'Sooner or Later the Truth Will Come Out'
L.A. officers were notoriously corrupt in the early 20th century. But reformers
ultimately cleaned up City Hall despite bombings of their leaders.
By JOSEPH TREVINO and ANNE-MARIE O'CONNOR, Special To The Times
September 17, 1999 Los
Angeles Times
Fax: 2132374712
W
When Javier Francisco Ovando was convicted and sentenced to 23 years in prison, the mother of
his unborn child wept in the courtroom.
The police officers who allegedly framed him--after paralyzing him
with a bullet--"sat there and laughed," his daughter's grandmother, Gloria Romero, said Thursday.
Romero said that she told Los Angeles police Officer Rafael A.
Perez, who has told prosecutors he and his partner handcuffed and shot Ovando in the head: "God
will punish you. Sooner or later the truth will come out."
Few could have imagined that her prophecy would become a curse.
In the worst LAPD scandal in decades, Perez has entered a plea
bargain for theft of cocaine and told authorities that he and his partner lied under oath about
Ovando's guilt. Ovando was freed Thursday from Salinas Valley State Prison.
Ovando, 22, probably will never walk again--but now he will enjoy
his first sight of his daughter, Destiny, whose mother, Monique Valenzuela, was just a few months
pregnant when Ovando was imprisoned, Romero said.
Destiny is 2« years old.
"I'm very happy," Valenzuela told a reporter. "It's a miracle. I never
thought he would get out."
Ovando told Romero he lived "only for his daughter" during his
nearly three years in prison. "Otherwise he wouldn't want to live," she said.
Federal authorities announced Thursday that they too are
investigating Perez's allegation that he and his then-partner, LAPD Officer Nino Durden, lied in
October 1996 when they said they shot Ovando after he burst in on them with an assault-style
weapon.
Perez now says that Ovando, then 19, was unarmed when he was
shot by police. Perez said officers planted the weapon on Ovando and fabricated the police report.
In allegations filed in court, Ovando said officers had him in
handcuffs when they shot him, and later planted the rifle.
When Ovando was sentenced to 23 years in prison, Superior Court
Judge Stephen Czuleger noted that the defendant, who was in a wheelchair, failed to show
remorse.
Why would he? Romero asked, when he stubbornly maintained his
innocence. She recalled him wondering: "I'm in jail--for what? I didn't do anything. I'm in a
wheelchair and I'm here for 23 years."
Romero said she felt powerless when Ovando was convicted and that
her daughter Monique was hysterical.
"We had no lawyer and no money," Romero said. "We were all
alone. We just had faith in God. We always knew he was innocent."
The only witness to the shooting was a member of the 18th Street
gang, according to a close family friend, Angela Taylor, who said she and Ovando were also
members of the gang.
"The homeboys wanted to say something," Taylor said. "But they
couldn't. Who would believe 18th Street gang members?"
Taylor said Perez often stopped 18th Street gang members, taking
their money and sometimes beating them.
Romero said Ovando, an illegal immigrant long out of touch with his
family back in Honduras, was not a violent man, although he was a member of the feared gang.
"I understand he was a gang member," Romero said. "But he wasn't
crazy. He wasn't a bad guy."
Ovando has been deported from the United States twice, the district
attorney's office said.
Immigration and Naturalization Service officials declined to take
Ovando into custody Thursday for deportation so he could be available to the Los Angeles Police
Department. LAPD officers picked him up from the prison at dinner time Thursday.
"It's obvious that he will be needed as a material witness," said
Richard Rosenthal, a deputy Los Angeles district attorney. "I would expect the LAPD will take
whatever action necessary to make sure he's available to us as a witness some time in the future."
Attorney Dennis Chang, representing Ovando's daughter and her
mother, said he had tried to arrange a family reunion with Ovando on Thursday night. But by 10
p.m., he said, the LAPD had vetoed the event, saying Ovando was too tired.
"They're not allowing Javier to talk with the mother of his child,"
Chang said. "My plan tonight was to have this reunification. They're telling us to wait until the
morning."
LAPD spokesman Don Cox said he didn't know who had talked to
Chang.
"I don't know where he got that," Cox said. "I don't know where
[Ovando] is or if he's tired."
In spite of repeated requests from The Times and other media, Terry
Thornton of the California Department of Corrections said prison officials reported that Ovando
"did not express any desire" to be interviewed at this time.
Times staff writers Tina Daunt and Robert Lopez contributed to this
story.
Copyright Los Angeles Times
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