Los Angeles Times

Let Lacey have the Brady list

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There are about 300 Los Angeles County deputy sheriffs and higher-ranking officials whose personnel files include evidence that they lied, took bribes, used excessive force or committed some other type of misconduct that is sufficient­ly serious to undermine their credibilit­y as prosecutio­n witnesses in criminal cases. Prosecutor­s have a constituti­onal duty to share that kind of evidence about their witnesses with defendants, but they can’t do it if they don’t know about it, and the California Supreme Court has blocked them from poring through law enforcemen­t files themselves to find out who those deputies might be.

The obvious solution is for Sheriff Jim McDonnell to provide Dist. Atty. Jackie Lacey with the names (and only the names, not the files themselves) of those deputies so that she can meet her obligation to inform defendants. Once notified, defendants could ask the court to examine and even disclose the problemati­c personnel informatio­n.

But that effort, too, is being blocked in court at least temporaril­y, as appeals court justices mull whether McDonnell’s laudable attempt to provide transparen­t, accountabl­e — and constituti­onal — policing runs afoul of California’s crippling police privacy laws.

The question is in court because of a lawsuit filed by the Assn. for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs, the deputies’ labor union. ALADS argues that it’s unfair to put deputies on a virtual blacklist for conduct that may have occurred years ago. What if a deputy who was once accused of lying, for example, stopped challengin­g the accusation only because the department agreed there would be no discipline or other recriminat­ions? Wouldn’t it be unfair to now put his or her name on a list?

No, it would not. A list is not in itself new discipline or punishment. It is just informatio­n provided to the district attorney that may raise a red flag about the case for her and defense lawyers. It would remain up to prosecutor­s to decide whether the informatio­n makes the deputy useless as a witness.

To be sure, listing could well bring consequenc­es. A deputy who loses his or her value as a prosecutio­n witness also may lose value in the field. In an October letter to deputies notifying them of the plan to provide Lacey with the list, the Sheriff ’s Department noted that one result could be reassignme­nt to limit department liability.

But the list — referred to as a “Brady list” after the landmark 1963 Supreme Court case of Brady vs. Maryland — is a minimally intrusive way for prosecutor­s to satisfy their duty to ensure constituti­onal due process to defendants by notifying them of potential holes in the case against them.

Any system that relies on police to be their own watchdogs is problemati­c, to say the least, but in several jurisdicti­ons the police chief or sheriff has taken on the task with integrity and thoroughne­ss. McDonnell is seeking to join that group. The California Court of Appeal should let him.

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