LA County DA Gascon ripped over lack of special charges in alleged cop killer’s robbery cases

Christina Solano, the sister of the slain L.A. County deputy, is ‘outraged’ over proposed justice reform.

San Diego County's top prosecutor is rescinding permission for Los Angeles County's newly elected district attorney to prosecute an alleged cop killer and suspected armed robber after the D.A. refused to bring special charges against the defendant.

In a Monday letter, District Attorney Summer Stephan criticized George Gascon, who was elected to office in Los Angeles County on a platform of prosecution reform that now has roiled law enforcement officials and some crime victims, FOX 11 of Los Angeles reported.

"I do not want our San Diego county cases to be connected to any publicly-announced special directive that dismisses special circumstances and serious gun use allegations where your stated reason is 'in the interest of justice,' when clearly the facts of this defendant’s violent offenses show it is not," Stephan wrote.

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Stephan said she wanted to take over the prosecution of Rhett Nelson, 31, who is accused of committing five armed robberies in San Diego County in 2019.

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Days later, on June 10, 2019, he is suspected of killing two people in Los Angeles County – off-duty Los Angeles County Sheriff's Deputy Joseph Gilbert Solano, 50, and 31-year-old Dmitry Alekseyevichand — in separate incidents, hours apart, FOX 11 reported. 

In her letter, Stephan said her office had agreed to let Los Angeles County prosecutors prosecute Nelson for the San Diego robberies with the understanding that he would face the maximum amount of prison time. 

District Attorney Summer Stephan of San Diego County.

Jackie Lacey was the Los Angeles County district attorney at the time. 

But Stephan said Gascon, who took office Dec. 7, ordered his attorneys to drop the enhancements, which could make Nelson eligible for parole when he's 50 without the special charges.

Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascon speaks in downtown Los Angeles, Monday, Dec. 7, 2020. (Bryan Chan/County of Los Angeles via AP)

"This doesn’t require creativity," Stephan told the news station. "Two people were killed, you don’t get two lives for the price of one, that’s not how this works. The policies that have been set forth, I think they’re unlawful. I think you cannot stand up in front of a judge and say that it’s in the interest of justice because those words cannot come across any prosecutor’s lips and be truthful about it."

Gascon's office did not immediately respond to a Fox News request for comment Friday evening. 

Under fire

Gascon, a former Los Angeles police officer, has come under fire from his own prosecutors and law enforcement officials for his progressive policies. He defended his stance on sentencing enhancements after the Association of Deputy District Attorneys for Los Angeles County (ADDA) sued him last month. 

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"People must be held accountable, but we often put ppl in prison for extra years, increasing recidivism & creating more victims," Gascón tweeted on Dec. 31. "This is unsafe, unjust & wastes taxpayer $. Prosecutors enter an appearance 'for the people' & the decisions we make must be in the people's interest."

He's also pledged to have his prosecutors end the seeking of cash bail for misdemeanor, non-violent and non-serious felony offenses.