LOS ANGELES (CNS) — Los Angeles International Airport Police Chief Cecil Rhambo announced Monday he will challenge Sheriff Alex Villanueva in the 2022 election.
Rhambo, a former assistant sheriff, made the announcement by releasing a handful of endorsements and an online video called "For Good," in which he vows to stand up to corruption and outlines other elements of his platform.
What You Need To Know
- LAX Police Chief Cecil Rhambo announced Monday he will challenge Sheriff Alex Villanueva in the 2022 election
- In his "For Good" campaign video, Rhambo said he wants to address issues in the department such as deputy gangs and the continued rise of murders and shootings
- Rhambo's early supporters include State Sen. Steve Bradford and Assemblyman Mike Gipson
- Also running in the 2022 election is Eliezer Vera, a chief in the department, who announced his campaign this spring
Rhambo has worked for 33 years in law enforcement and also served as city manager of Compton from 2017 through July 2019 and assistant city manager of Carson from 2014 to 2017.
In his "For Good" campaign video, he said he wants to address issues in the department such as deputy gangs and the continued rise of murders and shootings in Los Angeles, where violent crime is increasing at a rate not seen in decades. As a Black and Asian man, he said he understands what it's like to walk down the street as a person of color.
He accused Villanueva of eroding public trust in the agency, saying he "used fear to consolidate power, and tried to rehire ex-deputies that committed domestic violence or excessive force and who make us good cops look bad."
Villanueva has fiercely defended his record as sheriff, insisting he undertook sweeping action to eliminate deputy gangs and lashing out at the Board of Supervisors for what he has called dramatic budget cuts — or "defunding" — in a time of spiking crime rates.
Rhambo's early supporters include California Legislative Black Caucus Chair and state Sen. Steve Bradford; California Assembly Democratic Caucus Chair and Assemblyman Mike Gipson; California Progressive Caucus Founder and Assemblyman Reggie Jones-Sawyer; Assemblywoman Autumn Burke; and Assemblyman Jim Cooper.
Rhambo, who was raised in Compton and South Los Angeles after being adopted from Korea, said his experience in law enforcement includes an assignment in the Internal Affairs Bureau, where he assisted in the formation of the Shooting and Force Response Team in the wake of the Rodney King beating. He also headed the Asian Crime Task Force, commanding a group of investigators and multilingual deputies to investigate crimes committed against Asians or by Asians. And, he said he helped start the Sheriff's Community Oriented Policing Bureau, focused on suppressing violent crime, combating homelessness, offering quality of life programs and creating mental health response teams.
"And as sheriff, I'll stop the corruption, fight crime, address homelessness and make our criminal justice system more just and fair so that it works for all of us,'' Rhambo said in his campaign video.
He said that when the department came under fire from the ACLU and the FBI for prisoner abuse, Rhambo took on his boss, then-Sheriff Lee Baca, and other people in leadership.
Also running in the 2022 election is Eliezer Vera, a chief in the department, who announced his campaign this spring. Vera has served in the department since 1988.
"Villanueva was the first to dislodge a sitting L.A. County sheriff in more than a century; in the late 1990s, an incumbent nearly won reelection despite dying days before the vote."
— Kate Cagle (@KateCagle) July 12, 2021
Reading @AleneTchek's latest on @LACoSheriff's conservative pivot and what it means for 2022 https://t.co/8qnepztPHx