the 21st Century Mobile Field Force Doctrine Training, was implemented on July 10, 2025 and will cover all sworn officers in the Department by April 30 of this year;
  • Offered the IMTB training to 300 additional participants outside the Department, including the Department of General Services, Los Angeles Unified School District and some members of the media;
  • Formed incident management teams to select and develop choice individuals as incident managers. Selected participants with have specific skills, ranks and interests to deliver consistent results for all occasions. Events already facilitated by the management teams include the annual Academy Awards ceremony, the Pre-Tuesday Democratic Party Debate at the Kodak Theatre and various First-Amendment rallies throughout the City; and
  • Embarked on the next IMTB phase, a plan to unify planning methods among all LAPD areas and bureaus to ensure strict, Department-wide standards that are consistent.
       

The Department has also been examining its media protocols, searching for ways to improve quality service methods by protecting First-Amendment rights of the media and opening lines of communication on issues such as access at crime scenes, credentialing and the prospects of media inclusion in the event planning process.

A state-of-the-art crowd management vehicle known as the Critical Incident Utility Vehicle (CIUV) will also be introduced. This vehicle is capable of travelling over virtually any terrain and can attain a top speed of 45 mph. Outfitted with emergency equipment the CIUV features an electronic signboard that can be continuously programmed to provide visual commands to a crowd.  The CIUV comes equipped with a speaker system that can be heard up to a quarter-mile distance and linked with other CIUVs for greater amplification/range. A “Phraselator” may be interfaced with the audio system to translate messages into different languages, including Spanish, Korean and Mandarin Chinese.   

Any questions may be directed to Media Relations Section, at 213-485-3586.

SWAT The Next Level

THE NEXT LEVEL
Changes to how the LAPD selects SWAT officers will toughen the elite team

Changes to how the Los Angeles Police Department selects officers for its SWAT training program have prompted angry letters, disgruntled anonymous quotes in the newspaper and even a claim of unfair labor practices  from the police officers union. These critics charge that the department has lowered the standards for entry into the Special Weapons and Tactics Team. What is missing in all that rhetoric are the facts.

Much of what has been said and written is based on misinformation, assumption or emotion. The Police Protective League, for instance, claims that it was never consulted about the SWAT changes. The fact is, the department met with the league on Jan. 3 - and  its initial response was favorable - but the union canceled meetings scheduled for Jan. 10 and Jan. 24 and asked for more time. The LAPD simply couldn’t be held up indefinitely; it needed to train more SWAT officers before staffing levels got dangerously low. Its new class of 13 started training on Monday.

SWAT officers have one of the most dangerous and demanding jobs in the department. They serve warrants on known violent offenders and respond to high-risk situations  in which suspects barricade themselves or take hostages. Choosing these officers is something the LAPD takes very seriously.

But the process we had been using was  20 years old. Candidates were required to spend five days completing 14 events, many of which were held on a Camp Pendleton obstacle course. Tasks were redundant, had little to do with actual police work and were needlessly hazardous. In 2006, seven of the 38 applicants were injured, four on the military course. Two had to undergo surgery for torn ligaments and were off duty for about a year.

No one’s best interest is served by results like that. The military course was just an unnecessary rite  of passage. Current SWAT officers, by the way, do not test themselves on that rigorous course. They use one at the Police Academy, which better replicates the urban environment SWAT works in.

Still, there’s been a lot of misguided speculation as to why the LAPD is  changing the selection process now. Several news  articles have wrongly linked the changes to a SWAT board of inquiry, a panel of outside experts that made many recommendations in a report researched from 2005 to 2007. An executive summary of the final report soon will be submitted to the Police Commission. While the panel recommended that changes be considered, the specifics of the selection process were already being designed and implemented by SWAT and Metropolitan Division supervisors and commanding officers.

We’ve also broadened the pool of candidates. For years, only members of the Metropolitan Division could try out for SWAT, but ultimately the goal is that any sworn officer with five years of service will have that opportunity. That’s how it’s done in law enforcement organizations nationwide. Candidates also will be interviewed by a panel that includes SWAT supervisors from outside law enforcement agencies, who will bring their broader perspectives to bear.

But most important, once candidates are accepted, their 12 weeks of SWAT training will be tougher than ever. The centerpiece of that training remains its 40 hours on crisis negotiation.

The LAPD was the first metropolitan police department to incorporate a full 40 hours of this training into its SWAT curriculum. This speaks volumes about the unit’s philosophy, which emphasizes defusing dangerous situations so that officers don’t have to resort to using force. While the LAPD’s SWAT unit has ended some historic gun battles by force of arms - the 1997 North Hollywood bank shootout, the Symbionese Liberation Army shootout in 1974 -  its greatest legacy is its negotiation program.  From 1972  to 2005, the period for which statistics are available, there were 3,371 SWAT missions. Of those, only 31 resulted in the death of a suspect. Thousands of others were settled without any force whatsoever.

SWAT’s new selection process, combined with more extensive training, will take the unit and its officers to the next level. In our post-9/11 environment, SWAT has to be prepared for anything - bank robberies, armed standoffs,  even threats involving weapons of mass destruction. We use state-of-the-art technology to respond to these situations, and our officers need both strength and intellect.

As we move forward, other changes may be made, but legitimate criteria will never be compromised. The department is committed to providing training that will constantly evolve. SWAT is dedicated to selecting only men and women who have the physical, tactical and intellectual prowess the job demands.

No one is lowering the standards. In fact, we’re raising the bar.

Capt. Jeffrey L. Greer is the commanding officer of the LAPD’s Metropolitan Division. Mike Albanese is the Lieutenant in charge of SWAT.

LA Times

Mary E. Grady
Public Information Director II
Commanding Officer
Public Information Office
Office of The Chief of Police
(213) 485-3205


 

April 01, 2025

Notes from the April 1, 2025 Police Commission Meeting

•    The Los Angeles Police Commission awarded a Certificate of Appreciation to
Zedar Broadous for his community involvement and positive contributions to the Department.

•    The Department’s report, dated March 14, 2008, relative to the Transmittal of the Grant Application for an Electronic Traffic Citation System from the Office of Traffic Safety, as discussed by Lt. Anita McKeown and Senior Management Analyst Nancy Cammarata, was approved and transmitted to the Mayor and City Council.

•    The Department’s report, dated March 21, 2008, relative to the Categorical Use of Force Investigations Audit, Third Quarter, Fiscal Year 2007/2008, in accordance with the Annual Audit Plan, was received and directed to the Office of the Inspector General to submit an analysis of this report along with any appropriate recommendations to the Board.

•    The Department’s report, dated March 13, 2008, relative to the Initiation of Complaints Audit, Third Quarter, Fiscal Year 2007/2008, and the Executive Summary, in accordance with Paragraphs 74(a, b, c, and e) of the Consent Decree, as discussed by Det. Jose Ceja and Cmdr. Rick Webb, was approved along with the Executive Summary.

•    The Department’s report, dated March 25, 2008, relative to Gang Awareness Training Audit (AD No. 07-024), Third Quarter for Fiscal Year 2007/2008, in accordance with the Annual Audit Plan, was approved.

•    The Department’s report, dated March 13, 2008, in response to Board query, relative to the Adjudication of Categorical Use of Force Incidents - Completion of Training Monthly Status Report - February 2008, was received and filed.

•    The Department’s report, dated March 19, 2008, in response to the recommendation in the Training Evaluation and Management System (TEAMS) II Audit, Phase 1, 2007/2008, was received and filed.

•    The Department’s report, dated March 19, 2008, relative to the Supplemental Audit of Arrest, Booking, and Charging Reports, First Quarter of Fiscal Year 2007/2008, pursuant to Consent Decree Paragraphs 70 (b), was received and filed.

COMPSTAT Citywide Profile

Crime Statistics March 29, 2025

VIOLENT CRIMES                 2008**            2007**       % Chg
Homicide                               101                   84            20.2%
Rape                                    181                 191            -5.2%
Robbery                              3000                3223           -6.9%
Agg Assaults **                    2870                2859            0.4%
Total Violent Crimes          6152               6357           -3.2%

PROPERTY CRIMES

Burglary                                4469               4753          -6.0%
BTFV                                    7171                7817         -8.3%
Personal/Other Theft            6086                6579         -7.5%
Auto Theft                           5155                5867        -12.1%
Total Property Crimes     22,881            25,016        -8.5%
Total Part I Crimes          29,033            31,373
         7.5%

** Prior to 2005, Aggravated Assaults included Child/Spousal Simple Assaults

March 31, 2025

Freeway Shooting

Los Angeles:  The Los Angeles Police Department is investigating the shooting of 20-year-old, Marlon Gordillo Sical, a Los Angeles resident.

On Sunday, March 30, 2008, at around 8:15 a.m., Mr. Sical was shot while driving his white four-door Honda Accord, southbound on the 101 freeway, near the Van Nuys Boulevard off ramp.  As a result of being shot, he lost control of his vehicle and crashed into the center divider. 

Paramedics responded and transported Mr. Sical to a local hospital, where he later died.

At this time, there is no suspect description or motive for the shooting.  Detectives are continuing to investigate all aspects of this incident including evidence to confirm or rule out a car to car shooting, a self-inflicted gunshot wound, or indiscriminant gunfire. 

Anyone with information regarding this incident is asked to contact Van Nuys Homicide Detectives, M. Martinez or B. Shapiro at 818-374-1952.  During off-hours or on weekends, call the 24-hour toll free number at 1-877-LAWFULL (529-3855).

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