Los Angeles Times

Changing the Sheriff ’s Dept.

Real reform is necessary. But the demands made by Los Angeles activists are maddeningl­y modest.

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It is exceedingl­y difficult to qualify an initiative for the Los Angeles County ballot, so the Reform L.A. Jails movement achieved something remarkable earlier this year when it gathered nearly a quarter-million signatures on a petition to require a reexaminat­ion of jail funding and to enhance oversight of the Sheriff ’s Department. Now the Board of Supervisor­s must choose whether to allow the measure to proceed to the March 3, 2020, ballot or to short-circuit the process and grant the activists instant victory by passing the substance of their measure into law.

If only the activists’ demands weren’t so maddeningl­y modest.

They want the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission to study how to reduce the county jail population and redirect the resulting savings to non-jail alternativ­es, presumably including substance and mental health treatment and other rehabilita­tion programs. And they want the commission to have the power to subpoena witnesses and documents, to better keep tabs on the Sheriff ’s Department and its personnel.

There’s nothing wrong with those suggestion­s, but they miss the point. In fact, the Board of Supervisor­s has already created an Office of Diversion and Reentry that has redirected hundreds of would-be inmates to treatment, but its work is stymied by a dearth of community-based service organizati­ons that can care for rising numbers of patients and that have the expert personnel and funding to meet acceptable standards of service. Furthermor­e, there’s fierce resistance from would-be neighbors to housing and clinics for patients who might otherwise be in jail.

County supervisor­s and the sheriff have done an abysmal job at communicat­ing just what they are doing on alternativ­es to incarcerat­ion. And it may be that some county officials are quite comfortabl­e with their failure to publicly outline their program, because without clear numerical targets and timetables for reducing the jail population and offering safe and useful alternativ­es, there can be no meaningful oversight of their efforts — no determinat­ion that they must pick up their pace, no outside evaluation of their efficiency and effectiven­ess. They may be unbothered by the fact that their recalcitra­nce has led to the petition drive and ballot measure.

As for subpoena power, the Los Angeles Times supports it, but recognizes that its value may be more symbolic than substantiv­e. The files that activists appear to want most — documentin­g deputy misconduct and discipline — are either beyond subpoena power because of privacy laws or already within reach, without subpoenas, because of a recent change to state law. Witnesses could be ordered to appear before the commission, but it is not a court and would lack power to enforce its orders. Attempting to compel testimony could run afoul of the 4th and 5th Amendments of the U.S. Constituti­on.

Activists may have fetishized or mythologiz­ed subpoena power, investing it with greater potency than it actually has.

But there is a more basic and more sweeping kind of power, and reallocati­ng it might make the supervisor­s and the sheriff more responsive to their constituen­ts.

That’s what happened in the city of L.A. after the beating of Rodney King led to public demands for Los Angeles Police Department accountabi­lity, and the police chief and department brass responded defiantly. Reformers went to the ballot in 1992 with a landmark measure (known as Charter Amendment F) that stripped the chief of civil service protection and virtual lifetime tenure and reallocate­d power among him, the mayor and the Police Commission.

L.A. County was due for its Charter Amendment F following the resignatio­n and conviction of Sheriff Lee Baca, but it still hasn’t gotten it. Structural reform would be a taller order than the city’s version, because, under the state constituti­on, the sheriff is unaccounta­ble to anyone but the electorate (and criminal prosecutor­s). Until now, serious efforts to impose the right changes seemed futile because implementi­ng them seemed politicall­y impossible.

But the Reform L.A. Jails movement has demonstrat­ed that there is a hunger for change, and that activists have the ability to get a reform measure on the ballot. The measure they have may be fine as far as it goes, but change of a more fundamenta­l sort is needed.

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