The Laguna Beach City Council voted Tuesday night to keep an American flag design on city police cars.

The vote came after days of national debate about the design for the police vehicles, one that some local officials believed got out of hand.

At least 200 people packed the council chambers, where police officers guarded the doors. Many in attendance wore combinations of red, white and blue. Some donned veterans’ or American Legion hats. A couple wore “Make America Great Again” caps.

One woman burst into the national anthem, and most of the crowd joined her in song. Several people recited poems.


“This became about the flag, but before that it was not about the flag. It was about what our Police Department wanted, what they thought they could best serve the community with,” Mayor Bob Whalen said.

A few speakers had qualms about the design, which couples the cars’ new black-and-white color scheme with the U.S. flag graphic.

Longtime Laguna Beach resident Patrick Cannon said that when he sees the new logo on police cars, he sees “Immigration and Customs Enforcement” because the red and white of the flag runs through the capital letters “ice” in “police.”

“We’re rainbow-sandal-wearing, avocado-eating … surfers and artists, and inclusion is part of our town,” Cannon said. “We do not include our Hispanic community by putting ‘ICE’ on our police cars.”


The flag design on Laguna Beach police cars has stirred discussion about whether the new theme properly reflects the community. (City of Laguna Beach)

Chris Prelitz said he has seen “nothing but hate” toward anyone who questioned the design. Audience members interrupted him with boos, and Whalen quieted the crowd.

“The other side does exist,” Prelitz said. “Everyone here supports the red, white and blue, and I’m fine with that. I was just pointing out that there might be unintended consequences, and you’re seeing that [tonight].”

Councilwoman Toni Iseman, who cast the lone dissenting vote, said Laguna Beach doesn’t have a problem with patriotism, but she suggested making the “I” in “police” blue so the letters “ice” wouldn’t be all red.


“You’re really all here because you believe we should protect against the tyranny of the majority,” Iseman told the crowd. “We have to protect the minority voice or we don’t have a democracy.”

Conservative activist and local attorney Jennifer Zeiter began the conversation about the flag before the council took up the topic, asking for 10 seconds of silence to honor service members killed recently in Afghanistan. Her son serves in the military in Iraq, she said as she placed a triangle-shaped American flag in a case on the lectern.

“This flag is what they’re fighting for, and they’re fighting for all of us,” she said to cheers from many in the audience.

Jim Gilchrist, a Vietnam War veteran, said he was “awed” to see the number of Laguna Beach residents who came out to support the flag.


“This flag is very personal to me,” he said, choking up at the memory of fellow Marines who died in the war. “I fly a flag in front of my house to remember those men every day. To have that flag on a police car is great.”

The council first agreed to redesign the city’s mostly white Ford Explorer police vehicles in February, choosing a black-and-white look and the image of Old Glory running through the word “police” on the doors.

The council decided to revisit its decision this month “out of an abundance of caution” after hearing complaints from residents and acknowledging that the bold-colored design currently on the cars doesn’t match the option the council initially chose, Mayor Pro Tem Steve Dicterow said in an interview Monday.

The graphic the council unanimously approved Feb. 19 was a more muted version — what City Manager John Pietig called “a cloudlike look.”


Pinho writes for Times Community News.

Standing room only before Laguna Beach City Council meeting begins. Most are here to speak about police car flag design. @TheDailyPilot pic.twitter.com/NC7pmZgzih — Faith E. Pinho (@faithepinho) April 17, 2019

faith.pinho@latimes.com

Pinho writes for Times Community News.