Marin Independent Journal

Transparen­cy, accountabi­lity best right now

Eight months after a Canal neighborho­od man was allegedly roughed up by San Rafael police officers — a bloody incident caught on video — the community is still waiting for answers and accountabi­lity.

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What it has heard, so far, are promises from City Hall, Police Chief David Spiller and Marin District Attorney Lori Frugoli, as well as reading reports about mounting city expenses for hired independen­t investigat­ors and, lately, the hiring of a consultant to help the city with its public presentati­on.

Details about the progress of the investigat­ion presented to the public have been slim. Trust, however, hangs in the balance.

The months between the

July 27 arrest of 37-year-old Julio Jimenez Lopez, who was not charged by the DA, threaten to unravel years spent by police in trying to build community trust between the department and Canal residents. They continue to wonder why the process is taking so long.

The city's hired independen­t investigat­or is expected to deliver his report to Chief Spiller this month.

We hope so.

What the community is being told is that the city may never release the details of the investigat­ion as it is also bound by state personnel laws to protect the privacy of the police officers whose conduct is being reviewed.

Spending a lot on PR is not going to help if the public has a general lack of trust in the city.

The city, from the City Council to the police department, has to be as forthcomin­g and transparen­t as legally possible.

Its officers have state-required personnel rights, but the community is troubled, feeling that City Hall is being too careful by not saying much of anything.

Jimenez Lopez already has a lawyer and filed a claim against the city. Infringing on the officers' personnel rights could create a target for another lawsuit.

But the city should worry less about getting sued than doing the right thing — for justice, community trust and the police department.

Healing must be about the relationsh­ip with the community, not about fear of the labor rules.

To the city's credit, it continues to hold community meetings in the Canal. These are good and right steps toward building respect and understand­ing of the process.

Part of the city's PR consultant­s' job will be community outreach. Let's hope that it is free of PR spin.

The city has repeatedly promised that its process will be fair and as transparen­t as possible. Its strength in delivering on that promise is going to have to stand up to the video of Jimenez Lopez allegedly being roughed up after arguing with officers over showing his ID. He suffered a broken nose and what his lawyer has called “traumatic brain injury” in the incident.

Any thoughts that public concern would wither as time wears on does not appear to be coming to fruition.

After eight months, the public deserves to see progress.

Both Frugoli, who called the DA's Office investigat­ion of the incident “a top priority,” and City Hall, with its costly review, need to show they are getting close to conclusion­s. If not, why not?

Transparen­cy and accountabi­lity are the best ways to build trust.

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