Lynwood city manager says 'the chickens have come home to roost' following shooting of two deputies
by Emma Colton
Washington Examiner
September 14, 2020
A city manager in California posted on social media that “chickens
come home to roost” following the shooting of two Los Angeles sheriff’s
deputies.
City Manager Jose Ometeotl posted on his previously public
Instagram account that the ambush of two deputies in Compton on Saturday
night was “expected in the society we live in today.”
“The fact that someone randomly opened fire on deputies is
to be expected in the society we live in today. The political climate
and leadership of Sheriff Villanueva has only sowed the seeds of anger
and frustration in the community. I pray for the deputies and their
families while still demanding justice for Andres Guardado, Breana
Taylor, Tamir Rice, Ahmaud Arbery…” Ometeotl wrote in the post,
accompanied by a photo of Malcolm X with the caption "chickens come home
to roost."
“The shooting of anyone is a wholly unacceptable occurrence in society. I
do not condone the type of violence seen in the shooting of the
deputies yesterday in Compton. I will say that communities like Compton
have been plagued by deputy gangs that inflict fear and violence in the
community. These deputies murdered, framed and stole from the community
just because they could. Good deputies never turned on bad deputies for
fear of retaliation and when caught most of these bad deputies kept
their jobs and continued on their criminal career,” the post also
stated.
Local reporter Bill Melugin tweeted screenshots of the post, which
ostensibly led to Ometeotl making his Instagram account private.
Officials in Lynwood, a city in Los Angeles County, addressed the
post at the end of a statement on the shooting of the two deputies.
“There have been comments made today (Sunday) by our City
Manager on his personal social media that are his personal opinions and
don’t reflect the position of the Lynwood City Council,” the statement
said. “Today we are only thinking of the two deputies and are praying
for their recovery.”
Both of the deputies were shot Saturday evening while they were in their patrol car in what has been described as an “ambush.”
"That was a cowardly act," Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex
Villanueva said of the attack. "The two deputies were doing their job,
minding their own business, watching out for the safety of the people on
the train. To see somebody just walk up and start shooting on them, it
pisses me off. It dismays me at the same time. There's no pretty way to
say it."
Police have launched a manhunt for the suspect and announced a six-figure reward to anyone with information on the suspect that leads to his arrest and conviction.
The two deputies are out of surgery, and Villanueva said they are “going to be able to recover.”
The Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Ometeotl’s post.
1 comment:
I'll comment. The city manager is an ignorant asswipe.
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