By Tony Briscoe, Los Angeles Times The Tribune Content Agency
A Kern County public meeting dramatically deviated from the agenda when Supervisor Leticia Perez accused district attorney staff of attempting to "illegally" search her office.
Perez said that around 9 a.m. Friday, Kern County district attorney investigators arrived at her office in downtown Bakersfield. The investigators, Perez said, tried to "make illegal entry" by requesting the county administrative staff to give them access to her office while it was locked and empty.
Perez said the investigators did not have a warrant or her permission to search her office. A call and text to Dist. Atty. Cynthia Zimmer went unreturned, she said.
"They did not have permission, they did not provide notice to us and they did not have a warrant," Perez said.
Zimmer's office did not immediately respond to an email and call from The Times seeking additional details on the investigation.
About an hour into the public meeting, Perez once again interrupted the meeting to announce her office was in the process of being searched.
"The D.A. has arrived at my office with a warrant to search my office ... so I'll be heading up to have to deal with that right now, and I'm very, very sorry about that," Perez said shortly before rising from her chair and walking out.
With one supervisor seat vacant and Perez gone, the situation caught Kern County Chairman David Couch off-guard.
"What does this do to our meeting?" Couch asked. "We only have three people."
The Board of Supervisors was in the middle of hearing public comments ahead of a vote on what could be the state's first carbon capture and storage project, a plan to permanently store carbon emissions underground.
Perez is currently running for reelection for another four-year term on the Board of Supervisors. Perez represents County District 5, which includes portions of downtown and eastern Bakersfield. She has served as a county supervisor since 2013.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.