DA Jackie Lacey to Receive 30,000 Petitions Demanding Prosecution of Ed Buck

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The latest move in the campaign for the arrest and prosecution of Ed Buck will take place tomorrow, when Color of Change, the nation’s largest online racial justice organization, will deliver more than 30,000 petitions calling on L.A. County District Attorney Jackie Lacey to prosecute Buck for the deaths of Gemmel Moore and Timothy Dean.

Demonstrators outside West Hollywood Sheriff’s Station on Saturday, Feb. 23 (KTLA 5)

The event will be attended by LaTisha Nixon, the mother of Gemmel Moore, a 26-year-old black escort who was found dead of a drug overdose in Buck’s apartment on Laurel Avenue on July 27, 2017.  The L.A. County Coroner’s Office ruled the death an accident, which prompted friends and relatives of Moore and local activists to push for law enforcement officers to investigate it.  District Attorney Lacey declined to prosecute Buck after receiving the findings from the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department.  On Jan. 7 of this year, another black man, Timothy Dean, 55, also was found dead in Buck’s apartment, which has escalated both the campaign to prosecute Buck and an investigation by the Sheriff’s Department.

There have been several protests in front of Buck’s apartment building at 1234 Laurel Ave. by members of the Justice4Gemmel group and Black Lives Matter.  On Saturday, a group of demonstrators gathered outside the West Hollywood Sheriff’s Station to demand action.  The investigation is being carried out by the Sheriff’s Department’s detective bureau and is outside the purview of the West Hollywood station.

Buck, a 64-year-old gay, white man with a reputation for soliciting young black escorts and for allegedly using methamphetamine,  is well-known in political circles as a donor to Democratic Party candidates.  Demonstrators have demanded that those who have received contributions from Buck donate that money to Justice4Gemmel or other similar causes.

The petition will be delivered at 11 a.m. on Tuesday at the Hall of Justice, 211 W. Temple St., in downtown Los Angeles.

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Chris Sanger
Chris Sanger
5 years ago

Anyone who signed this petition is unwittingly an enemy of justice. We don’t do indictments based on public support. It’s right to bring attention to injustice and possible slights and make sure they are aware of public sentiment. But the day a petition is the reason someone is indicted is the day justice in America dies.

carleton croninc
5 years ago

Certainly, there are times when being citizens in a country ruled by laws rather than by emotions can be vexing and trying. Process is important for the furtherance of the rule of law. Suspicions, gut-feelings, anecdotal tales, allegations do not equal formal charges of criminal actions. The very best thing to do at this stage is to continue to pressure the investigating authorities to be sure that their concerns match ours. Justice is the result of process, which can be painstaking and lengthy, but necessary. Otherwise we are just a lynch mob. Lynching sure as hell makes one feel better… Read more »

Alison
Alison
5 years ago

That is not how justice works.

Concerned Citizen
Concerned Citizen
5 years ago
Reply to  Alison

Well how does it work? Because it certainly didn’t work last year when Lacey declined to file ANY CHARGES WHATSOEVER against Ed Buck in Gemmel Moore’s death.

Real Concerned Citizen
Real Concerned Citizen
5 years ago

Like it or not, our system works off of “Incent until proven guilty” not we don’t like this guy so he must be guilty is not how it works. If you have proof that this guy committed a crime, then take it to the DA. This is a sad mob mentality.

Eric Jon Schmidt
Eric Jon Schmidt
5 years ago

Silence = More Death.

chloe ross
chloe ross
5 years ago

I agree. Call a grand jury.