Saturday, April 24, 2021

New Police Chief Moves to Increase Police Accountability

 New Chief Unilaterally Increases Police Accountability

Town Hall Public Debate on Militarization,

Citizen Complaints Democratized

Emeryville’s new Chief of Police, Jeffery Jennings, indicated this week he will usher in greater accountability and transparency at the police department by agreeing to a open town hall style public meeting addressing police use of force and re-writing the citizen complaint code against officers with a higher degree of probity and openness.  The town hall meeting will likely be held off until the fall owing to the COVID pandemic but the re-write of the complaint code will begin much sooner says the Chief.

The Chief’s democratic demeanor, representing a thawing of previous intractability at the EPD on these two issues, will bring a new local level of community engagement for the department against a backdrop of greater calls for police accountability nation-wide. 

As it stands now, a citizen who wishes to make a complaint against an Emeryville police officer is asked to surrender their name, their address and their date of birth, all expressly counter to citizen’s right to make complaints anonymously.  Chief Jennings agrees the way the code is written now is improper and he told the Tattler April 20th he “will make it right” so that it better comports with state law.  The questions about complainants’ identity will be clearly qualified that answers given are strictly on a voluntary basis.  The date of birth question will be dispensed with altogether according to Chief Jennings.

Chief Jeff Jennings

These questions, as currently asked of would be citizen complainants, besides being of dubious legality, have a stultifying effect on accountability owing to their coercive and intimidating nature.

The public town hall style meeting will be attended by police department employees including the Chief himself and will focus on the militarization of EPD including specifically the quiet issuance of AR-15 assault rifles some years ago to officers for use in their daily rounds in Emeryville.  The police will answer citizen's questions and the Chief will weigh in himself on the issuance of these weapons to the rank and file he says.  The Council chambers will likely be the location of the meeting and it will probably take place before a regularly scheduled City Council meeting.

Assault rifles are considered weapons of high firepower and great lethality by the state legislature and are illegal for most citizens to carry in the State of California.  Emeryville police started carrying these weapons about six years ago, around the time former Chief of Police Jennifer Tejada took office during a period when police forces began acquiring military grade weapons systems nation-wide.  Citizens requested accountability for the new level of force the police acquired in Emeryville but were rebuffed by Chief Tejada.  The department would not attend any such town hall meetings set up to debate the militarization of the department Chief Tejada said.  “The weapons of my officers are not going to be up to a public debate” Chief Tejada opined at a public safety meeting at the time and City Hall dropped the issue.

By reversing the department’s wall of silence around the assault rifles issued to police and the unilateral rewriting of the citizen complaint code, EPD signals it is open to a new period of glasnost.  It is hard to say if this democratization of Emeryville’s police comes as a result of the new Chief or from pressure from below, taken on as citizens demand greater police accountability nation-wide.  Perhaps it’s a bit of both.  But it is taken as a public good that the police department has more citizen support as they strongly pronounce their embrace of and need for ‘community policing’.  


Emeryville's Current Police Complaint Form
Complainant's name, address, date of birth not optional.  Many citizens, seeing these questions will drop the complaint. 
Accountability is effectively thwarted.  Is that the function of this?
    












4 comments:

  1. Jennifer Tejada became the Emeryville police chief in June 2015, not quite six years ago. If the police started carrying AR15s 10 years ago, as you say, then it was well before Tejada’s time.
    Also, you credit the new chief, Chief Jennings, of bringing big changes to the department when, in fact, he hasn’t done anything, yet. So far it’s just talk. I suggest you reserve your lauding of Chief Jennings for when he actually does what he says he’ll do. I am hopeful, but won’t believe it until I see it.

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    1. Oops! I should have read the Tattler to check the date Ms Tejada got hired before I reported about ten years. Six is the actual number. The story has been changed. Thanks for the correction. And six (or thereabouts) is the number of years since the AR-15s were issued. We don't know for sure because the police department have refused to give the precise date. As I reported, it was done 'quietly'. The police were given the weapons just before they shot Yuvette Henderson with one (body cameras not turned on).

      Regarding all the talk from Chief Jennings, it's true he could not do anything he says. But its newsworthy that the chief of Emeryville police says he wants to do these changes. If he fails, the Tattler will report that as well. Perhaps this public airing will act as a deterrence against inaction.
      Thanks for the comment.

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  2. Our new chief seems like he's interested in helping the whole community. Breath of fresh air.

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  3. I agree with the secret news- wait until he does these things before you report on it.

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