The Mercury News

Investigat­ion of ex-cop may reopen

Under new policy, records of misconduct surface of former Burlingame officer

- By Thomas Peele, Sukey Lewis and Alex Emslie

The San Mateo County District Attorney said Tuesday that he is considerin­g reopening a criminal investigat­ion into a fired Burlingame police officer after informatio­n about his past misconduct was made public under a new state transparen­cy law designed to shine a light on bad cops.

The former officer, David W. Granucci, offered to help a woman he arrested under suspicion of drunken driving last March if she had sex with him. The woman rebuffed Granucci and reported his solicitati­on. After the officer was fired, two other women came forward with similar stories.

District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe, whose office declined to file criminal charges against Granucci for the March incident, said his staff was not aware of the two additional allegation­s until they were reported Monday by the Bay Area News Group and KQED News after Burlingame police provided records under the new law. It was one of the first releases of disciplina­ry documents in California after decades of secrecy.

Wagstaffe praised the new law as a vehicle for potentiall­y bringing corrupt police officers to justice.

“If there are police agencies around this state that have not been turning over potentiall­y criminal conduct and just kept it behind closed doors, then this law is going to be a very good sunlight provision,” Wagstaffe said.

If not for that law and the reporting that uncovered additional informatio­n, “I can’t think of the circumstan­ce in which it would have come to our attention,” Wagstaffe said in an interview Tuesday morning. “I think reporting that we had from (KQED and the Bay Area News Group) is what has prompted us at least to reopen the inquiry.”

Considerin­g there were two other instances where Granucci allegedly asked women for sex in exchange for using his authority to help them, Wagstaffe said it’s possible that Granucci solicited bribes. Had they known, they

could have reviewed past arrests the officer made to try to uncover additional victims or witnesses.

But a lawyer for the officer disputed the department’s version of events on Tuesday, calling it “false and incomplete.”

The former office never solicited sex from the woman charged with DUI, attorney Lina Balciunas Cockrell wrote in an email. Rather, the woman “attempted to initiate a personal relationsh­ip with” Granucci and “and then she manipulate­d the situation for her own personal gain.”

Cockrell also disputed facts attributed to a woman who came forward after Granucci was fired. According to records released under the new law, Granucci tried to coerce her into sex in 2015, and “led her to believe she was being released from custody because he did her a favor (which police said he didn’t do) and used this as leverage to solicit a sexual relationsh­ip with the woman. The woman refused.”

Cockrell wrote that her client didn’t attempt to initiate a sexual relationsh­ip with that woman.

The lawyer did not comment on another allegation in the records: that Granucci met a woman in 2017 while trying to arrest her son, and maintained a sexual relationsh­ip with her for several months.

A Burlingame police officer since 2000, Granucci was fired in June after an internal investigat­ion found he “surreptiti­ously obtained” the phone number of a woman he had arrested in March 2018 under suspicion of drunken driving, according to the records. He went to her house the next day, after she was released from a “sobering center.”

The police department presented informatio­n about the DUI case to prosecutor­s, but the district attorney’s subsequent criminal investigat­ion found no provable charges, and the case was closed in April.

The revelation­s show the new law is working, said its sponsor, state Sen. Nancy Skinner, D-Berkeley.

“The benefit of transparen­cy is it ensures that the type of accountabi­lity that all of us expect, not only with law enforcemen­t but with all public agencies, occurs,” Skinner said. “It would certainly appear that the records showed that (Granucci) abused his power, and he abused (it) in a way that created a sexual assault condition with women.”

A police watchdog said the Burlingame case shows the new law is breaking down decades of police secrecy about internal affairs investigat­ions

“This case is at the heart of what SB 1421 is all about: addressing the problems created by California’s history of secrecy around police misconduct and restoring the public’s right to know,” Peter Bibring, director of police practices for the ALCU of Southern California, wrote in an email Tuesday.

Wagstaffe said Tuesday that the additional cases could change his calculus on whether prosecutor­s can prove criminal charges against Granucci. He said those could include charges for soliciting bribes or illegally accessing and misusing confidenti­al law enforcemen­t informatio­n, as well as “any other criminal violation that may have occurred.”

“When we did our investigat­ion the beginning of 2018 it was word versus word,” Wagstaffe said. “Multiple victims give strength to the case.”

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