Another California City Allowed Police To Destroy Misconduct Records Ahead Of New Transparency Law

Another California City Allowed Police To Destroy Misconduct Records Ahead Of New Transparency Law

5 years ago
Anonymous $Dftgs0JzgE

https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20190326/17350141878/another-california-city-allowed-police-to-destroy-misconduct-records-ahead-new-transparency-law.shtml

California law enforcement agencies knew the reckoning was coming. A new law took effect at the beginning of this year, opening up records of police misconduct and use of force to the public for the first time. Some decided to engage in preemptive legal challenges. Some quietly complied. Some decided to ignore the law's author and pretend it didn't apply to any record created before 2019.

A couple of law enforcement agencies got really proactive and just started destroying records before the public could get its hands on them. The Inglewood PD got the green light from the city government to destroy hundreds of records subject to the new transparency law. The city and the PD claimed this was just regular, periodic housecleaning. But the timing seemed ultra-suspicious, given that it happened only days before the law took effect. Not that it matters. The records are gone and all the bad press in the world isn't going to bring them back.

Another California City Allowed Police To Destroy Misconduct Records Ahead Of New Transparency Law

Apr 1, 2019, 9:19pm UTC
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20190326/17350141878/another-california-city-allowed-police-to-destroy-misconduct-records-ahead-new-transparency-law.shtml > California law enforcement agencies knew the reckoning was coming. A new law took effect at the beginning of this year, opening up records of police misconduct and use of force to the public for the first time. Some decided to engage in preemptive legal challenges. Some quietly complied. Some decided to ignore the law's author and pretend it didn't apply to any record created before 2019. > A couple of law enforcement agencies got really proactive and just started destroying records before the public could get its hands on them. The Inglewood PD got the green light from the city government to destroy hundreds of records subject to the new transparency law. The city and the PD claimed this was just regular, periodic housecleaning. But the timing seemed ultra-suspicious, given that it happened only days before the law took effect. Not that it matters. The records are gone and all the bad press in the world isn't going to bring them back.