EXCLUSIVE: Santa Ana Police’s MET Team Includes Gang-Like Group That Sexually Assaulted a Child
Chief David Valentin has been accused of letting MET “act with impunity.”
Publisher’s note: This report was originally published by a different outlet on April 22nd, 2022, it has been republished and archived here with a note and up-to-date footnotes by the reporter. Body-worn camera footage that the city released after original publication has been added.
Note: This award-winning reporting is the first part of a series about the Santa Ana Police Department’s (SAPD) gang-like group, MET. Since publishing, the reporting sparked a city-hired investigation into MET, paved the way for the establishment of a police oversight commission, and brought groundbreaking transparency to the SAPD.
MET was disbanded in May 2024. The majority of the cops who were involved are still employed, some being SAPD top brass and the current chief of police.
Officers in an exclusive Santa Ana Police Department (SAPD) unit who share gang-like skull tattoos have been the subject to complaints of alleged misconduct both off and on duty but faced no discipline, according to police records and a source within the department. Five officers in the Major Enforcement Team (MET), which operates much like a police SWAT unit, were accused of verbally harassing two teenage girls and groping one of them on the buttocks in 2020 at a Culichi Town restaurant according to police records, police bodycam footage, and a source.
In a 2021 incident, Santa Ana City Councilmember Johnathan Hernandez reported seeing an off-duty MET officer and another man holding a struggling woman in a parking lot in downtown Santa Ana, groping her breasts and telling her, “chill,” and “shut up,” according to police reports. Other witnesses said they only saw the off-duty MET officer holding his wife back from an intoxicated woman who was trying to fight her outside the Copper Door restaurant.
In a separate instance, earlier this year, a Santa Ana police officer emailed City of Santa Ana human resources manager Jason Motsik1, City Manager Kristine Ridge2, and City Attorney Sonia Carvalho, alleging he had been harassed. He claimed Chief David Valentin3, who set up the MET unit, and a founding member of the MET unit had targeted him for criticizing the chief.
SAPD concluded no wrongdoing had occurred in all three cases, and no officers were disciplined, according to police records and the source.
SAPD initially refused to release records of these incidents in response to a Public Records Act request. After this reporter filed a lawsuit against the city for refusing to produce the records, Santa Ana released police body camera footage, 911 call audio, and written reports on the incidents, as required by the law.
SAPD spokesperson Maria Lopez did not respond to a request for comment on the MET officers’ behavior or the police department’s investigations of these incidents. She stated, “In regards to your questions, the Public Records Act does not require the City or Department to respond to questions, however, if I can assist you in locating a record that is not exempt, please feel free to contact me.”
MET Officers Share Matching Black Skull Tattoos with Ace of Spades
Most officers in the MET unit have matching black tattoos on their forearms, calves, and upper arms, the source said. The tattoo displays “040’s” above a skull with an ace of spades on its forehead and the word MET below the skull. The number 040 is a reference to MET’s police radio code. Historically, the ace of spades playing card was a token of death used in the Vietnam war by American soldiers. US soldiers would drop ace of spades cards, which were mass produced for the Army, on dead Vietnamese soldiers. Los Angeles County Sheriff gang “Jump Out Boys” also use the ace of spades in their paraphernalia.
Most members of the MET group also carry challenge coin–like tokens, according to the source. A challenge coin is a small token or coin with an organization’s name or slogan on it, typically given to members as a sign of recognition or status within an organization. The token is adorned on one side with an ace of spades decorated with a skull and number “31,” a reference to SAPD’s Orange County radio reference number. On the other side, the token reads “MET” and “ODERINT DUM METUANT.” The phrase is Latin for “Let them hate, so long as they fear.”
A photograph of a group of MET officers shows one of the MET officers, Travis Johnson, flashing his fingers to spell out the number 31.
New California Law Attempts to Address Police Gangs
A new law authored by state assemblymember Mike Gipson attempts to update the penal code to address the long-standing problem of law enforcement members forming their own violent gangs. It was supported by Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva, who has promoted alleged deputy gang members. Section 13670 now defines a police gang as “a group of peace officers within a law enforcement agency who:
“May identify themselves by a name and may be associated with an identifying symbol, including, but not limited to, matching tattoos, [and] … who engage in a pattern of on-duty behavior that intentionally violates the law or fundamental principles of professional policing, including, but not limited to,
excluding, harassing, or discriminating against any individual based on a protected category under federal or state antidiscrimination laws,
engaging in or promoting conduct that violates the rights of other employees or members of the public, violating agency policy,
the persistent practice of unlawful detention or use of excessive force in circumstances where it is known to be unjustified,
falsifying police reports,
fabricating or destroying evidence,
targeting persons for enforcement based solely on protected characteristics of those persons,
theft,
unauthorized use of alcohol or drugs on duty,
unlawful or unauthorized protection of other members from disciplinary actions,
and retaliation against other officers who threaten or interfere with the activities of the group.”
If an officer fits the description of a police gang member, they “must hold those officers accountable through proportionate disciplinary measures when misconduct is proven,” according to the penal code.
The law only applies to on-duty conduct by police gangs, and would not apply to the actions by the MET officers when they were off duty.
MET Unit Includes Officers From Disbanded SWAT Team
The MET team was created by Chief David Valentin on January 6, 2020, and currently has 11 members. It included Sergeant Oscar Lizardi4 and now-retired MET Detective John Rodriguez, both from Strike Force, a SWAT team that operated in Santa Ana between 2005 and 2013.
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Rodriguez and Lizardi, both handpicked by Valentin at MET’s inception, were tasked with selecting the rest of the MET team, according to the source. Officially, joining the MET team includes a normal testing process like any other department promotion. The source says instead current MET members contact officers directly as a form of endorsement before testing into the unit.
“They know who they want to be part of the team,” they said.
Off-Duty MET Officers Sexually Assault a Child
On August 9, 2020, two 15-year-old girls sat dining with their family at a Culichi Town restaurant5 in Santa Ana off Bristol Street. Off-duty MET members Sergeant Oscar Lizardi, Jonathan Perez, Dorin Buchanan, Jonathan McKee, and Mark Campi sat together a few tables away, according to the source. They had been invited there by the restaurant owner, who later stated in an interview captured on body-worn camera6 that the off-duty officers “were having a good time” but were “causing issues.” According to 911 calls made by family members and other police reports, each time one of the girls got up to use the restroom, one of the men would say to one of them, “Hey, I love you.”
Officer Sattar’s body-worn camera footage captured the interview with the restaurant owner who names a “Sergeant Oscar” at “Santa Ana PD”.
The girl’s father got up to tell the officers to stop harassing the girls, and the police officers began to argue. A MET member groped one of the children from behind and said “let’s go” as she got up from her chair, according to her interview after the incident. The family also stated in their interviews that the men identified themselves as police officers, prompting them to dial 911 to report the incident. In the first of several minutes of audio of the calls, a family member reported that the MET officers were “getting away” and were across the street already.
The officers involved in the Culichi Town incident have refused our requests for comment.
Bodycam footage of officers responding to Culichi Town incident.
The video footage of the responding officers’ bodycams are heavily redacted, but viewing it raises questions about whether they conducted a thorough investigation of their fellow officers. The investigating officers turned off their body cameras when they talked to each other and stood at angles that did not allow their body cameras to record the family’s cell phone footage of the MET members. According to the source and city records, the harassed family was never contacted after the night of the incident and no MET members present were interviewed.
Underchief Robert Rodriguez7, who had worked in the old SWAT unit with some of the officers who went on to join MET, played a vital role in protecting the former SWAT, off-duty MET members from investigation when he was the Internal Affairs commander, according to the department source.
The Culichi Town incident has been an open secret within the department since it happened in August of 2020, according to the source. A photograph of the MET officers standing in front of a car with their faces blacked out has been circulated within the department anonymously with the caption “Join our great team” and Culichi Town’s logo below that.
MET Police Officer Allegedly Protected by Chief in Off-Duty Fighting Incident
On May 6, 2021, Santa Ana City Councilmember Johnathan Hernandez reported seeing two men, one of which he recognized as off-duty MET Detective John Rodriguez, holding struggling woman, groping her breasts, and telling her to “chill out” and “shut up” in downtown Santa Ana on 3rd and Broadway, according to a police report. Hernandez, upon confronting the men, called Chief David Valentin and reported what he saw. Simultaneously, Rodriguez recognized Hernandez and left the area. The other man involved, who was not an officer, stayed with Hernandez. According to the anonymous source, Valentin first said that the off-duty detective was retired. Hernandez responded that he knew for a fact that the officer was not retired. The chief then changed his answer to say that the detective was retiring soon.
Santa Ana police interview with security guard who witnessed the incident.
According to a security guard who witnessed the incident, he also recognized the MET detective saying that he’s “known them for 10 years” and did not see Rodriguez groping the woman.
Chief Valentin has not responded to our requests for comment.
Jason Motsik has since retired.
Kristine Ridge is no longer the Santa Ana city manager.
David Valentin retired in late 2023.
Oscar Lizardi has since been promoted.
The restaurant has since been shut down for serving alcohol to minors in another, unrelated incident.
After publication, the city released a less-redacted version of this footage. It has been embedded above as “Less-Redacted - Officer Sattar's Body Cam Footage”. According to SAPD’s roster, there was only one “Oscar” holding the rank of sergeant at the time: Oscar Lizardi. Lizardi has since been promoted to commander.
Robert Rodriguez is now the police chief.