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Residents demand more transparency, accountability in next police chief

Palo Alto kicks off search for Robert Jonsen's replacement with Thursday public hearing

Palo Alto held its first of three "listening sessions" to gather feedback on what community members want to see in the city's next police chief on March 10, 2022. Embarcadero Media file photo by Veronica Weber.

Palo Alto's new police chief should be committed to transparency, focused on accountability and have a record of honesty and integrity.

They should be willing to discipline officers who aren't following department policy and able to deal fairly and respectfully with all community members regardless of race or socioeconomic class.

And they should be committed to civil liberties and aggressive when it comes to confronting the rising number of hate incidents in the community targeting residents of Black, Jewish and Asian backgrounds.

Those are some of the qualities that residents and members of the city's Human Relations Commission said they want to see in the city's next chief. They offered these comments on Thursday night during the first of three "listening sessions," public hearings scheduled by City Manager Ed Shikada that are designed to solicit community feedback about the qualities they want to see in the next chief.

Shikada kicked off the process of public hearings shortly after Chief Robert Jonsen announced his plan to retire this summer as he seeks to become the next Santa Clara County sheriff. And while most speakers refrained from directly criticizing Jonsen, many indicated that they are dissatisfied with the department's recent direction and suggested that it's due for a significant change.

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The Rev. Kaloma Smith, chair of the Human Relations Commission, was among them. He pointed to the recent spike in hate incidents around the city as well as current crime trends and argued that to date Police Department leaders have issued only "institutional responses," which are formal and technical in nature, rather than "community-based responses" in which they actually have honest conversations with concerned residents.

The new chief should be able to have a "real and honest dialogue and responses around police misconduct" and have "a clear vision that is not just a simple institutional response."

"We now are in a time where our city has a deep disconnect with the police force," Smith said. "I have rarely seen a police force where both sides of the aisle can both be disconnected at the same time: those who are worried about policing and safety and those who are worried about civil liberties."

Others were more pointed in their criticism. Aram James, a former public defender and a frequent critic of the Police Department, said the city has had a "really horrible experience" under Jonsen and alluded to policies that he enacted to cut off public awareness of department actions. These include his move in January 2021 to encrypt all radio communications, a policy that prevents media and residents from monitoring and independently verifying incidents involving police activity.

The switch, which was made without any advance warning, was prompted by a directive from the state Department of Justice that required law enforcement agencies to protect private information such as Social Security numbers and criminal history of individuals involved in police incidents. The DOJ did not, however, require agencies to fully encrypt radio communications, as Palo Alto and other agencies have since done. California Highway Patrol continues to broadcast its radio communication and switches to a secure channel when transmitting sensitive information.

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James also criticized the department for its failure to release in a timely fashion video evidence or any reports involving violent arrests, including the 2020 incident in Mountain View in which a police officer directed a canine to repeatedly bite a resident while he was sleeping in a shed during a manhunt for a kidnapping suspect. The resident, Joel Alejo, sued the city and received a $135,000 settlement in January.

"I think it's critical that we have someone who — when they say 'transparency,' when they say 'accountability,' when they say 'integrity,' — that it's not just words coming out of their mouth, that there are actions commensurate with those extraordinary concepts," James said.

'We now are in a time where our city has a deep disconnect with the police force.'

-the Rev. Kaloma Smith, chair, Palo Alto Human Relations Commission

Resident Scott O'Neil also alluded to the canine attack and suggested that the department needs "cultural reform." He noted that in recent cases that involved violent arrests, none of the officers intervened, in seeming violation of department policy.

"If that policy wasn't carried out, was there accountability? Why wasn't it carried out?" O'Neil asked. "Those are all things that land on the police chief's desk first. So I think that's the most important thing: Is this someone who will carry forward the efforts of currently reforming our Police Department from within?"

Others said the department should look for someone who is skilled at engaging the community, assisting vulnerable residents and understanding the community dynamics. Resident Lynne Chiapella said the chief should encourage casual and positive interactions between officers and residents to prevent a feeling of "them and us."

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"I'd hope for a more humanistic kind of culture where we try to solve problems, not create more problems and lawsuits and end up with officers who are afraid to come to work because of a drawing on cement," said Chiapella, alluding to a recent lawsuit from six officers that argued that the city's Black Lives Mural constituted discrimination against them (a Santa Clara County Superior Court judge dismissed that lawsuit earlier this month).

Commissioner Michelle Kraus said the individual should also be "tech savvy" and understand Palo Alto's "core being" as a cradle of innovation. Commissioner Patti Regehr noted that when Palo Alto opened Hotel de Zink in 1931, the shelter and food kitchen was named after former Police Chief Howard Zink, who strongly supported the creation of the facility.

She said she hopes the new chief would reflect a similar type of progressive thought and takes on "the character of the community."

"That means protection but also safety of everybody," Regehr said. "Because it is an honor that Hotel de Zink is named after a police chief. I don't think we can be saying that throughout our history recently."

'I'd hope for a more humanistic kind of culture where we try to solve problems, not create more problems and lawsuits and end up with officers who are afraid to come to work because of a drawing on cement.'

-Lynne Chiapella, resident, Palo Alto

Vice Chair Adriana Eberle, an attorney, said she would like to see the transcripts of candidates' court testimony and hear their position on radio encryption. She also said she wants to see a leader in the department with experience in working with a diverse population, one who "treats people with dignity, regardless of their color, socioeconomic status, gender, national origin or background."

The new chief will be charged with leading a department that currently has 79 full-time sworn positions and 125.6 total full-time employees, according to Shikada. The search for a new police chief, he said, comes at a "unique time," a time of "extraordinary change in expectations for what both our police force as well as our institution in general does and how we respond to the needs and issues of our community."

He also said that the city hopes to see at least one internal candidate for the job.

"We do have good quality people within the department," Shikada said. "We hope to have at least one candidate there as well."

The city is planning to hold additional listening sessions at 10 a.m. on Saturday, March 19 and at 5:30 p.m. on Thursday, March 31. To register for the sessions and provide input police chief selection process, visit cityofpaloalto.org/PoliceChiefSelection.

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Gennady Sheyner
 
Gennady Sheyner covers the City Hall beat in Palo Alto as well as regional politics, with a special focus on housing and transportation. Before joining the Palo Alto Weekly/PaloAltoOnline.com in 2008, he covered breaking news and local politics for the Waterbury Republican-American, a daily newspaper in Connecticut. Read more >>

Follow on Twitter @paloaltoweekly, Facebook and on Instagram @paloaltoonline for breaking news, local events, photos, videos and more.

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Residents demand more transparency, accountability in next police chief

Palo Alto kicks off search for Robert Jonsen's replacement with Thursday public hearing

Palo Alto's new police chief should be committed to transparency, focused on accountability and have a record of honesty and integrity.

They should be willing to discipline officers who aren't following department policy and able to deal fairly and respectfully with all community members regardless of race or socioeconomic class.

And they should be committed to civil liberties and aggressive when it comes to confronting the rising number of hate incidents in the community targeting residents of Black, Jewish and Asian backgrounds.

Those are some of the qualities that residents and members of the city's Human Relations Commission said they want to see in the city's next chief. They offered these comments on Thursday night during the first of three "listening sessions," public hearings scheduled by City Manager Ed Shikada that are designed to solicit community feedback about the qualities they want to see in the next chief.

Shikada kicked off the process of public hearings shortly after Chief Robert Jonsen announced his plan to retire this summer as he seeks to become the next Santa Clara County sheriff. And while most speakers refrained from directly criticizing Jonsen, many indicated that they are dissatisfied with the department's recent direction and suggested that it's due for a significant change.

The Rev. Kaloma Smith, chair of the Human Relations Commission, was among them. He pointed to the recent spike in hate incidents around the city as well as current crime trends and argued that to date Police Department leaders have issued only "institutional responses," which are formal and technical in nature, rather than "community-based responses" in which they actually have honest conversations with concerned residents.

The new chief should be able to have a "real and honest dialogue and responses around police misconduct" and have "a clear vision that is not just a simple institutional response."

"We now are in a time where our city has a deep disconnect with the police force," Smith said. "I have rarely seen a police force where both sides of the aisle can both be disconnected at the same time: those who are worried about policing and safety and those who are worried about civil liberties."

Others were more pointed in their criticism. Aram James, a former public defender and a frequent critic of the Police Department, said the city has had a "really horrible experience" under Jonsen and alluded to policies that he enacted to cut off public awareness of department actions. These include his move in January 2021 to encrypt all radio communications, a policy that prevents media and residents from monitoring and independently verifying incidents involving police activity.

The switch, which was made without any advance warning, was prompted by a directive from the state Department of Justice that required law enforcement agencies to protect private information such as Social Security numbers and criminal history of individuals involved in police incidents. The DOJ did not, however, require agencies to fully encrypt radio communications, as Palo Alto and other agencies have since done. California Highway Patrol continues to broadcast its radio communication and switches to a secure channel when transmitting sensitive information.

James also criticized the department for its failure to release in a timely fashion video evidence or any reports involving violent arrests, including the 2020 incident in Mountain View in which a police officer directed a canine to repeatedly bite a resident while he was sleeping in a shed during a manhunt for a kidnapping suspect. The resident, Joel Alejo, sued the city and received a $135,000 settlement in January.

"I think it's critical that we have someone who — when they say 'transparency,' when they say 'accountability,' when they say 'integrity,' — that it's not just words coming out of their mouth, that there are actions commensurate with those extraordinary concepts," James said.

Resident Scott O'Neil also alluded to the canine attack and suggested that the department needs "cultural reform." He noted that in recent cases that involved violent arrests, none of the officers intervened, in seeming violation of department policy.

"If that policy wasn't carried out, was there accountability? Why wasn't it carried out?" O'Neil asked. "Those are all things that land on the police chief's desk first. So I think that's the most important thing: Is this someone who will carry forward the efforts of currently reforming our Police Department from within?"

Others said the department should look for someone who is skilled at engaging the community, assisting vulnerable residents and understanding the community dynamics. Resident Lynne Chiapella said the chief should encourage casual and positive interactions between officers and residents to prevent a feeling of "them and us."

"I'd hope for a more humanistic kind of culture where we try to solve problems, not create more problems and lawsuits and end up with officers who are afraid to come to work because of a drawing on cement," said Chiapella, alluding to a recent lawsuit from six officers that argued that the city's Black Lives Mural constituted discrimination against them (a Santa Clara County Superior Court judge dismissed that lawsuit earlier this month).

Commissioner Michelle Kraus said the individual should also be "tech savvy" and understand Palo Alto's "core being" as a cradle of innovation. Commissioner Patti Regehr noted that when Palo Alto opened Hotel de Zink in 1931, the shelter and food kitchen was named after former Police Chief Howard Zink, who strongly supported the creation of the facility.

She said she hopes the new chief would reflect a similar type of progressive thought and takes on "the character of the community."

"That means protection but also safety of everybody," Regehr said. "Because it is an honor that Hotel de Zink is named after a police chief. I don't think we can be saying that throughout our history recently."

Vice Chair Adriana Eberle, an attorney, said she would like to see the transcripts of candidates' court testimony and hear their position on radio encryption. She also said she wants to see a leader in the department with experience in working with a diverse population, one who "treats people with dignity, regardless of their color, socioeconomic status, gender, national origin or background."

The new chief will be charged with leading a department that currently has 79 full-time sworn positions and 125.6 total full-time employees, according to Shikada. The search for a new police chief, he said, comes at a "unique time," a time of "extraordinary change in expectations for what both our police force as well as our institution in general does and how we respond to the needs and issues of our community."

He also said that the city hopes to see at least one internal candidate for the job.

"We do have good quality people within the department," Shikada said. "We hope to have at least one candidate there as well."

The city is planning to hold additional listening sessions at 10 a.m. on Saturday, March 19 and at 5:30 p.m. on Thursday, March 31. To register for the sessions and provide input police chief selection process, visit cityofpaloalto.org/PoliceChiefSelection.

Comments

Anneke
Registered user
Professorville
on Mar 11, 2022 at 9:56 am
Anneke, Professorville
Registered user
on Mar 11, 2022 at 9:56 am

Transparency laws improve accountability and trust in law enforcement.

Rather than allowing officers to hide behind anonymity, transparency laws force law enforcement agencies to admit to the public that there may be “bad apples” in their bunch. An additional benefit of this accountability is that it also serves as a mechanism to reward and publicize good behavior.


Barron Parker Too
Registered user
Barron Park
on Mar 11, 2022 at 11:23 am
Barron Parker Too, Barron Park
Registered user
on Mar 11, 2022 at 11:23 am

Sheyner has given us yet another slanted hit piece on policing in Palo Alto. There are a very small number of people in the city that hate the police, that wish to defund, demotivate and generally reduce the ability of the police to keep Palo Alto safe. Sheyner repeatedly goes to those people for their warped views. An example is Aron James, a lawyer who for decades has maligned the Palo Alto police, as a way to find clients to sue the city.

We have seen in the past two years what happens when movements (e.g., BLM), politicians and prosecutors work to destroy policing. The consequences are devastating. Murders in many of our large cities have increased to rates not seen since the bad 1990s. Palo Alto is still relatively safe, because the police have been effective in preventing and solving crimes. Most people in Palo Alto appreciate and have confidence in our police. This needs to be remembered when reading articles like this.


Local Resident
Registered user
Community Center
on Mar 11, 2022 at 12:39 pm
Local Resident, Community Center
Registered user
on Mar 11, 2022 at 12:39 pm

Its possible to have a police department that keeps us safe while practicing fair and equitable policing. The recent departure of a number of old timers including members of the law suit about the mural and DeStefanos indicates to me that culture change is already taking place in a postive direction. I speculate that some of those old timers were unhappy with actual accountability, transparency and social justice improvements. In my view this is yet another step in the right direction.


Aletheia
Registered user
Greenmeadow
on Mar 11, 2022 at 4:44 pm
Aletheia, Greenmeadow
Registered user
on Mar 11, 2022 at 4:44 pm

I have never had a positive encounter with any police officer. Bike stolen? File a report online and good luck! How's the investigation going guys? Car broken into? "Call your insurance company." I say fire 'em all and use the saved money to buy everyone guns.


S. Underwood
Registered user
Crescent Park
on Mar 12, 2022 at 4:48 pm
S. Underwood, Crescent Park
Registered user
on Mar 12, 2022 at 4:48 pm

To protect your privacy, all further communications from the police department and the city on this matter will be encrypted. Feel safe and secure yet!?


scott
Registered user
Fairmeadow
on Mar 15, 2022 at 12:13 am
scott, Fairmeadow
Registered user
on Mar 15, 2022 at 12:13 am

Since someone is calling this a "slanted hit piece on policing," here's
Web Link a direct link to the public comment section of the meeting in question. You can listen to everyone who gave comment, and decide for yourself if the reporting is a fair description of the meeting.


Consider Your Options.
Registered user
Another Palo Alto neighborhood
on Mar 17, 2022 at 5:49 pm
Consider Your Options. , Another Palo Alto neighborhood
Registered user
on Mar 17, 2022 at 5:49 pm

I think it is important not to lump people together, including people who work in law enforcement. I disagree with a number of decisions made by the current police chief. Transparency is critically important for an organization we authorize to enforce our laws.

That said, front line officers are not driving departmental policy. The chief, to a large extent, determines the culture of the department through his decisions about how to implement policy, hiring, training practices and through how he manages and controls systems associated with the department's work. I hope we can find a chief who will return to more progressive policies and practices. Former Chief Burns did a fine job, and I would like to see another chief of similar character, leadership style, and values.

I have been very fortunate to work as a community volunteer with a number of police officers. Many PAPD officers are a credit to the uniform, the department and our community--professional, caring, thoughtful people. I honor and appreciate their service. They do struggle with bureaucratic and procedural challenges caused by staffing, budget cuts, systems and facilities that could work better. The new public safety building will address that last bit.

Rather than criticizing and looking back, let's look forward. What kind of leader do we want in this role?


Duveneck neighbor
Registered user
Duveneck/St. Francis
on Mar 17, 2022 at 9:19 pm
Duveneck neighbor, Duveneck/St. Francis
Registered user
on Mar 17, 2022 at 9:19 pm

#Barron Parker Too,

You're out of step, in my opinion. With his substantive and accurate reporting, Mr Sheyner has hit the mark on EVERY point I would have wanted to make.

We, the members of this community, deserve transparency and accountability from our police force. On the other hand, we have not served our law enforcement officers well, insofar as we have turned a blind eye toward previous Council, City Manager, Chief of Police, City Attorney, District Attorney, Chief Medical Examiner, and Police Union actions, which (taken as a whole) have created obscurity and hidden from scrutiny. Our officers deserve to be as safe as possible in the execution of the duties which the *community* has specified. We have a disconnect between the tactics, training, and technologies available to our police officers, in the execution of their duties on our behalf. Instead, 'fraternal' behaviors (and by that I mean, some of the worst behaviors found in university and college fraternities) have taken hold. The Alvarez incident, for instance, was not an example of a 'bad apple' officer -- because *all* of the officers present acquiesced passively to the criminal behavior.

There is no way to change that narrative. The proofs are in the settlements paid (which come out of our pockets, not those of the officers at fault), and in the continued struggles police and community have with our relationship.

If it takes excusing *every* officer from the force, without prejudice and at full pension, and re-building the department from the ground up, with an instilled commitment to transparency and accountability, to achieve the goals of this community... then that's the price we must pay for having been inattentive for so long.

Barron Parker Too's perspective leads to fear and loathing and dissension and divisive. That's what we have today, and I say, enough. Our efforts are not at all about 'destroying policing', but rather about re-imagining policing.


Barron Parker Too
Registered user
Barron Park
on Mar 20, 2022 at 10:54 pm
Barron Parker Too, Barron Park
Registered user
on Mar 20, 2022 at 10:54 pm

@ Duveneck neighbor

Most happy to be "out of step" with you. Here's your plan, in your own words:

>> If it takes excusing *every* officer from the force, without prejudice and at full pension,
>> and re-building the department from the ground up, with an instilled commitment to
>> transparency and accountability, to achieve the goals of this community...
>> then that's the price we must pay for having been inattentive for so long.

Let's see. You propose to fire (you call it "excusing" -- how sweetly polite) every officer on the police force. Give them full pension (how magnificently generous: full pension is 90% salary for life). And then after you've destroyed all policing in the city, and the criminals are having a field day, you will then try to hire a new set of police officers.

Thank you for explaining so clearly the methods and goals of your movement to destroy policing in Palo Alto.


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