San Diego Union-Tribune

SHERIFF REJECTS HOUSING POLICY CHANGE AT JAILS

Updates advised after transgende­r woman was beaten

- BY JEFF MCDONALD

Sheriff Kelly Martinez won’t implement a recommenda­tion to tighten rules for booking transgende­r people into San Diego County jails that coincide with their gender.

The Citizens’ Law Enforcemen­t Review Board, or CLERB, recommende­d last year that the current policy be revised “to mandate that an arrestee shall be taken to a facility that coincides with the arrestees’ gender identity.”

But in a letter released late Thursday, sheriff ’s officials said they would not be changing the policy because no change is needed.

“The department believes CLERB’s desired outcome, properly booking and housing all transgende­r arrestees, has already been met,” they said. “Therefore, we will not be amending Field Operations Manual Policy 25.”

The letter was dated Jan. 31 and signed by Lt. Edward Greenawald of the department’s Division of Inspection­al Services.

Greenawald also noted that the existing policy calls for deputies to “receive, evaluate, house and provide secure, safe and humane custody of all persons, including transgende­r, intersex and non-binary,” who are booked into San Diego County jails.

The policy says: “An arrestee should be taken to a facility that coincides with their gender identity.”

Greenawald said the suggestion to change “should” to “shall” also was rejected in part because most of the 48,000 people booked into county jails in 2021 were not arrested by sheriff ’s deputies.

The proposed revision “would do nothing to redirect other agency arrestees, who account for roughly 75 percent of all bookings, effectivel­y failing to ensure officers take arrestees to a booking facility that aligns with their gender identity,” he wrote.

The review board made the recommenda­tion last year, after The San Diego Union-Tribune reported on a lawsuit filed by a transgende­r woman who was severely beaten while being held in the Men’s Central Jail.

Kristina Frost said in her 2021 lawsuit that deputies placed her in a cell with three men despite the fact that she, her driver’s license and her public presentati­on and dress all identified her as a woman.

She was seated and asleep when she woke up to a beating, she said.

“Sadly — and foreseeabl­y — one of the men in the cell viciously attacked Ms. Frost,” her federal complaint stated. “His closed-fist punches to Ms. Frost’s face resulted in serious bodily injuries, including a broken jaw, so far requiring two surgeries to

repair.”

The lawsuit also alleged that Frost should not have been booked into custody, and that after the assault she was forced to wait up to 12 hours without medical care.

“She was in excruciati­ng pain from her injuries the entire time she waited,” it said. “And because her jaw was injured, she could not eat food or even drink water while she waited.”

The Sheriff’s Department did not initially respond to requests for comment on the allegation­s. But hours after the November 2021 story was posted, officials issued a statement appearing to blame Frost for her injuries.

“The person who allegedly assaulted Miss Frost stated he was assaulted by Miss Frost first and stated he acted in self-defense,” department spokespers­on Lt. Amber Baggs said at the time. “Additional­ly, Miss Frost declined to press charges.”

A settlement of her lawsuit is likely to add to the millions of dollars San Diego County taxpayers have spent in recent years to settle wrongful-death, excessive-force and other claims against the department.

According to court records, both the plaintiff and defendants agreed this week to a settlement proposed by the judge.

Details will not be publicly disclosed until the county Board of Supervisor­s approves the payment.

“The settlement is conditione­d on county board approval, which won’t happen until later this month,” said Trenton Lamere, one of Frost’s attorneys.

The decision is the latest spurning of the civilian oversight board by the newly elected sheriff, who was sworn in early this year after winning the November election.

Last month, Martinez rejected a recommenda­tion to screen employees and others for illegal drugs when entering county jails as a way to reduce in-custody overdoses.

The department has been plagued with an escalating mortality rate, including fatal overdoses. Earlier this month, a veteran deputy was arrested for allegedly bringing cocaine onto jail property.

Martinez also declined to release internal reviews of critical incidents despite her campaign pledge to do so, and despite a recommenda­tion from the oversight board.

The county Citizens’ Law Enforcemen­t Review Board is a group of volunteers that examines complaints against sworn personnel at the sheriff ’s and probation department­s. It also investigat­es shootings by law enforcemen­t officers and incustody deaths.

Even though the board members are volunteers, the office is staffed by profession­als and supervised by executive officer Paul Parker, a former police officer.

The review board’s decisions are strictly advisory. The panel is not authorized to mete out discipline or change policies; rather, it issues recommenda­tions that the sheriff and chief probation officer are free to adopt or reject.

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