Los Angeles Times

LAWS USHER IN NEW ERA FOR POLICE

Measures unwind the secrecy regarding use of force, misconduct.

- By Liam Dillon and Maya Lau

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Jerry Brown ushered in a new era of transparen­cy in California law enforcemen­t on Sunday, signing two new laws that for the first time give the public access to internal police investigat­ions and video footage of shootings by police officers and other serious incidents.

The measures begin to undo decades of laws and court decisions that had made California the nation’s most secretive state for police records.

“With Gov. Brown’s signature, California is finally joining other states in granting access to the investigat­ory records on officer conduct that the public truly has a right to know,” Sen. Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley), the author of one of the measures, Senate Bill 1421, said in a statement.

Skinner’s bill allows the public to view investigat­ions of officer shootings and other major uses of force, along with confirmed cases of sexual assault and lying while on duty.

The availabili­ty of these records will allow the public to press California police department­s and elected officials in ways not possible before, said Peter Bibring, director of police practices at the American Civil Liberties Union of California, which was a principal supporter of both bills.

“People have seen there are systematic problems and the police aren’t being held accountabl­e — or at least the public isn’t aware of it because it’s secret,” Bibring said. “That’s something the public is not willing to ignore.”

Legal experts also say SB 1421 could have a significan­t effect on the state’s justice system by allowing broader access to records that could bear on the credibilit­y of a police witness who has a history of discipline for dishon-

esty or other significan­t misconduct.

California is the only state in which even prosecutor­s cannot directly obtain officer personnel files. Under the current system, prosecutor­s and criminal defendants must navigate a labyrinthi­ne process in court to glean informatio­n from those files.

The procedure, which requires filing a so-called Pitchess motion, often yields only the name and contact informatio­n of a complainan­t against an officer.

A recent Times investigat­ion into secrecy surroundin­g law enforcemen­t discipline found that past misconduct by police witnesses, whether alleged or proved, routinely is kept hidden in court as a result of California’s confidenti­ality laws.

The new law opens up interview transcript­s, evidence and full investigat­ory reports to the public, prosecutor­s and defense attorneys alike.

“This is revolution­ary,” said San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi. “It would unveil what we have been wanting for a long time.”

Lara Bazelon, a professor at the University of San Francisco School of Law, said the measure could expose officer misconduct that was long withheld from defendants and could lead to numerous conviction­s being dismissed.

“We are going to see a lot of skeletons falling out of the closets dating back years, if not decades. That means people who were convicted unjustly and unfairly will finally get a chance to be heard,” Bazelon said.

Contra Costa County prosecutor­s tossed 19 conviction­s in 2016 and 2017 after a police lieutenant revealed to a judge that files showing internal investigat­ions into two officers had not been disclosed in criminal cases involving the officers.

California’s rules prohibitin­g the public release of law enforcemen­t records date back four decades. At the time, police unions and other law enforcemen­t officials were complainin­g that criminal defense attorneys had flooded department­s with requests for complaints against officers.

Before the 1978 law was passed, the Los Angeles Police Department shredded four tons of prior complaints against officers that hadn’t resulted in a finding of wrongdoing.

In previous years, law enforcemen­t labor groups waged aggressive campaigns to successful­ly shut down attempts to loosen the state’s police confidenti­ality laws.

Police unions opposed SB 1421 as well. Brian Marvel, the head of the Peace Officers Research Assn. of California — the state’s largest law enforcemen­t labor organizati­on — said he worried the new disclosure rules would put officers at risk.

Earlier this year, protesters angry over the killing of Stephon Clark, an unarmed black man in Sacramento, gathered at the wedding of a police officer after identifyin­g him as one of the officers who shot Clark, and Marvel said releasing more informatio­n about officers could lead to more confrontat­ions that could turn violent.

“There would be a greater potential for officers and their families being harmed by having all of their informatio­n being put out publicly,” Marvel said.

Labor officials had used similar arguments in the past to defeat transparen­cy proposals. But Marvel said their position wasn’t as effective this year because public opinion has shifted against officers, pressuring lawmakers to act differentl­y.

Legislator­s and civil rights activists similarly have cited the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement and increased scrutiny on police killings of civilians as reasons why SB 1421 passed when past attempts at changing the transparen­cy laws failed.

Brown signed the original 1978 police confidenti­ality law during his first term in office. He did not issue a statement after signing the bill, and a spokesman declined to comment on the decision.

Besides the open records law, Brown signed a second measure, Assembly Bill 748, requiring department­s statewide to release bodyworn camera and other video and audio recordings of officer shootings and serious uses of force within 45 days unless doing so would interfere with an ongoing investigat­ion.

This law, modeled after a new LAPD policy on releasing body-camera video, makes California’s rules for releasing footage some of the most transparen­t in the country, according to research by Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

The body-camera law also breaks a long stalemate in the Legislatur­e over setting statewide rules on the release of police recordings. Multiple proposals in recent years either to make the videos public or limit access had failed before AB 748.

“Public access to body camera footage is necessary to boost confidence and rebuild trust between law enforcemen­t and the communitie­s they serve,” Assemblyma­n Phil Ting (D-San Francisco), the bill’s author, said in a statement.

The new transparen­cy laws could spur more efforts to increase public access to policing records in the state. Marvel, the police union leader, said he’d like to release body-camera footage of day-to-day interactio­ns officers have with community members, such as typical traffic stops, so that the public has a better sense of what regular policing is like.

“If the only thing we’re releasing is negative contacts with people, then that becomes the narrative,” Marvel said.

The new open records law takes effect Jan. 1. The body-camera law won’t be implemente­d until July 1 to give police department­s more time to update their policies on disclosure.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? AUTHORITIE­S investigat­e the scene of a fatal officer-involved shooting in Long Beach in June 2017.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times AUTHORITIE­S investigat­e the scene of a fatal officer-involved shooting in Long Beach in June 2017.
 ?? Los Angeles Police Department ?? AN IMAGE from video taken from an officer’s body camera highlights a deadly clash between Los Angeles police and a suspected prowler in South L.A.
Los Angeles Police Department AN IMAGE from video taken from an officer’s body camera highlights a deadly clash between Los Angeles police and a suspected prowler in South L.A.

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