San Francisco Chronicle

Richmond cops union boss in run for sheriff

- By Rachel Swan

A police union boss in Richmond has made his bid to unseat the longtime sheriff of Contra Costa County, days after a highprofil­e shooting by a sheriff ’s employee in Danville.

Benjamin Therriault, 38, is no outsider — California law requires that sheriff candidates have law enforcemen­t certificat­ion. He has done police work for years, having served in the U.S. Air

Force Security Forces before joining the Richmond Police Department in 2009.

But he is running on a reform platform for the June 2022 election, emphasizin­g transparen­cy and more robust communicat­ion with residents. He described the sheriff ’s office as “a position that people need to see, identify with and understand, and have someone be present all the time and engaged with the community. And I just don’t see that currently.”

For Therriault, this message of “engagement” is more a credo than a slogan. In 2011 he moved into the Richmond Village Apartments, a lowincome housing complex on South 26th Street

and Cutting Boulevard, which at the time was plagued by violent crime, Therriault said.

He lived there rentfree as part of a “PoliceinPr­operties” program run by the Richmond Housing Authority, but has since moved to Martinez — gang members had started surveillin­g his home, he said, and he worried for the safety of his 6yearold daughter.

Such housing choices brought Therriault publicity before he entered politics, with a slew of newspaper articles in 2014. Two years later he was elected president of the Police Officers Associatio­n. He’s since cultivated a profile that sharply contrasts with the incumbent, Contra Costa Sheriff David Livingston, who won his first term in 2010 and then ran unopposed in 2014 and 2018.

Livingston lives in the small TriValley town of Danville, and is reticent with the news media. He drew criticism for contractin­g with U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t to hold immigrant detainees in the West County Detention Facility in Richmond — a contract that Livingston canceled in 2018. Later that year, the sheriff defended Andrew Hall, the Danville police officer who shot and killed Laudemer Arboleda, an unarmed man experienci­ng a mental health crisis.

Hall shot and critically injured 32yearold Tyrell Wilson on March 11, drawing renewed scrutiny toward the Contra Costa County Sheriff ’s Office, which contracts with Danville to provide police services. Therriault declined to comment on either of the two shootings. The incident involving Wilson is under investigat­ion.

While it’s unusual for anyone to challenge an incumbent for Contra Costa’s top law enforcemen­t seat, skeptics warn that Therriault is still part of the establishm­ent. State Sen. Scott Wiener, a San Francisco Democrat, is pressing a bill to allow any registered voter to run for sheriff, which could open the door for a civilian to enter the Contra Costa race in 2022.

On the other side, Therriault faces a powerful sheriff with longstandi­ng institutio­nal ties.

Livingston “has strong and widespread support,” said Supervisor Karen Mitchoff, whose district spreads through the center of the county and includes Clayton, Concord, Pleasant Hill, parts of Walnut Creek and unincorpor­ated areas. Mitchoff began her civil service career in 1981, working as an executive secretary for former sheriff Richard Rainey.

Elections for Contra Costa County sheriff are seldom competitiv­e, Mitchoff said, adding that she could not remember a past instance of a challenger beating an incumbent. She has endorsed Livingston three times.

Livingston, meanwhile, told The Chronicle that he is not thinking about the race at this point.

“The election is over a year away,” he said through a spokespers­on. “There will be plenty of time for politics later. I choose to spend my time and energy laser focused on one issue: keeping Contra Costa families safe.”

Traditiona­lly, Contra Costa sheriffs have always been white men, which makes Therriault stand out. He is Native American and was raised on the Flathead Indian Reservatio­n in western Montana.

That doesn’t mean he’s an advocate for people of color who experience police violence, said Antioch City Council member Tamisha TorresWalk­er, who grew up in Richmond and runs a nonprofit for formerly incarcerat­ed people.

“In the past he has not shown up for the community or police accountabi­lity,” TorresWalk­er said.

She noticed a softening of Therriault’s tone earlier this year, when he joined Richmond’s Reimaginin­g Public Safety Community Task Force to discuss possible reforms after the death of George Floyd.

Sitting in the task force meetings, Therriault appears more “forthcomin­g with informatio­n and willing to have conversati­ons about how we can make the job of law enforcemen­t better,” TorresWalk­er said.

She added, “It’s a fairly new position for him.”

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Benjamin Therriault

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