Los Angeles Times

A bid to open secret police records

Proposal to increase the public’s access to some misconduct files of officers advances in the California Senate.

- By Liam Dillon

SACRAMENTO — An effort to make some internal law enforcemen­t investigat­ions open to the public cleared a key hurdle in the Legislatur­e on Thursday, marking the first time in four decades that lawmakers could vote to meaningful­ly increase transparen­cy surroundin­g police misconduct.

Senate Bill 1421 would open records from investigat­ions of officer shootings and other major force incidents, along with confirmed cases of sexual assault and lying while on duty. The bill’s author, Sen. Nancy Skinner (DBerkeley), said Thursday’s decision to send the measure through a legislativ­e fiscal committee is a major step toward building trust between police and the communitie­s they serve.

The committee, Skinner said, “did the right thing in moving to bring California in line with other states and give access to law enforcemen­t records where the public truly has a right to know.”

California has the strictest laws in the country protecting the confidenti­ality of police misconduct records. The rules not only prohibit the public from seeing them, but also deny prosecutor­s direct access.

A Times investigat­ion found that past misconduct

by law enforcemen­t officers who testify in court is routinely kept hidden by California’s police privacy laws, which were first passed in 1978.

Police unions have long argued that the rules protect officer safety and privacy and have successful­ly lobbied to crush past efforts to change the laws. Skinner’s bill would mark the first significan­t unwinding of the confidenti­ality rules.

The bill was changed Thursday in the Assembly Appropriat­ions Committee to allow police department­s to withhold records if they determine disclosure would be against the public interest. In addition, disclosure of investigat­ive reports on incidents in which officers used Tasers was dropped from the bill.

Robert Harris, a director for the union that represents the Los Angeles Police Department’s rank-and-file officers, said law enforcemen­t groups would continue their efforts to defeat the legislatio­n.

“It’s still incumbent upon us to educate lawmakers on what we feel are some of the harmful effects of the bill,” Harris said.

Should Senate Bill 1421 become law, California’s disclosure rules would still fall short of 21 other states that provide public access to records of all types of misconduct resulting in suspension­s and other significan­t discipline.

Still, leaders of activist groups said they were encouraged by the bill’s progress, noting that it had advanced further than earlier efforts to unwind the state’s police confidenti­ality laws.

“It’s a reflection of the demand and pressure from our communitie­s that shows this bill is needed,” said George Galvis, executive director of Communitie­s United For Restorativ­e Youth Justice, an Oakland group that’s a principal backer of the legislatio­n. “We need to hold law enforcemen­t accountabl­e.”

Thursday marked a busy

day for lawmakers debating major bills affecting police issues. In a setback for law enforcemen­t groups, none of the three principal efforts they opposed were defeated.

High-profile legislatio­n aiming to make it easier to prosecute police officers who kill civilians, however, was put on hold. That measure, Assembly Bill 931 by Assemblywo­man Shirley Weber (D-San Diego), has been the subject of intense lobbying by civil rights organizati­ons that believe it’s necessary to hold officers accountabl­e and law enforcemen­t groups who argue that the effort is an existentia­l threat.

State senators did not advance Weber’s bill but instead voted to move it out of a fiscal committee, where it faced a deadline to pass by the end of the week. Now, lawmakers have more time to debate the issue, Weber said.

“This is good news,” Weber said in a statement. “This is a critically important discussion that is long overdue in California.”

Lawmakers also advanced legislatio­n that would lead to the release of police body camera footage of major incidents statewide.

That bill, written by Assemblyma­n Phil Ting (DSan

Francisco), would require police department­s to release footage of most shootings by officers and other serious uses of force within 45 days unless it would interfere with an ongoing investigat­ion. Supporters of the bill said they modeled the measure after the LAPD’s new policy to release such videos within a similar time frame.

Should Ting’s bill pass, it would also go against historical precedent. In recent years, lawmakers have failed to advance major bills regulating the use of body cameras as their use has proliferat­ed up and down the state. In the statewide

vacuum, department­s have developed their own policies on disclosing footage that include keeping them private and releasing excerpts of incidents.

Despite Thursday’s decision to move forward the proposal to open some police personnel records, it still faces a difficult road to passage. The largest remaining hurdle is a vote by the full state Assembly, which has numerous members with strong ties to law enforcemen­t among the ruling Democratic Party. Skinner said she expects strong pushback from police unions.

“Of course law enforcemen­t,

since they’ve had the ability to deny access to records, they’re not going to want to give that up,” she said. “That’s a fundamenta­l challenge here.”

The bill faces a deadline of the end of the month to pass both houses of the Legislatur­e. To become law, Gov. Jerry Brown would then have to sign it. Brown approved the law that first enshrined the strict confidenti­ality protection­s for police records in 1978 during his first term in office. The governor has not taken a position on Skinner’s bill.

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