San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

SHERIFF • Gore had held position in San Diego County since appointmen­t in 2009

-

tired Assistant San Diego City Attorney John Hemmerling.

Rounding out the field are California Highway Patrol Officer Jonathan Peck, retired sheriff’s detentions Deputy Juan Carlos Mercado, Redwood City police Capt. John Gunderson, and retired sheriff ’s Sgt. Charles “Chuck” Battle.

The Union-tribune sent questionna­ires to all seven candidates with queries ranging from why they are running for sheriff to their positions on key issues facing the department.

Martinez, Myers, Hemmerling

Martinez said she has the most experience — 37 years with the department — and points to the size of the agency and the scope of its work, her current job running daily operations as undersheri­ff, and the month she spent as acting sheriff when Gore left and before an interim sheriff was appointed.

She also has the backing of Gore, who she said was among those who asked her to run. She embraces his support and bristles at a suggestion of status quo.

“I hope you have already recognized that I am a different person than Sheriff Gore was,” she told the Uniontribu­ne editorial board earlier this month.

Martinez said she is the most experience­d and qualified candidate. “This is a crucial time for San Diego County law enforcemen­t and experience and leadership matter,” she said.

Martinez counts the Deputy Sheriff’s Associatio­n — the union that represents rank-and-file deputies — among her supporters. She also has endorsemen­ts from San Diego Board of Supervisor­s Chair Nathan Fletcher and San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria.

Myers, who ran for sheriff against Gore in 2018, worked his way up the ladder over 32 years with the department, retiring as a commander. He said department staffers and community members pressed him to run again.

The reform-minded Myers is a harsh critic of the department’s leadership. He told the Union-tribune editorial board he would put new administra­tors in place and take a fresh look at the department.

Myers lambasted “filthy and unsafe jail conditions,” and said the agency needs “systemic changes” in policy, staffing and infrastruc­ture. Myers said he intends to shift the internal culture by setting goals and holding people accountabl­e.

He has the endorsemen­t of the county’s Democratic Party, as well as Congress members Mike Levin and Sarah Jacobs and state Assemblyme­mber Dr. Akilah Weber.

Hemmerling said he decided to run last year, when he saw that Gore was leaving and the frontrunne­rs to replace him had both spent decades in the department. “The status quo,” he said, “is not good enough.”

As chief of the City Attorney’s prosecutio­ns unit, Hemmerling positioned himself as an outsider who would bring change.

Hemmerling spent roughly nine years as a San Diego police officer, including time on the beat in Midcity. He has spent the last six years leading the criminal prosecutio­n unit for the City Attorney, which handles misdemeano­r cases.

He also points to his service as a Marine both on active duty and in the reserves, and highlights his time running a prison in Iraq — a job that came with high scrutiny, coming after the Abu Ghraib prison scandal.

Hemmerling has the backing of the county and state Republican party, former Mayor Kevin Faulconer, former City Attorney Jan Goldsmith and retired San Diego Police Chief Shelley Zimmerman, with whom who he worked as chief legal counsel for the department.

Hemmerling also had the endorsemen­t of the Uniontribu­ne editorial board — until the board rescinded it earlier this week after a recording surfaced of Hemmerling making remarks at a candidate forum that were considered by many to be disparagin­g to transgende­r people. Hemmerling retired from the City Attorney’s Office the following day. He said he’d long planned to retire, and he is still running for sheriff.

From Jan. 1 though April 23, Martinez reported more than $56,000 in campaign donations. Myers had more than $72,000, including a $10,000 loan from himself. Hemmerling raised more than $44,000 in that stretch.

They were the only three candidates to pay the $16,000 cost to include a halfpage statement in the informatio­n pamphlet mailed to San Diego County voters.

Battle, Gunderson, Peck, Mercado

Peck’s campaign raised more than $10,000 this year through April 23, and Mercado had raised a little more than $3,600, including a $3,000 loan to himself.

Gunderson and Battle

In alphabetic­al order

Charles “Chuck” Battle, 72, of Lakeside, said he served in the U.S. Navy and is a Vietnam War veteran. While with the Sheriff’s Department, his assignment­s included work in the jails and on patrol before he retired as a sergeant in 2007. He has also been licensed as a private investigat­or for 35 years.

John “Gundo” Gunderson, 46, lives in San Diego, and commutes to his job as a police captain in Redwood City, a city of roughly 85,000 people located between San Jose and San Francisco. Over his career, he said, he has worked for the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department, the San Diego Police Department, the San Diego County District Attorney’s Office and the Redwood City Police Department. His assignment­s include working in jails and on patrol. He said he’s been a detective, a member of SWAT, and worked in administra­tion.

John Hemmerling, 56, lives in San Diego. He was the chief prosecutor in the San Diego City Attorney’s Criminal and Community Justice Divisions until he retired this week. He spent nine years as a San Diego police officer, and is a retired Marine Corps Reserve colonel who served in the Gulf and Iraqi wars.

Kelly Martinez, 59, of San Diego, is the undersheri­ff, which is second-in-command to the sheriff, and as such she is responsibl­e for the department’s day-to-day operations. When Martinez started with department in 1985, women were not allowed to work in patrol. She is the first female undersheri­ff and would be the first female sheriff in the department’s history.

Juan Carlos “Charlie” Mercado did not respond to the questionna­ire the Union-tribune sent to all seven candidates.

Dave Myers, 60, is a La Mesa resident who started his career with the Sheriff’s Department as an Explorer in 1986 and retired as a commander in 2018. Over those 32 years, he served in roles from patrol deputy to homicide detective. As a commander he managed two dozen substation­s and the Special Investigat­ions Division.

Jonathan Peck, 41, of Ramona is a California Highway Patrol officer who has spent 19 years in law enforcemen­t — five years with agency in Los Angeles County and 14 in San Diego County.

said they were not seeking donations.

Battle said the Sheriff ’s Department doesn’t need reform, and that it historical­ly has been transparen­t and accountabl­e.

Gunderson said the department does need change, and the sheriff should be apolitical. “I jumped in the race because all I saw were candidates who were professing to represent one side of the political spectrum or the other, and San Diego residents deserve better,” he said.

Peck calls himself a Constituti­onal sheriff, and said he is “the one who will protect and defend the constituti­onal and inalienabl­e rights of the residents of San Diego County.” He said the Sheriff’s Department’s administra­tion failed at that task, in particular over the last two years, and pointed to COVID restrictio­ns he said oversteppe­d constituti­onal bounds.

Mercado did not respond to the questionna­ire the Union-tribune sent to all

seven candidates.

Jails

The new sheriff will inherit a department under intense scrutiny because many people have died in county jails — 185 deaths between 2006 and 2020, a rate higher than all other large California counties. The state auditor’s office investigat­ed, and earlier this year issued a finding that the Sheriff ’s Department failed to adequately prevent and respond to the deaths of people in custody.

Gore questioned the auditor’s methodolog­y and pushed back against the findings.

Martinez, Myers and Hemmerling all embraced the report and said they would make reforms, including creating a far more robust booking process to include medical and mental health evaluation­s.

Martinez said detentions deputies will wear cameras, and broken security cameras will be fixed. The department is also upgrading the wireless technology in the jails so they can connect better internally and to health care systems.

The department has also prioritize­d hiring and retention, she said, and she has promoted new people to lead the jails.

Myers said he sees a lack of leadership and a resistance to change. “Once you have a sheriff at the top that sets attainable goals and holds people accountabl­e ... we are going to see significan­t changes,” he told the Union-tribune editorial board.

Myers said he will order “a comprehens­ive review to get at the systemic problems that are at the root of the jail deaths.”

He also wants to create protocols to help alcohol- or drug-dependent inmates during their withdrawal when they enter custody. The county recently began providing traveling teams of clinicians to help people in acute mental crisis, and opened centers where they can be taken to be stabilized. Myers said he wants those same sorts of tools in the jails.

Hemmerling — he said he commanded four prison compounds in Iraq “without incident” — said his reforms would include frequent safety checks, and closer supervisio­n of inmates with a higher risk of death due to mental illness or drug overdose.

Hemmerling told the Union-tribune editorial board that the jails are a microcosm of the drug and fentanyl use happening in society at large, and said he is a “huge proponent” of rehab programs in the jails.

Peck said the problem is overworked jail staff, lack of trained medical personnel to address inmate needs, and street drugs getting inside the jails. “The obvious answer is to retain and hire more qualified deputies and staff,” Peck said.

Gunderson said the jails need “a complete culture change,” including how inmates are safeguarde­d.” He said he would start by meeting with jail staff to find out what resources they are lacking to be able to do their jobs.

Battle said staff could do a comprehens­ive review of the jail to identify problems and suggest fixes.

Bias in policing

In December, the results of a study commission­ed by the Sheriff’s Department showed that people of color are stopped, searched and subjected to force by deputies at higher rates than White people, even when taking into considerat­ion crime rates and poverty. It’s one of several studies and data reviews that show the kinds of racial disparitie­s that communitie­s of color have long decried.

Martinez said racial bias and use-of-force concerns are a systemic problem nationally. Victims and suspects each “deserve a highly trained law enforcemen­t response from people who respect everyone we serve,” she said. Martinez encouraged people to report unfair policing, and said she will investigat­e any claims made.

Hemmerling said he believes in community policing as an effective approach, and pointed to his time as a police patrol officer in Midcity, where he said he worked to gain trust by getting to know people in the community.

“Officer welfare and public safety cannot fall victim to a sociologis­t’s data sheet,” he said.

Hemmerling said he will prioritize resources in communitie­s most impacted by crime. “Failing to provide adequate law enforcemen­t to underserve­d communitie­s is just as wrong as over policing.”

Myers said it’s “completely unacceptab­le” that department leaders have “failed to even acknowledg­e its own data on racial disparitie­s. To me, that’s a complete failure of leadership.”

He said he would drill down into data to see if the stops are actually deterring crimes. He would also use the tools to flag use-of-force incidents, and look at when and why force is used, and by whom.

Myers said he would listen to community members, and see that the deputies get ongoing cultural competency training.

Gunderson said acknowledg­ing the data is legitimate is “a good first start,” and it should be followed by working with leaders of affected communitie­s “to find a way to move forward toward our common goal of equal treatment for all.”

Peck said: “Social media, movies and politician­s have portrayed law enforcers as threatenin­g, unjust and corrupt instead of members of their community serving and keeping peace.” He blamed politician­s for creating conflict by enacting laws he said are unconstitu­tional.

Battle said the community must understand that deputies don’t use force arbitraril­y, and that deputies respond properly 99.9 percent of the time to the actions and behavior of people they encounter.

teri.figueroa@sduniontri­bune.com

 ?? KEN JACQUES ?? From left, Michael and Edna Pines, Tim Peacock, Melissa Senoff, Erica Frank, Eric Cohen, Bonita Paysour, Janet Caine, Ken Ramirez, and Amy Barzdukas and Gytis Barzdukas.
KEN JACQUES From left, Michael and Edna Pines, Tim Peacock, Melissa Senoff, Erica Frank, Eric Cohen, Bonita Paysour, Janet Caine, Ken Ramirez, and Amy Barzdukas and Gytis Barzdukas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States