Los Angeles Times

San Diego Sheriff ’s Dept. encrypts radio channel

The move, part of a law enforcemen­t trend, is criticized for reducing transparen­cy.

- By David Hernandez San Diego Union-Tribune editor Dana Littlefiel­d contribute­d to this report.

The San Diego County Sheriff’s Department has encrypted its radio communicat­ions, blocking the public from listening to informatio­n about safety matters in real time.

The department is the latest law enforcemen­t agency in the county and state to cut off access to radio communicat­ions in response to a California Department of Justice mandate that required agencies to protect certain personal informatio­n that law enforcemen­t personnel obtain from state databases. Such informatio­n — names, driver’s license numbers, dates of birth and other informatio­n from the California Law Enforcemen­t Telecommun­ications System — sometimes is broadcast over police radios.

The October 2020 mandate gave agencies two options: to limit the transmissi­on of database-obtained personal informatio­n on public channels or to encrypt their radio traffic.

Police reform advocates say the switch to encrypted channels is problemati­c. The radio silence, they say, will force members of the public, including the news media, to rely on law enforcemen­t agencies’ discretion in releasing informatio­n about public safety matters.

“What this does, it inhibits transparen­cy and accountabi­lity,” said Yusef Miller, of the North County Equity and Justice Coalition and the Racial Justice Coalition of San Diego.

“We as the community need to have transparen­cy with law enforcemen­t — where things are happening in our community, where people are being stopped and pulled over,” Miller said at a news conference Friday.

A sheriff ’s spokespers­on has said the department is exploring ways to disseminat­e informatio­n about incidents as they unfold. One idea is an online page that would show informatio­n about calls to which deputies respond.

In San Diego County, the only policing agency that said it did not plan to fully encrypt its radio communicat­ions was the San Diego Police Department, which uses unencrypte­d dispatch channels as well as separate, encrypted channels through which personal informatio­n can be shared privately.

Police officers sometimes run background checks on their own, using their department-issued cellphones or computers in their patrol vehicles. Other times, they ask dispatcher­s to pull the informatio­n from the databases. That’s usually when personal informatio­n is broadcast over radio traffic.

The Sheriff’s Department made the switch to encrypted channels Jan. 11. Lt. Amber Baggs, a spokespers­on, said full encryption was the better option for the department to comply with the Department of Justice order.

“It’s not always feasible for us to switch channels,” Baggs said, adding that it could be “difficult or sometimes impossible” for deputies to switch from an unencrypte­d to an encrypted channel to protect personal informatio­n, especially in situations that unfold quickly.

Officials from several police department­s across the county took a similar stance in explaining their switch to encryption to the UnionTribu­ne in July. Some agencies said it wasn’t feasible for their dispatcher­s to manage both unencrypte­d and encrypted channels.

For years, anyone with a scanner has had the ability to tune into the unencrypte­d radio communicat­ions, more so in recent years with the advent of web and cellphone scanner apps.

Miller, from the Racial Justice Coalition of San Diego, said Friday outside Sheriff ’s Department headquarte­rs that the move to full encryption of radio communicat­ions runs contrary to the current demand for more transparen­cy from law enforcemen­t agencies.

“We need this type of access for trust and transparen­cy’s sake,” he said. “We cannot wait for law enforcemen­t to inform us of things that are happening in our community. Police shootings, any active shooter, rapes, thefts — these directly impact our families, and we need to know and be ahead of what going on.”

Miller said he was not advocating for access to the personal data of people being investigat­ed by the Sheriff’s Department or other law enforcemen­t agencies.

Darwin Fishman, who has served on the city of San Diego’s Community Review Board on Police Practices, criticized the Sheriff’s Department’s record on transparen­cy and said full encryption of radio communicat­ion is the “wrong way to move into this era.”

For “folks that are doing formal cop watch or people that are simply listening in and seeing about whether it’s fires or something in their apartment building, some kind of police action, [full encryption] really can have a significan­t impact,” Fishman said.

Imperial Beach resident Marcus Boyd, who often listens to a police scanner, said he regularly video records encounters between law enforcemen­t officers and the public — he views it as a way to hold officers accountabl­e.

“Now all we have is silence,” Boyd said in a recent interview. He also spoke at the Friday news conference.

Boyd pointed to state laws enacted in recent years that aim to increase transparen­cy, and faulted the Department of Justice for crafting an order that slows that progress.

“That [momentum] gave us one step forward,” he said, “and [agencies] are taking two steps back.

“This is giving them the ability to hide.”

Boyd, a former database programmer, is creating his own tool: CopWatcher, a cellphone app that includes a database with publicly available informatio­n about San Diego police officers and county sheriff ’s deputies. He said the app will allow users to write reviews of officers and deputies and file complaints.

The move toward encryption hasn’t generated much public outcry, and Boyd said he thinks that’s because many people aren’t aware that scanner traffic had been publicly available.

 ?? John Gibbins San Diego Union-Tribune ?? CRITICS SAY the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department’s encryption of its radio communicat­ions will force the public to rely on the agency’s discretion in releasing details about public safety matters, such as a fatal domestic violence attack in Lemon Grove in 2020, above.
John Gibbins San Diego Union-Tribune CRITICS SAY the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department’s encryption of its radio communicat­ions will force the public to rely on the agency’s discretion in releasing details about public safety matters, such as a fatal domestic violence attack in Lemon Grove in 2020, above.

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