Acting Orange County Sheriff Jack Anderson has expressed disgust at the mess he's inherited at Theo Lacy Jail. "I can't think of a lower standard they were acting at," he told a Times reporter Tuesday. "I will take it as far as I can take it," he said about possible further disciplinary actions, "and termination will not be enough for me."
I hope he's not talking about knee-capping people, but I get the point:
He's tough.
He's embarrassed.
He's angry.
And, might I suggest, he's thrilled.
Thrilled at his good fortune that just when he needs to impress five Orange County supervisors, his department hands him a scandal to clean up. Best of all, a scandal that doesn't have his fingerprints anywhere near it.
How lucky can a guy get?
By my unofficial count, Anderson already has collected seven scalps since taking over the top spot in mid-January. He dismissed an assistant sheriff six weeks ago and another one resigned at the same time, both caught in the blowback from the jail scandal.
This week, after a scathing report from Dist. Atty. Tony Rackauckas on the Lacy situation, Anderson suspended three jailers, an internal affairs investigator and a women's jail guard.
Anderson also has invited the FBI to look into the Lacy situation and has proposed systemic changes for how the county jails are operated.
He's been Action Anderson.
The D.A.'s investigation and the subsequent grand jury probe into the October 2006 beating death of an inmate at the hands of other prisoners have resulted in murder charges against nine of them. Rackauckas said the grand jury's nine-month investigation yielded a disturbing picture of dereliction of duty by Lacy personnel and subsequent efforts by higher-ups to impede the grand jury's work. He also chastised the department for assuming control of the investigation into the inmate's death, instead of following the long-standing practice of stepping aside to let the district attorney's office handle jailhouse homicides.
No sheriff's personnel have been charged with a crime, although Rackauckas noted that some gave misleading or false testimony to the grand jury.
For various reasons, he said, their statements didn't meet the legal requirements for perjury.
That has opened the door for Anderson, who wants his "acting" title removed.
A 21-year veteran of the department, he's already impressed one important observer -- Board of Supervisors Chairman John Moorlach.