Advertisement

Police Conducting Internal Probe in Ambush Killing of Officer

Share
Times Staff Writer

The Los Angeles Police Department is conducting an internal inquiry to determine whether investigators failed to act on a tip that Daniel Jenkins, accused of the ambush killing of a police detective in Canoga Park last year, had planned to shoot a victim in an earlier robbery, authorities said Saturday.

Cmdr. William Booth said the investigation is centered around testimony at Jenkins’ ongoing preliminary hearing that an informant told a Wilshire Division sergeant that the suspect was planning to shoot the victim. Booth said the probe will attempt to determine “just how much credence that information should have been given.”

Jenkins, 30, of North Hollywood, is accused of last October’s slaying of Thomas C. Williams, a North Hollywood Division detective who was struck by gunfire from a passing car as he picked up his 7-year-old son from a day-care center in Canoga Park.

Advertisement

At the time, Jenkins was free on bail, awaiting a jury’s verdict in the holdup of George Carpenter, a North Hollywood movie theater manager who was robbed in 1984 as he was depositing the night’s movie receipts outside a nearby bank. Several months later, Carpenter was shot four times in a bar next to the movie theater. He survived the shooting and Jenkins has been charged with the attack.

Booth said that “at some point” after the robbery an informant told the Wilshire Division sergeant that Jenkins was plotting a shooting and that the target might be Carpenter. The case was referred to Wilshire Division detectives, who said they passed the tip on to North Hollywood detectives.

However, at Jenkins’ preliminary hearing for the shooting of Williams, North Hollywood detectives said they never received that information.

“What we’re trying to do is find out in what context that tip originated,” Booth said. “We still don’t know precisely what the informant said and how readily identifiable the information should have been.”

Booth added that no individual officers are under investigation for misconduct.

Advertisement