Survivor of 2nd Shooting Says He Was Framed
TINA DAUNT, ANNEMARIE O'CONNOR, Times Staff Writers
September 18, 1999 Los Angeles Times
Fax: 2132374712
The survivor of a second controversial police shooting being investigated by local and federal
authorities said in an interview Friday that officers from the Los Angeles Police Department's
Rampart Division shot him in the back and killed his friend, then tried to frame him by saying he
pulled a gun on them. The allegations by Jose Perez, an inmate at the Men's Central Jail
awaiting trial on unrelated charges, mirror those that have surfaced in another shooting and that
led to the release from prison Thursday of a man convicted of assaulting the police officers.
Authorities now say he was framed. Perez said he was surprised in court by
the allegation that he had a gun when he was shot and a friend was killed in July 1996an incident
that a former LAPD officer has identified as "dirty." That exofficer, Rafael A. Perez,
provided the information as part of a plea bargain in his cocaine theft case.
Jose Perez said he was unarmed when he was shot and that the police lied.
Police documents also say Perez was shot in the chest, but Perez said he was shot in the back and
he showed reporters two round scars just below his left shoulder blade that seemed to support his
account. Though he maintained his innocence, Perezacting on the advice of
counseldecided to plead guilty to assault on a police officer because he faced life in prison if
convicted under California's felony murder law, which held him criminally liable for the death of
his alleged accomplice at the hands of police. In exchange for his plea, his sentence was
established as the 10 months he already had served in jail. "[The lawyer]
asked me if I wanted to take a deal," Perez said. "It sounded good. They're offering
me freedom instead of a life sentence. Of course I didn't want to do life."
Perez said he believes that police framed him to cover up an improper
shooting. "I got shot in the back and my homeboy got killed. They have
to make a story out of it," Perez said. "I didn't have a gun. I was on the floor,
bleeding . . . and they handcuffed me. I wasn't even running. I was walking. They said I was
pointing a gun at them. But I didn't even have a gun. Neither me or my homeboy ever shot a gun.
We just liked to party." Faced with the worst LAPD scandal in six
decades, federal and state authorities say they are investigating this and other alleged abuses by
Rampart officers. Perez said authorities have not contacted him in the
downtown jail, where he is awaiting trial on charges that stem from an unrelated shooting incident
in September 1998. Richard Rosenthal, a deputy Los Angeles district attorney
involved in the investigation, said he could not comment on Perez's allegations, which are
strikingly similar to those of Javier Francisco Ovando. Ovando was released
from prison Thursday after Rafael Perez told police that he and his partner, Nino Durden, lied
when they said they had shot Ovando after he burst in on them with a weapon in October 1996.
Ovando says police handcuffed him, shot him in the head and planted the gun.
Officer Perez was at Shatto Place the night Jose Perez and his friend were shot there and has
alleged that that incident, too, was "dirty," sources say. Sources say authorities are
looking into the possibility that officers planted the weapons on the suspects in both cases.
Three of the officers who were at the scene of the Shatto Place incident have been
relieved of duty since the corruption investigation began, and another was fired earlier this year in
connection with the alleged beating of a handcuffed man inside the Rampart station. A total of 12
LAPD officers have been relieved of duty or forced to leave the department since the
investigations began. "If there are other allegations made, we'll make
sure they are investigated," Rosenthal said. "In the Ovando allegations, the
information was of such a nature that we needed to take immediate action. So we did."
Jose Perez is a smallstatured 22yearold covered with tattoos that include the
emblem of the 18th Street gang, which he says he joined five years ago. He
says he emigrated from Mexico at 3 but his family later returned to care for his grandmother. He
has an 18monthold daughter, Elizabeth Guisselle, who sometimes visits him with his
girlfriend. The night he was shot, Perez said, he went to an apartment building
in the 600 block of South Shatto Place to place flowers at a shrine memorializing two gang
members who had been shot there the day before. The police account paints a
very different picture. It says that "two men with guns were possibly readying for retaliation
over the gangrelated homicide," and that the suspects fled into the building when they saw
the officers approaching. The police report said Jose Perez, armed with a gun,
entered the building through the front lobby. It said one officer asked Perez to stop and drop the
weapon, but alleged that he ignored the order and ran up to the second floor, turning to point his
pistol at an officer. Fearing for his life, the officer shot at Perez, but Perez
continued to run upstairs, the police report said. Perez denies that he had a
gun in his hand and said police did not shout out a warning or tell him to halt before they opened
fire. "Out of nowhere, I got shot," he said. "I would have stopped."
As Perez ran upstairs, a resident he knew as Salvador, who was coming down the
stairs with his children, was shot in the arm and chest by police, whose account said the shots
ricocheted. Perez said Salvador was a witness to the fact he did not have a gun.
In a separate interview with The Times on Friday, the resident, who identified
himself as Salvador Ochoa, confirmed that he did not see a gun in Perez's hands as he ran toward
him. Three officers in another part of the building said Perez's friend, Juan
Manuel Saldana, pointed his gun at them. Fearing for their lives, they said, one of them shot at
him. Saldana kept running butaccording to policestopped to point his weapon at officers two
more times, and they shot him, the police account said. The police reports do
not allege that either Jose Perez or Saldana fired the weapons they allegedly held.
Perez said he did not find out that his friend had been killed until later, when police
told him that he had engaged in the illegal activity that brought about Saldana's deathand that,
therefore, he was responsible. Perez said his plea bargain made him a marked
man, a parolee wellknown to neighborhood police. He said he believes that is why he was arrested
an hour after the unrelated September 1998 shooting. His public defender,
Ramon Quintana, said Perez faces five counts of attempted murder and one count of assault with
a firearm. Quintana said the charges stem from an alleged shooting at rival gang members at the
same building where the first incident occurred. A trial in March ended with a
hung jury after Quintana argued that someone else was the shooter, and that police did not
properly investigate the case. The case against Perez, which then involved assault charges, was
refiled as an attempted murder, Quintana said. "[Police] said it was
me," Perez said. "They say two little boys saw me do it. But they caught me an hour
later and I didn't have a gun in my hand. The deal that I took with the police officer [in the first
case] is a pain. Now I'm on my second strike. It just doubled it up."
&nb
sp; * * * Special correspondent
Joseph Trevino contributed to this story.
Copyright 1999 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved
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