"Cal/OSHA might think they're doing the right thing, I think they're mistaken," said Chris Branscum, the mayor of Marysville.
After an exchange of gunfire, both Officer Rodarte and drug trafficker Rick Oliver were killed.
"It's tragic to relive this in this circumstance. We're going to deal with it, we're going to fight this," Branscum said.
"I do know the city conducts proper training and I'm certain the county does and I have confidence in what our District Attorney, Mr. Clint Curry, ever says, and you were there," said the mayor.
"He did what he was trained to do," said Clint Curry, Yuba County district attorney.
"It basically stops at the belly button and all vests do that, plate carriers and regular vests. And you can see why just from this picture, because he's seated. If he had a longer vest, you wouldn't be able to sit down without either the vest coming up over your ears, or in this case, the plate being shoved in your throat as you squat or sit," Curry said.
The Yuba County Sheriff's Office, which was also involved in March's raid, calls these citations a "dangerous precedent for unfocused oversight by a state entity that has little to no knowledge in regard to public safety and law enforcement."
"We did not let Osmar down," Branscum said.
CBS13 reached out to Cal/OSHA, but they did not respond in time for this article.
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