Skip to Content

Hemet City Council Declares Emergency As Police Grapple With Violence

The Hemet City Council approved an emergency declaration on Tuesday, clearing the way for beefed up security at the Hemet Police Department and the gang task force headquarters.

The move comes as more police property is falling victim to vandals who appear to have it out for the police and gang task force members.

An outlaw motorcycle gang called the Vagos may be behind several attempts to kill or injure police officers and other city workers, police have said.

Thirty members of the Vagos were arrested, primarily in the Hemet area, last month. Law officers from 60 agencies also arrested Vagos members in Northern California, Arizona, Utah and Nevada during “Operation Everywhere.”

The city’s declaration now eliminates the bidding process usually set up to install new security devices, like an alarm, a fence, or other security instruments, and allows them to be built immediately.

A fire damaged a Hemet police training building in a remote area west of the city, on Monday, and police said they need a declaration of an emergency from the city council because they and their police station are endangered.

The fire destroyed a building at the Hemet Police Department’s shooting range and was reported about 2 a.m., according to Hemet police Capt. Dave Brown. The frame-wood structure was badly-charred in the blaze, and arson squads from several agencies spent the day gathering evidence there.

“Intelligence reports indicate that the police facility is the likely focus of future criminal acts,” Brown wrote in a staff report to the Hemet city council, released Monday.

“A security assessment of city buildings indicates that the public access lobbies present a significant risk to city employees and resources,” Brown wrote in the staff report.

“Immediate action is required to harden these facilities and the delay resulting from a competitive bid process would result in increased exposure to criminal acts,” the report reads.

In late March, four city code enforcement trucks were torched in the Hemet City Hall parking lot.

On March 5, a member of the Hemet/San Jacinto Gang Task Force found an explosive device attached to his unmarked patrol car when he pulled into a filling station in Hemet.

On Feb. 23, a member of the task force opened a gate at its headquarters and was nearly struck by a bullet discharged by a homemade “zip gun,” rigged to fire when the gate moved.

Dec. 31, someone rerouted a natural gas line into the task force’s headquarters building, setting the stage for an explosion by a spark.

However, police stop short of blaming any one organization or even conceding that all the acts have been related.

“We will not speculate at this point until the investigators are able to complete their work,” Brown said.

The cause of the fire has not been released to the public.

Article Topic Follows: News

Jump to comments ↓

KESQ News Team

BE PART OF THE CONVERSATION

News Channel 3 is committed to providing a forum for civil and constructive conversation.

Please keep your comments respectful and relevant. You can review our Community Guidelines by clicking here

If you would like to share a story idea, please submit it here.

Skip to content