Los Angeles Times

Gang database is plagued with errors, auditor finds

CalGang includes unverified entries and informatio­n that may violate privacy rights, a state report says.

- By Richard Winton richard.winton @latimes.com Twitter: @lacrimes

A California gang database maintained by law enforcemen­t agencies is rife with unsubstant­iated entries, names that should have been purged long ago and glaring errors, a state audit released Thursday found.

As a result of poor oversight, the CalGang database, which includes the names of more than 150,000 suspected gang members and affiliates, contains questionab­le informatio­n that may violate the privacy rights of many individual­s, according to the audit.

In one of the most telling examples, auditors found the names of 42 people whose birth dates indicated they were one year of age or younger at the time they were entered into the database. Of those, 28 were entered for “admitting to being gang members,” according to State Auditor Elaine M. Howle.

Although state-funded, the CalGang database is overseen by an executive board and advisory committee made up of local law enforcemen­t officials with no statutory authority. Howle noted that model means there is almost no public transparen­cy or scrutiny of its work.

“Our review uncovered numerous examples demonstrat­ing weaknesses in the user agencies’ approaches for entering informatio­n into CalGang,” auditors wrote.

For decades the database has been a way for police officers to check on suspected gang ties and affiliatio­ns.

A sample of data from four user agencies — Los Angeles and Santa Ana police and Santa Clara County and Sonoma County sheriffs — found they “could not substantia­te numerous CalGang entries they had made, demonstrat­ing weaknesses in the processes for entering, evaluating and auditing the data in CalGang,” the audit said.

A review of 100 individual­s placed in the database by the four agencies found 13 were “inappropri­ately included.”

Auditors found more than 600 individual­s who were still listed even though their files should have been purged because they hadn’t been updated within five years. Many of those records were not scheduled to be purged for more than 100 years. In 2015, nearly 15,000 gang members or affiliates were added to the system while a little over 33,000 were removed. The database is overwhelmi­ngly male — 93.1% — and disproport­ionately minority — 64.9% Latino and 20.5% black.

Los Angeles and Santa Ana, the auditors noted, failed to fully implement a 2014 state law that requires juveniles and their parents to be notified before their names are added to the gang database so they could contest the decision. Of 129 juvenile records examined from the two agencies, 70% had been added without proper notificati­on.

The LAPD did not explain why some minors were being added to the database and in some cases did not notify the juveniles at all or only after they were added, the audit found.

Howle recommende­d that CalGang be overhauled with a new oversight structure, administer­ed by the state Department of Justice.

Other recommenda­tions include conducting public hearings and adopting new entry, review and informatio­n-sharing requiremen­ts. The audit called for police agencies across the state to do a comprehens­ive review of their entries.

Representa­tives of civil rights organizati­ons said the audit confirmed what many have long suspected.

”CalGang is an ineffectiv­e tool full of inaccuraci­es that result in violations of people’s rights,” said Peter Bibring, director of police practices at the ACLU of California.

Many of the police agencies cited in the audit agreed with its recommenda­tions.

In a response to the draft report, LAPD Deputy Chief Matt Blake said the department is revising its standards and expects to complete reviews of all its 40,000 entries.

Blake, however, questioned the report’s suggestion that the database entries had violated privacy rights, saying the accusation might harm public trust in law enforcemen­t. He also praised his gang detail officers for their ability to identify gang members.

Similarly, Santa Ana Police Chief Carlos Rojas in a letter questioned how the report could praise his department’s work in notifying juvenile’s families but still be dinged for its overall performanc­e on that issue.

The Sonoma County Sheriff’s Department disputed the audit findings, saying the department met state guidelines for entries.

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