Ruben Salazar: A witness remains suspicious about Ruben Salazar's death

Raul Ruiz was sitting on a curb on Whittier Boulevard, drinking a soda
after a hard day's work shooting photographs of a rally against the
Vietnam War. Suddenly, a group of Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies
approached the bar across the street.

He snapped a few pictures and watched as the deputies fired tear-gas
canisters through the bar's open front door. Then, after 15 minutes or
so, the deputies made him leave. Hours later, Ruiz learned that Ruben
Salazar, the best-known Mexican American journalist in L.A., had been
killed inside the bar.

"We've got to develop this film because I have a feeling I've got the
shooting," he told his colleagues at La Raza, the magazine he helped
run. In the darkroom, an image soon took form — a sheriff's deputy
pointing his weapon at an open doorway in which several people gathered.

In death, Salazar was lauded as a fallen spokesman for Chicano rights.
Some suspected he'd been assassinated. Ruiz's photographs gave the
public its only glimpse of how Salazar died on that day in 1970, and
they've become iconic images of L.A. history.

But for 40 years, Ruiz has been trying to sort out all the things his
camera lens could not capture.

"To this day, I have not accepted the fact that Ruben was killed by a
tear-gas projectile," Ruiz said, referring to the Sheriff's Department's
official explanation for how Salazar died.

When I met Ruiz at a Boyle Heights restaurant last week, he arrived with
a 3-inch-thick manuscript he's written on the case. It summarizes all
the publicly available evidence — much of it from a controversial
coroner's inquest conducted in 1970 — and the results of his own work
tracking down and interviewing witnesses.

Ruiz, now 70, went on to get a doctorate from Harvard. He's never tried
to get his Salazar work published — for the simple reason that it can't
be finished until he gets access to all the public records in the case.
They've been kept from the public — and from historians and Salazar's
family — all these years.

"We've been waiting for the sheriff's records," he told me.

On Monday, Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca said he would release the
documents — but only to the media. The decision followed a study of the
documents conducted by the Sheriff's Department's Office of Independent
Review.

The Times received a draft version of the report and published it on the
Web Sunday. It lists, among other contents in the department files,
statements from 61 witnesses, and a box filled with reel-to-reel tapes
and "photographic evidence."

"All of that is incredibly important stuff," Ruiz told me. "No one has
ever seen or heard any of that before."

There seemed to be little reason why Baca should continue to keep all
that evidence under lock and key. After all, as the draft report states,
the department long ago paid a settlement to the Salazar family.

There are many important reasons for making everything about the case
public.

According to the report, Sheriff's Department documents include
memorandums on the department's preparation for the East L.A. march and
rally — a seminal moment in L.A. history that is known as the Chicano
Moratorium. It's the subject of numerous academic studies, and releasing
the records to the general public would allow for a more accurate and
complete understanding of that history.

According to the new report's account of Salazar's death, deputies fired
tear gas into the bar but didn't enter it. They allowed Salazar's body
to lie there for more than two hours, until calls from Salazar's
employer, KMEX-TV, led them to go back inside.

The report strongly criticizes the Sheriff's Department's actions on
that day, saying "it cannot be disputed that the deputies who responded
to the Silver Dollar Cafe on August 29, 1970 employed poor tactics and
made mistakes that resulted in Mr. Salazar's death."

But it finds no evidence of a plot to assassinate Salazar.

Ruiz says he won't be convinced until he sees the evidence himself. I
understand his skepticism.

The late 1960s and early '70s were, after all, a time of revolt and
paranoia across America. A variety of federal, state and local agencies
actively engaged in spying on student, peace and civil rights groups.

Salazar himself cooperated with the FBI after a 1967 reporting trip to
Cuba, according to documents obtained by The Times. He spoke
confidentially with agents about Stokely Carmichael's activities in that
country. Those same records show FBI agents sometimes monitored Salazar.

He'd written columns for The Times and done reports on KMEX critical of
the Los Angeles Police Department. And shortly before his death, he told
friends he believed that police were following him.

And yet, for all the taint of conspiracy surrounding the case,
everything we know about what happened that day points not to a police
plot but to a messy series of poor decisions.

Deputies had dispersed the crowd gathered at a park a mile away. Ruiz
said he walked east on Whittier Boulevard, returning along the route the
march had taken earlier that day. Salazar had done the same thing. "I
think he was just a few minutes ahead of me," Ruiz said.

Many deputies, local residents and marchers were gathered at the corner
of La Verne Avenue and Whittier Boulevard. The atmosphere was relaxed,
Ruiz told me, with "deputies and Chicanos" in line together at a
hamburger stand just a hundred feet or so from the bar.

The mood changed quickly when an unnamed man in a red vest stepped
forward to say he'd seen someone enter the bar with a gun.

Ruiz said he heard deputies order the bar's patrons back inside. Then he
saw a deputy, later identified by the department as Thomas Wilson,
launch a 9-inch projectile into the building from outside.

Days later, at Salazar's funeral, Ruiz saw the newsman's body in an open
casket. He did not, Ruiz said, look like a man whose head had been
nearly taken apart by a tear-gas shell.

"There have to be death scene photographs," Ruiz said. "But we haven't
been allowed to see them."

If and when Ruiz and other members of the public see those photographs
and the other evidence in the Sheriff's Department's possession, 40
years of doubts could finally be put to rest. In 1970, police officials
in this city could act as if they were accountable to no one. Releasing
the Salazar files to everyone would make it clear those days are gone
forever.

[email protected]

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http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-tobar-20110222,0,1358736.column
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