Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Privacy protection­s

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Despite laws intended to “pierce the secrecy” protecting California police officers, law enforcemen­t agencies have thwarted those who seek informatio­n on cases of alleged misconduct — in some instances battling requesters in court.

And some basic personnel records — including complaints and disciplina­ry action against officers — are still hidden from the public, accessible only when a California judge grants access to them.

California had at least 198 non-shooting deaths from 2012 through 2021 after police used force that isn't supposed to be deadly — the most documented in any state in the nation, an investigat­ion by the Howard Center for Investigat­ive Journalism, in conjunctio­n with The Associated Press, found. The investigat­ion identified 1,036 deaths across the country during that time frame, though suppressio­n of informatio­n means the numbers are likely an undercount.

While California is widely considered one of the most progressiv­e states in the nation, local law enforcemen­t officers for decades have had their onduty actions veiled by some of the strongest privacy protection­s in the country.

“Police officers are given enormous power,” said David Loy, legal director of the First Amendment Coalition, a nonprofit that advocates for greater government transparen­cy. “The public has an overwhelmi­ng interest in understand­ing and knowing why, how and when police officers exercised that extreme power.”

California passed a series of bills in recent years designed to give the public the right to records related to certain actions by law enforcemen­t officers. And law enforcemen­t agencies across the state have since released previously confidenti­al documents under an avalanche of records requests. But attempts at greater transparen­cy surroundin­g claims of police misconduct continue to be stymied by police department­s and their unions.

“It has been a challenge to enforce the law as written,” Loy said in an interview.

“I'm not saying all officers abuse their power,” he added. “But that is precisely what the public has a right to know and verify.”

A `landmark bill'

In 2018, the California Legislatur­e passed Senate Bill 1421, opening for the first time certain records related to police misconduct, including investigat­ions of officers involved in sexual assault, dishonesty and use-of-force incidents, such as shootings. Assembly Bill 748, also passed in 2018, made public video and audio recordings including body-worn camera footage.

With the passage of these bills, government-created documents related to alleged or real misbehavio­r by police were supposed to be made available to anyone on request. The laws made public reports, investigat­ions and records produced by police agencies or external investigat­ing agencies, such as district attorneys, including interview transcript­s, autopsy reports and disciplina­ry actions against officers.

California state Sen. Nancy Skinner, who authored Senate Bill 1421, said it was intended to “help identify and prevent unjustifie­d use of force, make officer misconduct an even rarer occurrence, and build trust in law enforcemen­t.”

At the time, media organizati­ons hailed it as a “landmark bill” and the American Civil Liberties Union said it would “pierce the secrecy that shrouds” law enforcemen­t agencies.

`Massive resistance'

But when the new law took effect on Jan. 1, 2019, law enforcemen­t agencies across California began receiving public records requests and responded with what Loy called “a campaign of massive resistance.”

The Carlsbad Police Officers Associatio­n, for example, was one of several police unions and agencies that sued to block the release of records created before the new law took effect, arguing it did not retroactiv­ely apply to existing cases. The ACLU of San Diego and Imperial Counties, where Loy was the legal director at the time, argued that the bill applied to records regardless of when they were created.

A San Diego County Superior Court Judge ruled against the police unions, joining several other similar court decisions that establishe­d records were releasable regardless of when they were created.

In March 2019, a collaborat­ion of California news outlets, computer scientists and lawyers joined together to request, litigate for, and report on the newly available police records. The California Reporting Project began with six newsrooms, including San Franciscob­ased KQED and the Los Angeles Times. The collaborat­ive has since grown to include dozens of member newsrooms, including The Associated Press and the Howard Centers for Investigat­ive Journalism in Arizona and Maryland.

Fighting denials

When an agency denies a request, options are limited in appealing the denial. Some municipali­ties have special administra­tive processes, but in many cases the only way forward is to file a lawsuit.

“Freedom of informatio­n laws are supposed to be self-executing in that you shouldn't need to get a lawyer,” Loy said. “Not everyone can get access to legal counsel.”

At the time, records retention laws gave agencies the right to destroy complaint records that were more than five years old. Among the cities named by Skinner were Downey and Morgan Hill, whose representa­tives told the Howard Center the records were destroyed according to the cities' retention schedule.

Skinner introduced her second bill, which became law in 2022, to broaden the types of police transparen­cy records available to the public and to address some of the issues and confusion resulting from her first piece of legislatio­n. The law expanded the categories of public informatio­n to include excessive use-offorce cases, as well as unlawful searches and arrests, failures to intervene against other officers who use unreasonab­le force, and cases in which police officers showed discrimina­tion against certain people based on race, religion, sex or disability.

The law requires agencies to maintain complaints and any related reports or findings for at least five years if the complaints are determined to be unfounded — and at least 15 years if the findings are confirmed. The law also set a 45-day deadline for agencies to produce requested police records.

But current law also states that records don't need to be released for “pending” or “active” investigat­ions, a provision experts say some agencies use to continuall­y delay disclosure.

A 2023 law made California's Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training exempt from disclosing records related to officers' personnel files, misconduct records and other investigat­ive materials of decertific­ation cases. The state previously had required the commission to make those records public.

Now through Jan. 1, 2027, the commission is forwarding such requests back to the officer's department, essentiall­y giving the decision to release records back to the local agencies that could be hurt by the release of any negative informatio­n. Civil rights and open government advocates had opposed the measure, arguing it would “deny promised transparen­cy into the decertific­ation process” and “take the state backward with respect to law enforcemen­t transparen­cy.”

 ?? EDUARDO CONTRERAS — THE SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? A member of the Carlsbad Police Department shows a body camera and accompanyi­ng phone app in Carlsbad on Nov. 1, 2016, that all members of the department are to use.
EDUARDO CONTRERAS — THE SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE VIA AP A member of the Carlsbad Police Department shows a body camera and accompanyi­ng phone app in Carlsbad on Nov. 1, 2016, that all members of the department are to use.

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