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David Silva - Beaten to death by the Kern County Sheriff's thugs

 

Kern County pigs videotaped beating man to death!!!

 
 

Kern County pigs videotaped beating man to death!!!

Kern County is just north of Los Angeles county, and Bakersfield is it's biggest city.

Sadly I suspect this happens much more frequently, but the cops always cover up their crimes. Well except in cases like this and the Rodney King beating in Los Angeles when the public accidentally video tapes the police crime.

If you remember the Rodney King beating the piggies lied and claimed that Rodney King was superhuman who was going to kill all the pigs that beat him up with his bare hands.

Source

Videotaped sheriff's beating prompts charges of coverup after death

By Paul Pringle and Richard Winton

May 13, 2013, 3:45 p.m.

The sharp cracks echoing from the East Bakersfield street were loud enough to jolt Ruben Ceballos from a midnight slumber. Then he heard screams.

The 19-year-old jumped from his living room sofa and hurried to the kitchen door, which offered a view of the violent scene unfolding outside. It was then, Ceballos said in an interview Monday, that he realized the sounds that woke him were the reports of batons striking a man’s head.

“I saw two sheriff’s deputies on top of this guy, just beating him,” Ceballos said. “He was screaming in pain … asking for help. He was incapable of fighting back – he was outnumbered, on the ground. They just beat him up.”

The man was David Silva, 33, a father of four, and he was pronounced dead less than an hour later. The incident last Wednesday and the actions of Kern County sheriff’s deputies in its aftermath have led to claims of police brutality and an attempted coverup.

According to witnesses like Ceballos and lawyers for them and the dead man’s family, the deputies hit Silva repeatedly in the head even though he was prone on the pavement and posed no threat.

Sheriff’s officials later seized cellphones from people who used them to shoot video of the altercation. In two cases, deputies detained the witnesses for hours until they agreed to hand over their phones, attorneys say.

“It makes it look like a coverup,” said David Cohn, a lawyer for Silva’s children and parents. “What we’re all concerned about is, ‘Are these videos going to be altered? Are they going to be deleted?’”

A witness identified in news accounts as Sulina Quair, 34, made a 911 call to the Sheriff’s Department and is heard on the recording saying, "I got it all on video camera and I'm sending it to the news. These cops have no reason to do this to this man."

"You’ve got 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 sheriffs," she said to the dispatcher. "The guy was laying on the floor and eight sheriffs ran up and started beating him up with sticks. The man is dead, laying here right here, right now."

Sheriff Donny Youngblood said it was too early in the investigation to reach any conclusions about Silva’s death, but he defended the decision to confiscate the phones as a way of preserving possible evidence.”

“We still have to secure the evidence, especially when the evidence can tell us whether we did it right or wrong,” Youngblood told The Times on Monday.

The Silva episode follows a number of brutality cases involving the Kern County Sheriffs’ Department in recent years. One led to criminal convictions of three deputies in the 2005 death of a jail inmate and another resulted in a $4.5-million court award for the family of a man who died in 2010 after being struck 33 times with batons and Tasered. A deputy named in civil lawsuit over the 2010 death was among those who confronted Silva, a laborer who previously had a couple of minor run-ins with authorities.

According to Cohn, Silva went to Kern County Medical Center late Wednesday night to seek counseling for some sort of emotional trouble, then left after a staffer told him he could not sleep there. He was sleeping on the street across from the hospital when the sheriff’s deputies arrived, Cohn said.

A sheriff’s statement said Silva resisted when the deputies tried to restrain him, and they were forced to use their batons. Silva stopped breathing and was taken to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead, the statement said.


Kelly Thomas' father 'totally disgusted' by Kern County beating

Source

Kelly Thomas' father 'totally disgusted' by Kern County beating

By Kate Mather

May 14, 2013, 1:44 p.m.

As the family of a man who died after being beaten by Kern County sheriff's deputies appeared before a crowd of reporters, Kelly Thomas' father watched video footage from afar.

Ron Thomas said he understood exactly what they were going through: "It's like, my God. I know how you feel. I really do."

Kelly Thomas, a mentally ill homeless man, died after being beaten by Fullerton police in 2011. David Sal Silva died last week after an encounter with Kern County sheriff's deputies, and authorities there are investigating the matter.

"I was just totally disgusted," Ron Thomas said of his reaction to the Kern County incident. "This totally disgusted me."

Silva's death -- like Kelly Thomas' -- has prompted allegations of excessive force from witnesses and attorneys. After authorities seized cellphone videos taken of the incident, a lawyer representing Silva's family said he was particularly worried.

"It makes it look like a cover-up," David Cohn told The Times, adding that he has not been able to see the footage. "What we're all concerned about is, 'Are these videos going to be altered? Are they going to be deleted?'"

Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood said Monday that it was too early in the investigation to reach any conclusions about Silva's death. But he defended the decision to take custody of the phones as a way of preserving possible evidence. The sheriff said his office obtained a search warrant for the phones and asked the Bakersfield Police Department to analyze the videos to remove the appearance of any conflict.

Ron Thomas said he spoke to Cohn over the weekend and planned to talk to Silva's family Tuesday. He said he would offer to help in any way he can, including going with the family to talk to the Kern County sheriff.

He also had advice based on his own experience, recommending the family "immediately" get the investigation to the district attorney or state attorney general's office, reach out to potential witnesses, and ramp up public pressure.

"If there's no pressure, there's no result," Ron Thomas said. "They would not have done it in Fullerton -- look at all the changes in Fullerton. I was a thorn in the side constantly and made them do their job."

Kelly Thomas' death roiled the Orange County community, prompting protests, memorials and a recall election as the incident drew international attention.

Three former members of the Fullerton police now face criminal charges in the death, including one officer who is accused of second-degree murder. Police Chief Michael F. Sellers took a medical leave amid calls for his resignation. He eventually stepped down.

Three City Council members perceived as protecting the embattled Police Department were ousted in a recall, and at one point the City Council considered disbanding the department and handing over law-enforcement authority to the sheriff.

Ron Thomas said the Kern County incident brought up memories of his son's case.

"It's very tough," he said. "I just happen to be in a whirl right now -- if I slow down, I'll get choked up."

"We've got to stop this," he said later. "We the people have got to stop this."


Kern County asks FBI to investigate police murder

Source

Kern County sheriff asks FBI to investigate man's beating death

By Richard Winton

May 14, 2013, 4:14 p.m.

The Kern County sheriff has asked the FBI to conduct a parallel investigation into the death of David Sal Silva who died less than an hour after being struck by baton-wielding deputies.

Silva, 33, a father of four, was pronounced dead May 8. Witnesses reported seeing several deputies repeatedly strike the man in the head with batons as he lay on the pavement.

Sheriff Donny Youngblood also announced Tuesday that he asked the FBI to analyze two cellphones taken from witnesses who say they recorded the incident.

"I took the unprecedented step of asking the FBI to conduct a parallel investigation," Youngblood told The Times. "Our credibility is at stake here."

Youngblood said he has also placed the officers on paid administrative leave, a decision made in the last 48 hours, based on information they had received. He said he wanted to ensure the safety of the officers on the street.

The cellphones were controversially taken after the witnesses were detained at a home. A search warrant was obtained to access the phones.

The phones were turned over to Bakersfield police for analysis, Youngblood said.

"The analysis by the Bakersfield Police Department confirmed the existence of video footage related to this incident on one phone and no video footage on the second phone. This prompted the subsequent request for further analysis by the FBI," the sheriff's office said in a statement.

On Tuesday, Sheriff’s Office personnel transported the phones to the FBI's Sacramento office for analysis, officials said.

Deputies had responded to a report of an intoxicated man. In addition to the deputies and sergeant, two California Highway Patrol officers were involved in the incident.

The department has identified those involved as Deputies Ryan Greer, Tanner Miller, Jeffrey Kelly, Luis Almanza, Brian Brock, David Stephens and Sgt. Douglas Sword.

Youngblood said a cause of death for Silva rests on toxicological tests, which could take 90 to 120 days. Youngblood cautioned in an interview Monday that it is too early in the investigation to reach any conclusions about Silva's death.

Witnesses described a violent scene in which s deputies repeatedly struck Silva in the head with batons.

"I saw two sheriff's deputies on top of this guy, just beating him," witness Ruben Ceballos said in an interview Monday. "He was screaming in pain ... asking for help. He was incapable of fighting back — he was outnumbered, on the ground. They just beat him up."

One woman frantically called 911, telling the operator: "The guy was laying on the floor and eight sheriffs ran up and started beating him up with sticks. The man is dead laying right here, right now. I got it all on video camera and I'm sending it to the news. These cops have no reason to do this to this man."

The decision to take the witnesses' cellphones has raised further questions about the Kern County sheriff's handling of the incident.

"It makes it look like a coverup," said David Cohn, a lawyer for Silva's children and parents, adding that he has not been able to see the footage. "What we're all concerned about is, 'Are these videos going to be altered? Are they going to be deleted?' "

Youngblood defended the decision to take custody of the phones as a way of preserving possible evidence. The sheriff said his office obtained a search warrant for the phones.


Cops erase video of police murder in Bakersfield.

Based on my experience with crooked cops this doesn't surprise me the least bit. Every time I am stopped the police I take the 5th and refuse to answer any police questions.

Of course the cops always lie and tell me I don't have any 5th Amendment right to remain silent. And almost always the cops make up threats that bad, bad, bad things will happen to me if I don't answer their questions.

And most of the time the cops illegally search me looking for an ID, since I always refuse to them them my name.

The good news, is that even if the piggies erased the video of the Kern County sheriff's officers beating David Silva to death, frequently the file can be recovered.

Last if the police are so corrupt that they will erase the evidence that is needed to convict the 10 are so cops who beat David Silva to death, don't you think these crooked cops will also commit perjury and lie in court to convict people??? Or plant evidence to frame people???

Source

Witnesses of Kern County beating accuse authorities of erasing video

By Paul Pringle and Richard Winton

May 15, 2013, 9:24 a.m.

Two witnesses who saw Kern County sheriff's deputies beat David Silva before he died accused authorities of erasing one of the cellphone videos that captured the incident.

Kern County Sheriff Danny Youngblood said Tuesday he has asked the FBI to conduct its own investigation after learning that one of two phones seized from witnesses had no footage on it.

The two witnesses told The Times that they watched the videos on each of the phones last week in the wake of Silva's death.

Melissa Quair, 31, said she saw the videos on both phones shortly after the beating, which she witnessed. "They must have gotten rid of one of the videos," she said.

Another witness, Laura Vasquez, 26, said she was "positive" the video had been erased because she watched both of them. One was shot by Quair's mother, Maria Melendez, and the other by a family friend, Paco Arrieta, whose video was similar but a minute or two longer, Vasquez said. Silva family lawyer David Cohn also said he believes one of the videos may have been erased. He said Monday he feared deputies might tamper with the videos, but did not believe they "would be that stupid."

Kern County Sheriff’s Office personnel transported the phones Tuesday to the FBI's Sacramento office for analysis, officials said. [After the video had been erased!!!]

"Our credibility is at stake here," Youngblood told The Times on Tuesday. [Anybody that deals with the police on a regular basis will tell you the police don't have any credibility]

"It is not just troubling to the public, it is not just troubling to news media, it is troubling to me," Youngblood said of the Silva incident. [Yea, sure!!!]

In an earlier statement, the Sheriff's Office said Silva had resisted arrest, forcing deputies to use force. Silva was pronounced dead at 12:44 a.m. May 8, less than an hour after the confrontation began. [As usual the police blame the dead victim for his murder by the police!!!]


Cops who murdered David Silva are the victims????

Cops who beat David Silva to death paint themselves as victims????

This is typical when cops are caught committing crimes, they frequently paint themselves as the victim, not the criminal.

The murder of David Silva by the Kern County Sheriff's Office isn't any different. And sadly people frequently believe these fantastic big lies made up the the police.

Source

Sheriff says deputies at fatal Kern County beating received threats

By Diana Marcum, Paul Pringle and Richard Winton

May 15, 2013, 8:00 a.m.

The Kern County sheriff's sergeant and six deputies at the beating of a man who died after being struck by batons have been placed on paid administrative leave, in part because they have received emailed threats, the sheriff said.

Sheriff Donny Youngblood also said he has asked the FBI to conduct a parallel investigation into the death of David Sal Silva, who died less than an hour after the beating.

Silva, 33, a father of four, was pronounced dead May 8. Witnesses reported seeing several deputies repeatedly strike the man in the head with batons as he lay on the pavement.

Youngblood said he has asked the FBI to analyze two cellphones taken from witnesses, who say they recorded the incident. Bakersfield police said they could find only one of the videos. [because the cops allegedly erased the other one]

"I took the unprecedented step of asking the FBI to conduct a parallel investigation," Youngblood told The Times. "Our credibility is at stake here."

Youngblood said he has also placed the deputies involved on paid administrative leave.

"Because of information we have received in the last 48 hours, I made that decision," he said. "It is a question of officer safety on the streets. We have also taken measures to protect their homes."

He provided no further details on the threats.

Two witnesses told The Times that they watched the videos on each of the phones last week in the wake of Silva's death. The case is generating widespread attention because several witnesses have come forward to say deputies ruthlessly beat Silva with batons even after he was motionless on the ground.

Youngblood said in an interview that he did not dispute the witnesses' accounts about the videos but said he would not draw any conclusions until the investigations were complete. [I bet he wouldn't say that if 10 civilians were accused of beating a cop to death]

The cellphones were flown to the FBI's Sacramento office Tuesday for analysis.

The FBI said it had agreed to launch an inquiry and emphasized that it would be independent of the sheriff's own work.

It appears several videos captured parts of the incident. Last week, KERO-TV broadcast grainy footage from a security camera. The Times on Tuesday reviewed a security video provided by a source, which showed blurry images of figures swinging batons or sticks at a man on the ground.

Youngblood said the Bakersfield Police Department found a video on one of the phones; he asked the department to do the analysis to avoid a conflict of interest. He declined to elaborate on the length or condition of the video, but confirmed that it shows baton blows.

"I have seen the video," said Youngblood at a news conference Tuesday afternoon. "I cannot speculate whether they acted appropriately or not just by looking at the video." [I wonder if Mr. Youngblood would comment on if it is OK for the police to beat people to death???]

"Baton strikes were used but what I don't know is how many and where they were on the body and if they caused significant injury that caused death," he added. [Of course if you ask the cops David Silva didn't die of the police beating it was something else that caused his death. Maybe David Silva was murdered by the same mysterious guy who OJ claims murdered Nicole!!!! Well at least that's what the cops want us to think!!!]

In interviews Tuesday, witnesses insisted that the videos on both phones — each several minutes long — clearly captured deputies repeatedly striking Silva with batons.

"They must have gotten rid of one of the videos," said Melissa Quair, 31, who told of seeing deputies pummel and kick Silva after confronting him across the street from Kern Medical Center in East Bakersfield. Quair and several relatives and friends were at the hospital because a family member had been in a car crash.

Quair said a phone video shot by her mother showed a deputy trying to block her view of the beating. "She went around him and told him, 'I'm still recording,' " Quair said.

Laura Vasquez, 26, a friend of the Quair family, said she also watched both videos — the other shot by a friend of Melissa Quair — and they vividly depicted the violence she witnessed.

Echoing the account of two other people interviewed, Vasquez said the first two deputies at the scene woke Silva, who was sleeping in front of a house, and ordered him not to move. When Silva sat up, looking confused or scared, a deputy hit him in the head, Vasquez said.

"He fell back and then the other officer got out and swung toward his head," she said. "Mr. Silva was reaching for his head and the officers said 'stop moving' and 'stop resisting.' He wasn't resisting.… He rolled on his back and they kept hitting."

More deputies and two California Highway Patrol officers arrived at the scene. Vasquez said the deputies hogtied Silva, lifted him off the ground and dropped him twice, and delivered more baton blows and kicks to his head and body until he went limp. [I know when cops torture people with Tasers, it's called "Stun Gun Fun", I wonder if this form of police entertainment has a name???]

"He was screaming for help. He was laying on his chest. The cops were still on top of him, still hitting him. My family and I screamed at them to stop hitting him.… The blood was all over Mr. Silva's face. We couldn't even tell if he had eyes or a mouth."

Vasquez said her friend yelled, " 'Somebody call the cops,' and everybody looked at her and said, 'They ARE the cops.' " [If you have a loved one in need NEVER call the cops. Sometimes that is a death sentence for the loved one]

The friend, Sulina Quair, 34, said she called 911 and told the dispatcher she would give one of the phone videos to the news media.

"We were right across the street. We could see the whole thing," she said. "A cop light lit up the whole scene. I could remember every single one of [the deputies]. I dream about them every night. I wake up screaming. The beating was so brutal. I can still hear Mr. Silva screaming and yelling and gargling his blood."

An attorney for Silva's family said he had gone to the medical center for help with an emotional problem, then settled across the street after he was told by a security officer he could not sleep at the hospital. The lawyer, David Cohn, said he did not know if Silva, who had two previous arrests involving alcohol, was drunk. Sheriff's officials said they were called to the scene after someone reported that a man was intoxicated there.

In an earlier statement, the Sheriff's Office said Silva had resisted arrest, forcing deputies to use force. Silva was pronounced dead at 12:44 a.m. May 8, less than an hour after the confrontation began. [As usual the cops paint the victim as the criminal. If David Silva hadn't resisted arrest we would not have had to beat him to death. His murder is his own damn fault!!! Well, at least that's what the cops want us to think]

During the hours that followed, sheriff's detectives detained several witnesses when they refused to turn over phones they said had footage of the beating. The two phones were confiscated after the detectives obtained a search warrant. [And of course the cops erased one of the videos according to another article]

The Silva death is the latest high-profile brutality case involving the Kern County Sheriff's Office in recent years.

One resulted in criminal convictions of three deputies and a $6-million civil judgment in the 2005 death of a jail inmate, according to attorneys. An second ended with a $4.5-million court award for the family of a man who died in 2010 after being struck 33 times with batons and struck by a Taser 29 times, attorneys said.

diana.marcum@latimes.com

paul.pringle@latimes.com

richard.winton@latimes.com


Kern County makes lame excuses to justify the murder of David Sal Silva

Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood makes lame excuses to justify the murder of David Sal Silva

  • "I cannot speculate whether they acted appropriately or not"
  • "Baton strikes were used, but what I don't know ... if they ... caused death"
  • Youngblood said the baton is a less lethal weapon
  • Youngblood noted that no cause of death has been determined

I wonder if Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood would be making these same lame excuses if we had a video of 10 Black men beating up a cop with billy clubs???

Source

Kern County sheriff 'cannot speculate' on deputies' actions

By Richard Winton

May 15, 2013, 1:46 p.m.

Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood said he has now watched a video of the beating incident, but said it remains too early to determine whether the deputies' actions played a role in the death of David Sal Silva.

Youngblood said that in the video, he could see deputies using their batons on Silva, who died May 8 about an hour after the altercation.

The FBI has opened an investigation into Silva’s death at Youngblood’s request after he discovered that one of two cellphones seized from witnesses did not have footage of the incidents that apparently had been recorded. Youngblood has asked the FBI to analyze the cellphones to determine what footage they contained and whether anything was deleted.

"I have seen the video," Youngblood said at a news conference Tuesday afternoon. "I cannot speculate whether they acted appropriately or not just by looking at the video."

The sheriff, however, acknowledged that there is a great deal of public concern about the incident and subsequent investigation.

"It is not just troubling to the public, it is not just troubling to news media, it is troubling to me," he said.

In an interview with The Times, he said the credibility of the department is at stake.

The department on Wednesday canceled a law enforcement day -- an open house that allowed the public inside. The department's website cited "recent events" for the decision.

Youngblood declined to give reporters a detailed analysis of the video.

"Baton strikes were used, but what I don't know is how many and where they were on the body and if they caused significant injury that caused death," he said.

Youngblood said the baton is a less lethal weapon and because of that its use doesn’t usually lead to deputies being placed on leave. But he said the head is not an appropriate place for a baton strike.

"Sometimes in the heat of battle, the baton doesn't go where you want it to go.... If someone has 20 baton strikes to the head, OK, that is easy for us. But when there is a fight or scuffle and a baton strike goes where it should not ... then you have to evaluate,” he explained.

Youngblood noted that no cause of death has been determined for Silva and that toxicology tests could take four months to be completed.

In interviews Tuesday, witnesses insisted that the videos on both phones — each several minutes long — clearly captured deputies repeatedly striking Silva with batons.

"They must have gotten rid of one of the videos," said Melissa Quair, 31, who told of seeing deputies pummel and kick Silva after confronting him across the street from Kern Medical Center in East Bakersfield.

Laura Vasquez, 26, a friend of the Quair family, said she also watched both videos — one shot by Quair's mother, the other by Quair's friend — and they vividly depicted the violence she witnessed.

Echoing the account of two other people interviewed, Vasquez said the first two deputies at the scene woke Silva, who was sleeping in front of a house, and ordered him not to move. When Silva sat up, looking confused or scared, a deputy hit him on the head, Vasquez said.

"He fell back and then the other officer got out and swung toward his head," she said. "Mr. Silva was reaching for his head and the officers said 'stop moving' and 'stop resisting.' He wasn't resisting.… He rolled on his back and they kept hitting."


Phones to be further examined for video of Bakersfield man's fatal beating

If the videos or movies were simply deleted it is a trivial task to undelete and restore them.

This is because when you delete files, the software doesn't really delete the files, but rather marks the files as deleted.

However if after deleting the files, the police wrote a bunch of new data to the cell phone that makes it a little bit harder to recover the deleted videos.

I suspect the police know this and if they do, I suspect they did just that in an attempt to prevent their crooked police buddies from being convicted of murder.

Source

Phones to be further examined for video of Bakersfield man's fatal beating

By Paul Pringle and Richard Winton, Los Angeles Times

May 15, 2013, 9:08 p.m.

More analysis will determine if footage might be missing from a second cellphone that Kern County authorities seized from witnesses who shot video of sheriff's deputies beating a Bakersfield man who later died, one of the witnesses said Wednesday.

Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood called in the FBI earlier this week after discovering that another phone that witnesses said contained video of the David Silva beating had no footage. Youngblood said the second phone did have some video of the incident.

Both phones were returned to their owners Wednesday after the FBI examined them, said Melissa Quair, a witness who recounted watching the video on each device before deputies took them last week.

Quair, 31, said she and other witnesses are worried that recorded segments on the second phone might have been erased. "My biggest concern is that not everything that was videotaped is still there," she said. The phone found to have no video belongs to her mother and the other belongs to her friend, Francisco Arrieta.

Quair said the phones were turned over to a lawyer for the witnesses, John Tello, and he would arrange for further analysis of them. Tello would not comment to the Los Angeles Times, but was quoted in the Bakersfield Californian on Wednesday as saying that the phones would undergo more examination and the remaining video could be made public by Friday.

The FBI did not reveal what its analysis determined. The federal agency is also investigating the beating.

Youngblood's spokesman said the Sheriff's Office had no new information and referred questions about the phones to Tello. Amid the controversy and national attention brought by the Silva case, the office announced that it had postponed an open house for local residents.

Several witnesses told The Times that deputies repeatedly struck Silva, 33, with batons until he went limp. They said the blows continued after Silva was in restraints and motionless on the ground. He was pronounced dead less than an hour later, on May 8.

Youngblood's office initially said Silva resisted arrest, requiring deputies to use force. The sheriff later said he was troubled by the incident, but would wait until the FBI and his own detectives completed their investigations to say more about the deputies' actions.

A forensics expert said Wednesday that analysts could recover deleted videos from most phones produced in recent years, unless special software was used to erase the footage or the devices were returned to their original factory settings.

Patrick Paige, co-founder of Florida-based Computer Forensics LLC, said deleted video could also be permanently removed if large amounts of data are download on top of the erased file.

Otherwise, he said, it is common for law enforcement agencies to retrieve lost video. "In the past five years or so, it's been perfected," Paige added.

paul.pringle@latimes.com

richard.winton@latimes.com

Times staff writer Diana Marcum in Bakersfield contributed to this report.


Nobody cares about Bakersfield police murder???

Source

In Bakersfield, a muted response to beating by deputies

By Diana Marcum, Paul Pringle and Richard Winton, Los Angeles Times

May 19, 2013, 10:10 p.m.

BAKERSFIELD — After the last twisting drop of the Grapevine pass, the road stretches flat out past fields, fast-food restaurants and tractor lots to this Central Valley city that likes to emphasize that it's different from the rest of California.

It's only 100 miles north of Los Angeles and less than three hours from the coast, yet many people here say, "Well, that's how we do it in Kern County."

This distinctive insularity has perhaps never been more evident than now. Across the state, public outcry is growing over sheriff's deputies who beat David Sal Silva, an unarmed man who died less than an hour after his screams for help fell silent. Authorities tracked down witnesses and confiscated their cellphones. A video on one of those phones may now be missing. The case has brought the FBI to Bakersfield.

But in this city of 350,000, residents have remained largely silent.

"I think another community might really nut up over this," said Lee Yeoman, a 73-year-old retired dentist. "We've gotten used to a lot here."

Some say the muted response is due to a history of trusting law enforcement, others cite intimidation or resignation, and some say it's just the Bakersfield way.

"We're a cowboy town," said a retired deputy, whose idea of a getaway is riding out of the city on his horse with a tin cup and bedroll. He gave nod to an old cowboy proverb: "Never miss a good chance to shut up."

Wilted flowers beneath a stop sign mark the place where Silva went limp. He died across the street at Kern Medical Center.

Silva had abruptly left the home he shared with his girlfriend and four young daughters May 7. Family friends said he visited his mother and told her he was going to the hospital. In response to a search warrant, a judge on Friday ordered the Mary K. Shell Mental Health Center to release video to the Kern County Sheriff's Office possibly showing Silva before the incident.

The 33-year-old apparently fell asleep on the sidewalk in this neighborhood of mostly immigrant families.

Authorities said officers responded to a report of a possibly intoxicated man. A family leaving the hospital said they saw two officers wake Silva and tell him not to move.

When Silva sat up, a deputy hit him in the head, said Laura Vasquez, 26.

Witnesses said officers arrived and beat him with batons. Silva's cries for help and the crack of the batons woke up many in the neighborhood.

A woman screamed, "Call the cops!" "They are the cops!" people shouted.

Authorities said six deputies, a sergeant, two California Highway Patrol officers and a police dog were at the scene.

A week later, on a gray, sweltering afternoon, a woman who lives across the street and her two middle-school-age sons brought a bouquet of fresh flowers from the supermarket to the corner.

"I was the one who brought the first flowers too," she said. "I keep thinking of the moment when Mr. Silva stopped pleading and went limp. I felt chills."

She declined to give her name, saying, "I can't. They came to my house. At first the officer was very polite, very professional.... But when I told him, 'No, I don't want to talk to you,' he said, 'Is anyone in your house on probation?' And my — well, it was a threat."

The night of the beating, sheriff's deputies detained two people in their home and told them they couldn't leave until they handed over their cellphones. Witnesses said both phones had video of the beating shot from about 20 feet away.

Sheriff Donny Youngblood asked the FBI to join the investigation after he was told one of the phones did not have video on it. "Our credibility is at stake here," he told The Times.

The beating is the latest in several high-profile incidents involving the Sheriff's Department. The parents of Jose Lucero won $4.5 million in a wrongful-death lawsuit stemming from a 2010 incident in which their son died after being beaten by deputies.

Lucero, who was mentally ill, called 911 several times, saying a friend was being murdered in Lancaster. Four officers responding to the call struck him 33 times with batons and shocked him with a Taser 29 times, according to court testimony. No charges were filed against the officers, one of whom was also involved in the Silva beating.

In 2011, a sheriff's deputy shot and killed David Turner, a former NFL football player. Two deputies were responding to a call about an adult buying beer for minors at a liquor store. The killing was ruled within department policy because Turner had raised a bag of beers and was about to swing them at an officer. The beers were deemed a lethal weapon.

Alicia Moore, 37, said she was worried that video of the Silva beating might disappear once she heard deputies had the phones.

Her son's father, James Moore, an offshore oil rig worker, died six days after being beaten by deputies at Kern County jail in 2005. He was punched, choked, kneed in the back and pepper sprayed while in handcuffs and chains and then hit while lying on a hospital gurney, according to court records.

It was a deputy who stepped forward and told authorities what had happened to Moore, who had been arrested on suspicion of threatening his girlfriend and resisting booking. Twenty officers were part of the struggle. One was convicted of second-degree murder, another of involuntary manslaughter.

"I knew James since we were kids. We had little James. We weren't together but we stayed friends," Moore said. "Only one officer got serious time. The rest of them went back to work.... I thought if there was video it would be different this time."

There is some public video of the deputies' encounter with Silva.

A mother of four, whose backyard security camera is trained on the east Bakersfield corner where witnesses say the beating took place, gave a tape to Silva's family. Local station KERO-TV aired a snippet of grainy footage copied from a cellphone. The Times later viewed the entire original recording and posted a segment online. It shows a group of officers clearly swinging batons at a man on the ground. It's not clear how many blows connected or what Silva was doing when the beating began.

Still, the images have been enough to cause some uncommon criticism of local law enforcement. Steve E. Swenson, a retired reporter who covered crime and courts at the Bakersfield Californian for 33 years, said a few of his friends at the Episcopal church and his daily golf game are calling the beating brutal and the phone seizures an attempt at a coverup.

Criticism of deputies "doesn't happen around here. The investigation isn't even complete," Swenson said. "We like and support law enforcement and usually give them the benefit of the doubt."

Indeed, nothing brings as loud a cheer at local parades as deputies on horseback. The most popular public figure in recent memory was plain-spoken former Sheriff Carl Sparks, Youngblood's mentor.

"One time deputies fired at a bad guy some 70 times," Swenson recalled. "Reporters asked Carl, 'Why so many times?' He told them, 'I believe that's all we had.' If you said that in San Francisco or L.A., you might get run out of town on a rail. But in Kern County we reelect the guy."

Swenson said he's withholding judgment on the Silva case until the sheriff presents all the facts.

He said that about nine years ago he watched video of several deputies beating up someone in the jail.

"It was totally unjustified. And I'd had one of the deputies in my Sunday School class — I guess I should have done a better job," he said. "But the point is, it was the Sheriff's Department who showed the tape. I think we can trust them to tell us the truth."

diana.marcum@latimes.com

paul.pringle@latimes.com

richard.winton@latimes.com


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