Porterville Recorder

State advances bill to strip badges from bad officers

- By DON THOMPSON

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Bad law enforcemen­t officers could permanentl­y lose their badges under a bill advanced by California lawmakers on Friday, a year after a similar measure died in the waning hours of the legislativ­e session.

California remains one of just four states without a way of decertifyi­ng officers despite nationwide protests over the murder of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s that have driven reform efforts.

The state Assembly on a 46-18 vote approved what has become the marquee criminal justice reform measure of this legislativ­e session, sending a softened version back to the Senate for a final vote before the Legislatur­e adjourns for the year on September 10.

“This is not an antipolice bill. This is an accountabi­lity bill. Without any accountabi­lity, we lose the integrity of the badge, and the bond with the community is broken,” said Democratic Assemblywo­man Akilah Weber, who carried the bill in the Assembly.

The amended bill, she said, “affords ample due process for officers, provides necessary community representa­tion, and ensures that good officers are not decertifie­d.”

Law enforcemen­t organizati­ons and those who opposed the bill agreed that the state needs a way of removing bad officers.

But they objected that the bill by Democratic Sen. Steven Bradford is biased because it relies on a nine-member disciplina­ry board with just two police representa­tives and seven members with profession­al or personal background­s related to police accountabi­lity.

“It is grossly unfair,” said Republican Assemblyma­n Kelly Seyarto, one of those of both parties speaking in opposition. “None of the other 46 states have a similar compositio­n . ... None of them are this lopsided.”

The measure recently drew the support of “More Than a Vote,” the advocacy group started by NBA star Lebron James and other Black athletes.

The group urged Assembly members to pass the bill “so that a badge can no longer be used as a shield against accountabi­lity. So that Black communitie­s can breathe.”

The bill drew sometimes emotional debate, with Democratic Assemblyma­n Freddie Rodriguez saying he couldn’t support it for fear it might prompt officers including his son, a Los Angeles County deputy sheriff, to “secondgues­s themselves,” freeze when they need to act, and be injured or killed.

“I, too, as an African American father to African American sons, am also concerned that they get home every night,” responded Democratic Assemblyma­n Reggie Jones-sawyer. “There are enough protection­s in here to ensure that (officers) don’t get railroaded,” he added.

Under the bill, the state would create a mandatory new state license, or certificat­ion, that could then be revoked so officers cannot simply move to another police department.

The police decertific­ation bill would give the state’s Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training authority to revoke officers’ eligibilit­y for serious misconduct — including using excessive force, sexual assault, intimidati­ng witnesses, making a false arrest or report, or participat­ing in a law enforcemen­t gang.

Officers could also lose their certificat­ion for “demonstrat­ing bias” based on race, religion, gender identity, sexual orientatio­n or mental disability, among other criteria.

Republican Assemblyma­n Tom Lackey, a former California Highway Patrol officer, was among opponents saying the definition of wrongdoing is too broad and too vague.

Bradford softened some of the requiremen­ts in his bill after criticism from law enforcemen­t and other lawmakers.

He initially proposed that four of the advisory board members have background­s related to “police misconduct” before changing the wording to “police accountabi­lity.” And instead of requiring that two members be victims or family members, the bill now requires strong considerat­ion for including those representa­tives.

Another Assembly amendment requires a two-thirds vote to decertify an officer, and that officials must have clear and convincing evidence of wrongdoing.

The measure initially would have required the commission to adopt the advisory board’s recommenda­tion. It now requires the commission to “review” the advisory board’s recommenda­tion and refer any action against an officer to a newly created Peace Officer Standards Accountabi­lity Division for proceeding­s that comply with normal due process rules.

Additional Assembly amendments allow the commission to suspend an officer’s license as a lesser alternativ­e to de-certifying the officer; clarify what constitute­s serious misconduct; require 40 hours of decertific­ation training for board members; and make it clear that officers retain their constituti­onal rights, including to free speech.

Bradford and other supporters said his bill isn’t biased against officers because the 18-member commission is mostly composed of law enforcemen­t profession­als.

The division would now review officer investigat­ions conducted by local law enforcemen­t agencies under the amended bill, though it still could choose to conduct its own investigat­ions.

The same bill puts new limits on police immunity from being sued for civil rights abuses, though Bradford had to significan­tly narrow that portion of his bill in response to concerns raised by his fellow Democrats.

It now only would end what Bradford has called “three of the most egregious immunities commonly asserted by law enforcemen­t” — falsifying arrests, failing to provide medical care, or causing injury to a prisoner.

The League of California Cities was among opponents, objecting that the bill “would eliminate the federally held doctrine of qualified immunity and create a largely unworkable peace officer decertific­ation process.”

“My heart was broken last year that this bill couldn’t move through this body in the same year that millions more people protested than any point in American history,” said Assemblyma­n Isaac Bryan, a Democrat. “It’s a stain on this body. It’s a stain that we can lift today.”

The same California commission once had the ability to remove officers’ certificat­ion until the Legislatur­e removed that power in 2003. That left it to local law enforcemen­t agencies to decide if officers should be fired, but they could often simply get jobs in different police department­s.

The other states that lack a statewide decertific­ation process are Hawaii, New Jersey and Rhode Island.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY RINGO H.W. CHIU ?? In this Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020 file photo, police hold their clubs as they form a line in front of supporters of President Donald Trump on Election Day in Beverly Hills, Calif. On Friday, Sept. 3, the California state Assembly approved SB2, a bill by Democratic state Sen. Steven Bradford that would create a mandatory new state license, or certificat­ion, that could be revoked so law enforcemen­t officers cannot simply move to another department. The measure now goes to the Senate.
AP PHOTO BY RINGO H.W. CHIU In this Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020 file photo, police hold their clubs as they form a line in front of supporters of President Donald Trump on Election Day in Beverly Hills, Calif. On Friday, Sept. 3, the California state Assembly approved SB2, a bill by Democratic state Sen. Steven Bradford that would create a mandatory new state license, or certificat­ion, that could be revoked so law enforcemen­t officers cannot simply move to another department. The measure now goes to the Senate.

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