The Los Angeles Police Captain Sylvia Sanchez, who was involved in a conflict with more than 8,000 rankings and file policemen with the union, started with a 911 call on the city's yeast.
Two Holbek Division officials showed two young women arguing on the street next to the gray SUV. On suspicion of domestic violence, they decided to arrest the younger and 16 -year -old child of the couple, so they wrote in their report.
A regular review did not see any of their actions, and the case was closed and forgotten. Then Holbek patrolled Captain Sanchez intervened.
After complaining about the incident March 30, 2022, he returned and reviewed the camera footage worn by the authorities. Sanchez accused the video teenager to hold the teenager in the neck and slap against a definite ban.
He said in a government claim filed against the city in October, ordered to investigate the authorities “following the illegal detention of the authorities and the use of unauthorized power.”
His moves have attracted the anger of the powerful Los Angeles Police Security League. The senior female commander and her associates accuse the union leadership of the union leadership to turn the department against her. The union president has accused a pair of officers of going to the Sanchez train for doing their jobs.
The case has become the latest lighting in a long -term debate on how to reform the department's order. In the midst of several statements Mistake The Department of how its own, critics investigate its own and critics within and outside the LAPD, believes that this process is excellent and basically broken.
The feeling among many subordinate authorities is that they are under microscopic, while their employers should rarely take responsibility for misconduct. On the other hand, there are generals like Sanchez, accusing him of targeting after calling for bad behavior.
Sanchez's claim that Holbek's then-minister Captain al-Mendoza and others were confronted with “opposition and” opposition “after ordered by Holbek's then-minister Captain al-Mendoza and others. Brushing this incident under the carpet. ”
The Police Security League, which refers to Lieutenant's office, has protected the officers undergoing Sanchez. Last summer, the union's monthly magazine, the thin blue line, exploded the unnamed female captain of the unnamed female captain to suit Sanchez's profile. At the time it was released, the unnamed LAPD officer filed a formal complaint against Sanchez, accusing him of improperly dealing with the situation.
Craig Lali, president of the Los Angeles Police Security League, speaks during a news conference in 2019. The union represents more than 8,000 LAPD officers in Lieutenant.
(Gabriella Angotti-Jones/Los Angeles Times)
Sanchez and his lawyer did not respond to the demands for comment.
The Times received a copy of the police report from the 2022 incident. When they arrived at the 100 block of North -Mers Road, near the 1st Street Vaddak, the 1st Street to Boyle Heights, the authorities stressed that one of the two women they met was nothing wrong, and that they were looking for a lost medal.
The police report did not give a second age to the second woman, but the department's sources of demanding anonymity as she was unauthorized to discuss the case, and she appeared to be old and adult.
According to the police report, the pair began to move away from “refusing to cooperate.”
When they decided to arrest, the young man “started screaming”, and then “threw himself” into a definite barrier, kicked the two officers. He later reported that he was “detained without the incident.”
Officials called the ambulance after the younger woman claimed that she was a panic attack. The two women were later released at the scene and could not comment.
After reviewing the body camera scenes of the call, he decided that the authorities had “illegally using unauthorized power,” she decided to hold the teenager on the neck and slapped her on the concrete wall when she began to move away. Sanchez made a mistake for using a homosexual broth towards the couple.
Other departmental officials who reviewed the case insisted that there was nothing wrong.
But Sanchez is the subject of his boss CMDR. Michael Oreb, leading the Central Bureau. He agreed that the actions of the authorities should be reviewed and documented in their report. It is not clear whether most police moral matters are protected from public view under state law, and whether the authorities have been investigated or confronted with any punishment.
The latest claim that the Sanchez whistle was beaten that complex behavior in Holbecke is not.
Sanchez, who was appointed to the station on the eastern side of the city in 2022, said that in his claim, he said that in his claim that he had met anti -women culture on women, leading to a number of complaints of public servants.
Such behavior was tolerated by supervisors, said Sanchez. According to her claim, he asked the senior captain, Mendoza, that an employee was asked to file a complaint against an unnamed male officer, in which he said, “Women are not at work, or those words.” Mendosa refused and he accused.

The main entry of Lapd Holbec Station on the first street in Los Angeles.
(Mel Melgon/Los Angeles Times)
Instead, his claim, the officer who published the comments, received the so -called comment card – equivalent to the room on the wrist of the department. Since then, Sanchez said, he was subjected to “trivial complaints”, and was “openly humiliated” by colleagues as “ineffective tea captain”, forced to transfer, and was sent to advertising twice.
In August, Sanchez was re -transferred to police services, where he was given a limited supervisory role. In September, he received a two -day suspension for misconduct, and he considered it a “fake discipline.” He was given an official strictness on a different matter.
In the recent months, he came out amid other leadership changes in Holbek, including the transfer of Captain Mendoza, who was accused of trying to cover up the Mierce Street incident.
Mentosa did not respond to the email sent to her work, and was not named as defendant in the claim of Chancens.
The league and its supporters argued that Sanchez's case staff and rankings and file officers have dual standards for several months, which has affected the morale.
Amid the Union Anger, CMDR. One of the supervisors of Sanchez, Lilian Garza, came to her security. Carnsa met with the then interim chief Dominic Choy last summer, LAPD sources, seeking anonymity to discuss the matter without retaliating. The sources said that he had called for an internal investigation against union leader Lali. He is said to have accused him of attempting to perform an example of Sanchez – a warning to other senior officials on the consequences of misbehavior.
In his August passage, Lali referred to Sanchez's support for Sanchez, saying, “This captain should have avoided retaliation training at school.”
Carnsa refused to comment when she reached this week.

Captain Lilian Cornsa speaks at a news conference at LAPD headquarters in 2018.
(Gary Coronado/Los Angeles Times)
A group of directors of the Police Security League issued a statement on Wednesday, saying, “It is firmly behind what was exposed in the release of our Blue Line, which explicitly ignored the rights of our member of the Captain Silvia Sanchez.”
The union report added: “When it comes to discipline in the LAPD, the command staff is treated like the rank and the file.”
Cornsa and League Are locked in their own bitter legal battle After the union accused the union of inappropriately accessing its internal communications, he denies. The union was forced to repair the case against Garnsa earlier this year after a judge dismissed the initial demand.
The new leader Jim McDonald said that he wanted to review the disciplinary procedures of the department to identify areas where the authorities believe that it is unfair.

Mayor Karen Bass introduced Jim McDonald to the new LABD chairman during the City Hall meeting in October.
(Ringo Chiu/Period)
The Police Association maintains that the commanders and the authorities with the links are receiving priority treatment, and the statistics tell a different story.
The data compiled by the Professional Standards Bureau shows that complaints against the command staff-keptons and more of the public with high-level meetings are prolonged at the same rate. Of the 262 complaints against the commanders, nearly 9% were confirmed by about 12% of the rankings and 17,800 complaints against the file.
“The results of the complaint are only due to evidence to support the allegation, the type of misconduct and the previous complaint of the employee,” said Michael Remnes, the vice president who runs the professional standard bureau. He pointed out Recent cases Concerned ”Senior department officials Those who are responsible for their actions, regardless of their position in the organization. ”
Nevertheless, the majority of cops are frustrated. In a recent league study, only 3% of its members are supported by the department's command staff.
Former LAPT internal affairs Lieutenant Mario Munos realizes that some officials are not responsible for how the internal investigations are handled.
“This should be reasonable and balanced. But one of the things we have disappeared here,” he said.
The department has been facing cases for decades – sometimes big payments – from the authorities who said that the results of discipline are unreasonable and whether they are preferred by the superiors.
Some in the department called this “LAPD lottery”, saying that the internal affairs organization should be armed with the plaintiffs.
However, according to him, Sanchez tried to do the right after he caught his officers.
After watching the arrest video, he wrote, “You have to investigate and adjust these things correctly.”
Times staff writer Richard Windan contributed to the report.