Los Angeles DA George Gascon defends policies after 2 police officers killed: 'We have an imperfect system'

George Gascon suggested his policies would have landed Justin Flores in jail before the June 14 shootout that left two El Monte officers dead

Los Angeles District Attorney George Gascon on Tuesday defended his policies amid criticism following reports that the deceased suspect accused of killing two El Monte, California, police officers, was on probation at the time of the incident.

Justin William Flores, who is accused of fatally shooting El Monte Police Department Cpl. Michael Paredes and Officer Joseph Santana, had a previous strike conviction and received two years probation for a felony firearm possession charge.

"We have an imperfect system," Gascon said during a Tuesday press conference, "and that's not only here in L.A. It's everywhere. I know this is frustrating to hear, and it may not help heal the wounds for some. We do not serve our community when we try to pretend that we can predict 100% of the time when these cases are going to … occur."

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Flores had been "drug-addicted for many years" and previously arrested "multiple times for a variety of low-level offenses," most of which were drug-related, the DA said. 

Los Angeles District Attorney George Gascon on Tuesday defended his policies amid criticism following reports that the deceased suspect accused of killing two El Monte, California, police officers, was out on probation. (KCBS-TV)

"And then almost a decade ago, he was arrested and convicted for burglarizing his grandparents' home for stealing a TV," Gascon said. "He then remained pretty much away from the criminal justice system until the arrest in this particular case, where he was arrested for possession of drugs for personal use and possession of a gun."

Gascon added that Flores "could have" gone to jail under his policies had the suspect been tried.

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"We can ‘if’ this thing to death," he said. "There's certainly many opportunities for a catastrophe — a tragedy — to have occurred, but the reality is that when you have the history that this individual had, the outcome was appropriate under the circumstances."

Justin William Flores is the alleged gunman in a Southern California shootout that killed two police officers on Tuesday, June 14, 2022 in El Monte, Calif.  (California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation via AP)

The district attorney, who is facing a recall effort, added that prosecutors must "continue to work toward a safer community" by "doing things we know that work," including interventions for those on probation, transitional services for those getting out of prison to keep them out of prison, trauma recovery, working employment and housing services, and so on.

"I urge everyone to ensure that we do not overreact here and that we do the things that we know that work," Gascon continued. 

Fox News reporter Matt Finn was at the press conference and asked Gascon he had any response to the mother of one of the slain officers who specifically blamed him for her son's death.

"Do you have anything to say to the mother of El Monte Police Officer Joseph Santana blaming your policies for her son's death?" the reporter asked Gascon as he walked away from the podium.

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Olga Garcia, Officer Santana's mother, previously told "Fox & Friends First" Gascon should be recalled "immediately" as he has "destroyed so many lives." 

"It's not fair, Gascon needs to be recalled immediately," Garcia told co-host Griff Jenkins. "He's destroyed so many lives, and he's completely destroyed ours. We're just completely devastated."

"He's left children without fathers, mothers destroyed. Wives destroyed," she continued. "They're never coming back, and I blame it all on Gascon."

Eric Siddall, vice president of the Los Angeles Deputy District Attorneys Association, released a statement Tuesday condemning Gascon's response to the two officer deaths. 

The city of El Monte announced Corporal Michael Paredes and Officer Joseph Santana were killed in the line of duty.  (City of El Monte)

"Under California law, Flores should have been in a state prison cell on the day he murdered the two officers. Instead, because of George Gascón’s policies, he was in a hotel room in El Monte beating his girlfriend until two officers responded for the call for help. Now two officers are dead," Siddall said. 

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Paredes and Santana were responding to a local motel over reports of a possible stabbing when they encountered a suspect. A shootout occurred, and both officers were struck. They later died in a Los Angeles hospital, officials said. 

Nineteen months prior, Siddall added, Gascon "issued an order that all strikes offenses that were charged by the prior district attorney were to be stricken."

Aerials from the scene where two El Monte police officers were fatally wounded at a motel in Los Angeles County (KTTV )

Law enforcement response to El Monte shooting scene.  (KTTV )

Memorial outside El Monte Police Department. (KTTV)

"He ordered that all cases eligible for probation should be given probation. Those were his orders," Siddall wrote. "On February 10, 2021, Flores – a gang member charged with felon with possession of a firearm, possession of methamphetamine, and illegal possession of ammunition – was the beneficiary of this policy. Under California state law, Flores was ineligible for probation and faced a minimum sentence of 32 months in state prison. Instead, because of Gascón policies, he received probation."

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On June 14, a "career criminal who should never have been out murdered two officers who were trying to help a vulnerable victim," Siddall argued.

Gascon's office told Fox News in a statement at the time that Flores' sentence for the firearms charge "was consistent with case resolutions for this type of offense given his criminal history and the nature of the offense," and that Flores "did not have a documented history of violence" at the time of the offense.

Fox News' Louis Casiano, Bill Melugin, Bailee Hill and Lawrence Richard contributed to this report.

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