2 ex-cops accused of sham raid to extort $37 million from California business man

Four former law-enforcement officials, including two who worked as Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies, face federal charges for carrying out a raid at the behest of a Chinese national engaged in a legal battle with a business partner who lived in Irvine, authorities said, making threats and demanding nearly $37 million.

The four defendants were accused of taking an unmarked Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department vehicle to the Irvine home on June 17, 2019, forcing the business partner, his wife and their two sons into a room, taking their phones and threatening to deport the parents and separate them from their 4-year-old son if the man didn’t transfer his assets — the money and his shares in the rubber-chemical manufacturing company they shared — to the Chinese national, said Ciaran McEvoy, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

The four defendants, who all pleaded not guilty on Monday, Aug. 12, in federal court in downtown Los Angeles and were ordered released on bond:

— Steven Arthur Lankford, 68, of Canyon Country– Glen Louis Cozart, 63, of Upland– Max Samuel Bennett Turbett, 39, of Australia– Matthew Phillip Hart, 41, of Australia

All four were running their own private businesses at the time of their arrests, McEvoy said.

Lankford and Cozart are former LASD deputies, with Lankford still working for the department when the raid was carried out. Cozart worked for the department from 1982 to 1995, according to an indictment, while Lankford left the department in 2020, federal officials said. Turbett is a United Kingdom citizen and a former member of the British military, while Hart is a former member of the Australian military.

They each face charges of conspiracy to commit extortion, attempted extortion, conspiracy against rights and deprivation of rights under color of the law, McEvoy said.

“It is critical that we hold public officials, including law enforcement officers, to the same standards as the rest of us,” United States Attorney Martin Estrada said in a statement. “It is unacceptable and a serious civil-rights violation for a sworn police officer to take the law into his own hands and abuse the authority of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.”

The Chinese national whose request prompted the raid, a woman, is not facing a charge and was not named by authorities. She was embroiled in a lengthy business dispute with the victim, which resulted in at least three lawsuits in China and one in Atlanta, McEvoy said.

Growing impatient, the Chinese woman reached out to Turbett in December 2018 to help get assets from the victim and said the “long and costly litigation had not been ‘the smart way’ to handle her dispute,” McEvoy said.

She also asked Turbett in an email to find, the spokesman said, quoting her, “(a) different solution to finish the problem. … We can both retire.”

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