The Mercury News

Oversight board urges sheriff to body-scan deputies entering jails

- By Jeff McDonald

The voices demanding that Sheriff Kelly Martinez do more to stop overdoses inside San Diego County jails continue to grow louder.

Family members of people who died in sheriff's custody spoke out Tuesday before the civilian oversight board, and board members voted for the third time in two years to recommend that the Sheriff's Department scan deputies for illegal drugs as they enter work.

“I will always wonder where the drugs came from, how they got into the jail,” Sundee Weddle, whose son, 22-year-old Saxon Rodriguez, suffered a fatal overdose in San Diego Central Jail nearly three years ago.

“I believe somebody working on the fourth floor on July 20, 2021, knows the answers to my questions,” Weddle told the Citizens' Law Enforcemen­t Review Board.

Later in the meeting, the review board voted to resubmit a formal recommenda­tion

to the sheriff that all staff undergo body scans as they enter county jails as a way to help keep drugs out of the lockups.

The Sheriff's Department twice has rejected the suggestion from the oversight board and has not acted on similar recommenda­tions from the county grand jury and the California state auditor.

Martinez says the department has taken steps to reduce the amount of drugs in jails.

“Resources are being used creatively and efficientl­y to combat overdoses and drug smuggling in ways that are intentiona­lly leveraging our resources based on best practices, guided by evidence and actionable intelligen­ce,” the department wrote in its latest reply to the board's suggestion.

The issue of scanning deputies on their way into working at jails has become something of a flash point as people have continued to die in custody at alarming rates.

Three people already have died in San Diego County jails so far this year, a pace that would exceed the 13 in-custody deaths recorded last year. In 2022, 20 people died in sheriff's custody, surpassing the 18 people who died behind bars in 2021.

According to a state audit released in 2022, 185 people died in San Diego County jails between 2006 and 2020 — the highest rate of any large county in California. State officials said conditions and practices in San Diego County jails were so dangerous that legislatio­n was needed to force improvemen­ts.

Many of those deaths result from accidental drug overdoses, records show.

At the review board meeting Tuesday night, speakers noted that the number of overdoses reported inside county jails has not been updated since last year.

The department is confrontin­g a slew of civil lawsuits filed by relatives of people who have died in custody, and the county already has spent more than $60 million in recent years to pay legal settlement­s and jury awards.

Martinez has said her department is always working to improve practices and there is no evidence that employees are responsibl­e for the flow of drugs into county jails.

“We have developed a strategy to plug the gaps in our security that might allow drugs to enter our facilities,” her Nov. 29 letter to the review board said. “This comprehens­ive strategy has reduced drugs entering our facilities to almost zero.”

Two sheriff's deputies have been convicted of drug-related offenses in recent months.

One deputy was arrested last year for stealing drugs from a drop box inside a sheriff's station; another was charged with possessing cocaine on jail property. Both subsequent­ly pleaded guilty and were sentenced to two years of probation.

 ?? NELVIN C. CEPEDA — THE SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE ?? Those who lost family members while in custody at the San Diego County Jail hold photos of their love ones during a press conference at the federal courthouse in 2022.
NELVIN C. CEPEDA — THE SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE Those who lost family members while in custody at the San Diego County Jail hold photos of their love ones during a press conference at the federal courthouse in 2022.

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