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Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Thousands of formerly secret files on police misconduct in CA made public through searchable database

 “Superstition is another mighty evil, and has caused much terrible cruelty. The man who is a slave to it despises others who are wiser, tries to force them to do as he does.”

 Jiddu Krishnamurti (1895–1986) Indian spiritual philosopher

Thousands of formerly secret files on police misconduct in CA made public through searchable database

The Independent: “Thousands of previously secret files on alleged police misconduct in California have now been made public through a searchable database. 

The Police Records Access Project database, painstakingly assembled over seven years by journalists, activists, and data scientists, went public on Monday with documents from more than 400 government agencies across the Golden State. The records open a window into nearly 12,000 cases involving alleged police misconduct or the use of serious force, ranging from dishonesty through brutality complaints to repeated sexual harassment by officers. 

The database will allow researchers, journalists, members of the public, and victims of police misconduct to dig into how California cops have handled such cases, while helping defense lawyers identify officers who may have skeletons in their closets. “In 2018, California had some of the most secret records in the country. So people decided to work together,” project co-founder Lisa Pickoff-White told The San Francisco Chronicle, one of the news outlets providing access to the database. 

The records can be searched publicly online via the Chronicle, the Los Angeles Times, the San Francisco broadcaster KQED, or the state wide news nonprofit CalMatters. The project has its roots in 2018, when California’s state legislature reversed decades of secrecy and mass-unsealed all police records involving the use of serious force or findings of officer dishonesty or sexual assault. 

Another law in 2021 also unsealed all records involving findings of police discrimination, excessive force, wrongful arrests, or wrongful searchers. Journalists spent years methodically requesting documents from police departments, sheriff’s departments, transit agencies, prisons, coroners’ officers, prosecutors, and oversight bodies, eventually pooling their efforts in a collective of more than 30 news outlets. 

Researchers at the Berkeley Institute for Data Science and Stanford University’s Big Local News project then created the searchable database, with help from the ACLU and numerous other academic and civil society organizations — as well as funding from the state of California, the Sony Foundation, and Jay-Z’s entertainment company Roc Nation…”