Advertisement

Councilman’s Comments Draw Fire From Latinos : Thousand Oaks: Leaders decry Michael Markey’s remarks linking gangs and heritage. He insists that he was misquoted.

Share
TIMES STAFF WRITER

Dismayed by public remarks from a Thousand Oaks city councilman linking Latino heritage with gang participation, leaders in Ventura County’s Latino community on Thursday called for sensitivity training for city officials “from the top down.”

Councilman Michael Markey, who works as a Compton homicide detective, angered Latino officeholders and activists with his reported comments that Latino gangs “have been around for 200 years,” and are “inbred in the Latino families.”

“It seems to me that people who are in law enforcement should have a much more enlightened perspective,” Oxnard City Councilman Andres Herrera said. “It’s a disservice that he does as a member of the City Council.”

Advertisement

“This is the type of thing that causes more tension,” said Francisco Dominguez, director of the Oxnard-based Latino advocacy group El Concilio del Condado de Ventura. “You start making public comments like that, it just becomes reckless.”

While Markey stood by the bulk of what he told business owners at a Westlake Village Chamber of Commerce breakfast Wednesday morning, he said his comments were taken out of context and that he was misquoted.

Markey was quoted in editions of the Ventura County Star as telling the business leaders that “Latino gangs have been around for 200 years. So we’re 200 years from trying to stop it, because that’s inbred in the Latino families. They raise kids up to protect the barrio. That’s their heritage, I think.”

Markey, who was elected to the City Council in a special election June 6, disputes that he used the word inbred .

“That isn’t accurate,” Markey said, adding that he is concerned people will think he is a racist. “I’m not, and that’s why I’m upset about it.”

But Thousand Oaks Star Editor DeAnn Wahl Justesen said she stands by the newspaper’s quotes from Markey.

“We have it on tape,” Justesen said. “It’s accurate.”

Markey was responding to a question from businessman Jim Sumner, who asked him what police can do to eliminate gangs in the Conejo Valley area.

Advertisement

“What I was trying to explain is that gangs have been around so long that we can’t ever eradicate them, we can just control them,” Markey said. “What I was referring to was in Latino families, some do raise their families into the gangs culture, but not all.”

Markey said he was speaking in “generalities,” not specifically of the Conejo Valley or the Latino community here.

“It makes it sound like I was talking about the Latino community in Thousand Oaks and I was not talking about that,” he said.

Miguel Osornio, president of the nonprofit Hispanic Organization for Personal Excellence, based in Thousand Oaks, said the Latino family is not the problem.

“It’s not the families that teach the youth to join gangs,” he said. “The gangs are controlled by the drug dealers from Los Angeles.”

He said Markey’s comments are evidence that discrimination against Latinos here is increasing.

Advertisement

Markey said that he has had cultural sensitivity training as part of his 18 years with the Compton Police Department. But some critics said he could use a refresher course.

Dominguez said he thinks El Concilio will probably write a letter to the entire Thousand Oaks City Council about the matter, explaining “that we’re disappointed and that they need to have some cultural sensitivity training from the top down.”

Sumner, the Thousand Oaks businessman who posed the question at the breakfast meeting, said he saw no harm in what Markey said. There was no obvious reaction from the 12 people attending the meeting, he said, and no one seemed upset by Markey’s remarks.

“I didn’t feel that he was trying to be hard on any group,” Sumner said. “I saw nothing in his language or feelings at all that was trying to pick on any group.

“The only thing he said that may have been considered offensive is he said the Latino community has a history going back 200 years. I assume that is factual, though.”

Markey acknowledged that his timeline was not accurate.

“The part about the 200 years I said, but I was being extreme,” Markey said.

Herrera said Markey is entitled to his opinion, but he hopes it can be backed up by research.

Advertisement

“Those making broad-based . . . comments should realize they have a tendency to insult and offend communities,” Herrera said.

Joining Sumner in defending Markey was Compton Mayor Omar Bradley, who called the detective/councilman an “exemplary person.”

“He certainly is not a person who harbors any racist sentiment, and I can say that from having known him well,” Bradley said. “Maybe what he meant to say is that certain gangs are generational, the father may be in a gang and the son may join the same gang. That’s endemic with most gangs, not just Latinos.”

Markey’s boss, Police Chief Hourie Taylor, said he had talked to the detective and believes Markey when he says he was misquoted.

If the quotes were, indeed, accurate, Taylor added, “I’d think what he said was inaccurate and inappropriate. It’s certainly not the philosophy of this department or myself.”

Markey said he doesn’t feel the need to apologize for remarks taken out of context, but he did say he would be happy to talk one-on-one with Latino leaders about the incident.

Advertisement

“If they have a concern, sure I would explain where I was coming from,” Markey said.

Times staff writer Joanna M. Miller and correspondent David R. Baker contributed to this story.

Advertisement