East Bay Times

New watchdog has regional experience

Richmond's Eddie Aubrey is `honored' to be selected to lead city's civilian oversight office

- By Robert Salonga rsalonga@bayareanew­sgroup.com

In its selection for a new civilian police watchdog, San Jose ultimately landed about 50 miles north.

Eddie Aubrey, currently head of the Office of Profession­al Accountabi­lity in the Richmond Police Department, was unanimousl­y approved by the San Jose City Council on Tuesday to lead San Jose's Office of the Independen­t

Police Auditor.

Aubrey, who was the inaugural OPA manager in Richmond when that office was establishe­d in 2016, becomes the seventh person to serve as permanent IPA in San Jose. He succeeds Shivaun Nurre, who ended a lengthy career in the office last year following a controvers­ial encounter at the San Jose Greek Festival in which she drunkenly accosted police officers working at the event.

In the interim, retired Santa

Clara County Assistant District Attorney Karyn Sinunu-Towery has headed the IPA's office while the city searched for a full-time replacemen­t.

Aubrey, whose heritage is African American and Korean, will take over the position on May 6.

“I am honored and privileged to to have been appointed,” Aubrey said at an introducto­ry press conference Tuesday at City Hall.

He added that he follows “a north star” to “make a difference and add value to public safety and community service.”

“I saw that opportunit­y here and I said I wanted to continue that work,” Aubrey said. “I wanted to do that here for the community of San Jose.”

Aubrey brings an array of law enforcemen­t and oversight experience­s to the role. He served as a police officer in Santa Monica and Los Angeles from 1980 to 1997, the year he earned a law degree from Seattle University. In the Seattle area, Aubrey worked as a criminal and city prosecutor, led a community college public safety department, served as a pro tem judge, and ran a private law practice in the two decades before he relocated to the Bay Area to take the Richmond oversight job.

Within that time span, in 2009, he establishe­d a civilian police auditor office in Fresno modeled after the one employed in San Jose.

“Eddie will help maintain trust between our residents and the people tasked with protecting them,” Mayor Matt Mahan said at the news conference. “We're incredibly fortunate to have a new independen­t police auditor with extensive experience both working within and overseeing the conduct of law enforcemen­t agencies.”

Steve Slack, president of the San Jose Police Officers' Associ

ation, said in a statement that “we pledge our cooperatio­n to Mr. Aubrey as he transition­s into his new role.”

When asked about how his extensive law enforcemen­t background could affect his connection with communitie­s that are historical­ly distrustfu­l of authoritie­s — one of the foundation­al reasons the IPA's office was created — he pointed to a track record in Fresno and Richmond of both disciplini­ng and clearing officers accused of misconduct.

“My demonstrat­ed history shows that I have held officers accountabl­e, officers have been terminated, they've been suspended, and officers have been found not sustained, exonerated or unfounded” when evaluating allegation­s, he said.

San Jose's IPA office was establishe­d in 1993 as a compromise between city leaders, who wanted a police commission, and the police union, which resisted creating additional civilian oversight. The office has gradually expanded its footprint in the past few years. Voters in 2020 approved authorizin­g the IPA's office to audit internal police complaints — known as department­initiated investigat­ions — and review police use-offorce records.

That measure also gave the city latitude to take on a larger role in police oversight, and the city explored the idea of moving SJPD internal investigat­ions out of the police department and into the IPA's office.

But that movement ultimately died out with the council deciding last fall to preserve the current system — in which the office makes policy recommenda­tions but has no power to compel the police department to adopt them — and pledging to increase the agency's staff and resources.

That is a notable contrast from Aubrey's role in Richmond, where he was a civilian with direct oversight for the department's internal affairs unit. But he said Tuesday that he believes that the existing IPA arrangemen­t in San Jose can be leveraged to produce change.

“You just don't make the recommenda­tions, you have a discussion and a dialogue … that's the kind of collaborat­ion that I'm hoping to have,” Aubrey said. “Right now what I'm looking at is what do we have, what can we use, and how effectivel­y can we use that model in the things that we're doing. And we're always open to entertaini­ng other options.”

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