LAPD meeting again descends into chaos as slur-slinging protestors shout down top commissioner

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Unhinged lefty agitators sent a meeting of the Los Angeles Police Commission spiraling into chaos again on Tuesday — calling the city’s top cop a “pig” and a “rapist” as the group’s president failed to maintain order.

In a scene that has become a disturbing weekly ritual, foul-mouthed radicals stormed the meeting and hurled vile insults at LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell as he attempted to deliver his weekly report.

A person’s outstretched hand at a Los Angeles Police Commission meeting attempts to block photography. Jamie Paige
A man wearing a “F—CK THE POL(ICE)” shirt. Jamie Paige

“Piece of s–t,” one protestor screamed as McDonnell tried to brief the public on recent violence in the city.

Board of Police Commissioners President Teresa Sanchez-Gordon issued repeated warnings to the hostile crowd, but her voice was regularly overpowered by the profanity-laced attacks.

“From the outside looking in, it shows this commission has lost control of the room,” said former mayoral candidate Rick Caruso, who served the board from 2001 to 2005, including three years as president.

A man wearing a face mask and a hat that says “DEFUND POLICE” gives the middle finger while holding a picture of Keenan Anderson. Jamie Paige

“That shouldn’t be accepted. It reflects weakness and incompetency in leadership — and it’s being tolerated.”

From the moment McDonnell began speaking Tuesday, protesters zeroed in on the chief with sustained personal attacks.

One notorious agitator, Jason Reedy — who frequently uses his children as cover during public outbursts — repeatedly called LAPD officers “pigs” as he spoke with a young child strapped to his chest.

Jason Reedy speaking at a podium with a young child nearby at a Police Commission meeting. California Post

Sanchez-Gordon did order one vocal protestor out of the meeting — despite the demonstrator already heading for the door at the time.

“You jerks — I’m leaving. What does it matter?” he shouted as security stepped. “You have all day to listen to us. I’m leaving. Shut up.”

Teresa Sanchez-Gordon, President of the Police Commission, listens at a meeting. Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Sanchez-Gordon did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment regarding the disorder.

Caruso stressed that the city charter requires commissioners to control the room — and that failing to do so undercuts public safety.

“These are serious issues,” Caruso said. “If someone refused to conduct themselves in a way befitting a serious meeting, we removed them. You have to draw that line, or you lose control — and they’ve lost control.”

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