A Step Forward for Police Oversight
Thursday, April 19, 2007 permalink

A bill to reopen California police records and restore civilian oversight cleared a key hurdle in the state Senate. The bill would reverse a state Supreme Court decision that put police disciplinary records off-limits for the public and threatens 30 years of police reform in California.
Hundreds of ACLU/SC members sent letters and made calls to state legislators urging support of the measure.
In L.A., the court's decision meant the public was denied access to a police hearing that cleared the officer who shot unarmed 13-year-old Devin Brown in 2005. "American justice is done in the open, but the conduct of LAPD officers is now judged in secrecy," the ACLU/SC said at the time.
The bill passed the Senate committee 3-2, and a similar bill is pending in the Assembly. The bills are backed by California newspapers and First Amendment and civil-rights groups.
Special Report: Video Surveillance of Public Spaces Grows in California (pdf)
Website: Jails Project Helps L.A. County Inmates and Families
News: Police Secrecy Under Fire
In Depth: Get Help Fixing California's Broken Classrooms
In Depth: Military Recruiting in Our Public Schools
News: U.S. Citizen Illegally Deported From Jail Found After 3 Months
ACLU/SC Protects The Rights Of Those Who Feed The Poor
ACLU/SC and Partners Win Settlement In Equal Rights Fight for a Husband to Adopt His Wife’s Surname
Open Forum: The quarterly of the ACLU of Southern California
To get more in-depth coverage of our recent work, visit the online version of our quarterly. In our archives, printable pdf versions are available as far back as 1998.
















