The Mercury News

City officials agree to police reforms following investigat­ion

- By Douglas S. Wood

The Bakersfiel­d Police Department will revise its policies after a four-year state investigat­ion determined that the department violated the constituti­onal rights of residents, including an unreasonab­le use of force.

The changes include a ban of the use of electronic control weapons such as tasers on handcuffed individual­s, and requiring officers to avoid restrainin­g a subject face down whenever possible, according to a stipulated judgment reached between the city and the California Department of Justice.

“These are broad, significan­t, far-ranging comprehens­ive changes,” said California Attorney General Rob Bonta. “Making a commitment to that depth and breadth of change is not easy.”

An independen­t monitor will oversee the implementa­tion of the judgment, which includes Bakersfiel­d police’s adoption of bodyworn cameras, volunteeri­ng to collect data early under the state’s Racial and Identity Profiling Act, and creating a community collaborat­ion initiative.

The state investigat­ion found that the department engaged in unreasonab­le stops, searches, arrests, and seizures, and failed to supervise its officers, according to a civil complaint filed by the state.

In exchange for enacting the reforms, the city avoids liability for the constituti­onal violations alleged in the state’s complaint.

“After much deliberati­on, and upon my recommenda­tion, the city decided to adopt this agreement; the decision came down to a choice between litigating the past or controllin­g our future, reassuring our community, and moving forward in a positive way,” said Bakersfiel­d Police Chief Greg Terry at a press conference with Bonta on Monday.

The state’s Justice Department began a civil investigat­ion in December 2016 following allegation­s made by individual­s and community organizati­ons of excessive force and other serious misconduct by the police department.

Kern County, which has a population of about 900,000 and is home to Bakersfiel­d, is known for its unusually high rate of police violence. In 2015, an investigat­ion by The Guardian found it had the highest number of police killings per capita of any U.S. county. It also reported police had killed 79 people in the county from 2005 to 2015.

The state Justice Department conducted a similar investigat­ion into the Kern County Sheriff’s Office, which also ended with a stipulated judgment in December.

The investigat­ion determined that the Bakersfiel­d Police Department “failed to uniformly and adequately enforce the law, leading to a pattern or practice of conduct that deprives residents of constituti­onal protection­s.”

“Specifical­ly, DOJ alleges in its complaint that BPD’s conduct resulted in the use of unreasonab­le force, as well as unreasonab­le stops, searches, arrests, and seizures,” the department said.

The investigat­ion also faulted the department for the following:

• Failing to provide appropriat­e management and supervisio­n;

• Using unreasonab­le deadly force against individual­s with a mental health disability and those undergoing a mental health crisis;

• Failing to provide meaningful access to police services to individual­s with limited English proficienc­y;

• Failure to provide equal employment opportunit­ies;

• Failing to adequately maintain a program to address civilian complaints;

• Lacking a comprehens­ive community policing program.

The agreement will require the department to revise how it uses police dogs. K-9 officers should use “bark and hold” techniques to locate subjects rather than immediatel­y resorting to force.

The Bakersfiel­d Police Department will expand its reporting on when officers use force, requiring officers to report anything beyond a standard handcuffin­g. All reported uses of force will be investigat­ed by a supervisor and supervisor­s will be held accountabl­e for not detecting, adequately investigat­ing, or responding to unreasonab­le use of force.

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