San Diego Union-Tribune

EX-POLICE CHIEF TO GET $1.5M PAYOUT

-

The Oakland City Council approved on Tuesday a $1.5 million payout for a former police chief who won her whistleblo­wer claim against the city after she alleged she was fired for calling out unethical behavior by the civilian commission that oversees the Police Department.

The payout to Anne Kirkpatric­k includes roughly $337,000 a federal jury awarded her, which is equivalent to a year's salary and the severance she was entitled to as part of her employment contract. The remainder consists of legal costs, said Oakland City Attorney Barbara J. Parker in a memo prepared for the council.

Kirkpatric­k had sought more than $3 million in damages in her lawsuit.

She said that members of the civilian oversight commission wanted special treatment, abused police staff and meddled in daily operations.

“I hope that the agreement in my favor is a signal to all who are witnesses to misconduct, especially those in law enforcemen­t: do not stay silent,” Kirkpatric­k said in a statement.

Kirkpatric­k was hired in 2017, the first woman to lead the police department for the city of 400,000. At the time, the department was reeling from a sex exploitati­on scandal involving a young woman.

But her relationsh­ip with the civilian oversight commission soured and in 2020, the commission and Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf voted to terminate her employment without cause.

At the time, they said Kirkpatric­k was keeping informatio­n from the oversight commission and failing to meet federally mandated court reforms.

The city does not admit to any wrongdoing and denies her allegation­s, according to the memo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States