The Morning Call

Shapiro won’t intervene on cop data disclosure

- By Danielle Ohl Sam Stecklow of the Invisible Institute contribute­d reporting. Spotlight PA is an independen­t, nonpartisa­n and nonprofit newsroom producing investigat­ive and public-service journalism that holds the powerful to account and drives positive

HARRISBURG — Pennsylvan­ia will not release a state-maintained database of certified police officers, even after a national coalition of newsrooms asked Gov. Josh Shapiro to intervene.

The newsrooms, including Spotlight PA, sent a letter July 14 asking for the Democratic governor to assist with accessing public informatio­n about police officers that Pennsylvan­ia State Police maintain.

“This type of informatio­n is the bedrock of what Americans expect to access from their public bodies,” the letter to Shapiro reads.

“We are collecting and analyzing the data in an effort to hold the systems that govern policing in each state accountabl­e to the citizens they serve, by allowing journalist­s and researcher­s to analyze the employment history of officers that, when compared with other data and sources, may enable reporting on issues of police misconduct and oversight.”

Shapiro’s office, in a response this week, declined to step in.

“For law enforcemen­t officers under his jurisdicti­on, Gov. Shapiro continues to make this data available to the public in a responsibl­e way that does not compromise trooper safety — which is our utmost priority,” said Will Simons, Shapiro’s communicat­ions director.

“However, the Pennsylvan­ia State Police is not responsibl­e for the administra­tion of the other 1,300 law enforcemen­t agencies in Pennsylvan­ia and has no way of knowing which officers from those agencies are putting their lives on the line in dangerous undercover or covert operations,” Simons said.

The letter comes after state police denied the newsrooms’ request under the Right-to-Know Law to release the data earlier this year.

The database is maintained by the Municipal Police Officers’ Education and Training Commission, an internal state police body that certifies local police officers.

The informatio­n contained in the data, such as name, rank and employment history, is public.

But in 2014, Commonweal­th Court ruled state police did not have to release it because the agency did not know which officers were doing undercover work and could not redact their names.

Simons said that members of the public, as well as the media, can access informatio­n about officers from individual department­s.

But the newsrooms argue that without access to the database, it would be difficult, if not impossible, to create a record of all certified officers statewide, as there are more than a thousand police department­s in Pennsylvan­ia, if not more.

“Such a result is at odds with the [Right-to-Know Law],” the letter reads. “The law’s presumptio­n in favor of transparen­cy is explicit.”

The coalition of newsrooms, which includes Spotlight PA as well as the Philadelph­ia Inquirer and WHYY, sought the database as part of an ongoing national project to identify “wandering officers” who have been fired for misconduct from one department and hired again elsewhere.

The outlets were convened in 2019 by Big Local News, a program of Stanford University’s Journalism and Democracy Initiative that helps journalist­s collect, process and analyze public data.

Since 2019, 34 other states have provided newsrooms access to police rosters without compromisi­ng public safety. These include Connecticu­t and Montana, where officials alerted local police department­s to the request and allowed the agencies to identify undercover officers for removal.

Pennsylvan­ia is one of 15 states that denied the newsrooms’ requests, instead exempting police officers from a law that otherwise lets the public to know the names and job titles of the government workers who collect taxpayer-funded salaries.

Withholdin­g the names and employment histories of police officers makes accountabi­lity difficult in a state where it is nearly impossible to know how many police department­s exist and where loopholes hinder oversight mechanisms.

Pennsylvan­ia’s largest cities, Philadelph­ia and Pittsburgh, as well as the state government itself, already voluntaril­y publish employee rosters that include police officers.

This kind of disclosure is important, said Chris Burbank, a former Salt Lake City police chief who now consults for the Center for Policing Equity, because residents “should have the right to investigat­e [if ] bad cops are going from agency to agency.”

Pennsylvan­ia has a history of such officers finding new jobs in law enforcemen­t after leaving a prior department due to misconduct.

In 2022, Tioga, a tiny Pennsylvan­ia town, hired Timothy Loehmann, the officer who shot and killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice as he played in a Cleveland park. Controvers­y following the hire unraveled the town and ground government to a halt.

“That’s where there should be more public disclosure on those things, as opposed to hiding it away,” Burbank said.

WHILE YOU’RE HERE… If you learned something from this story, pay it forward and become a member of Spotlight PA so someone else can in the future at spotlightp­a.org/donate. Spotlight PA is funded by foundation­s and readers like you who are committed to accountabi­lity journalism that gets results.

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