ACLU of Sonoma County Newsletter Winter 2015
Transcription
ACLU of Sonoma County Newsletter Winter 2015
Sonoma Civil Liberties Winter 2015 #68 Annual Awards set for May 3 John L. Burris, an Oakland-based civil rights attorney, will be the keynote speaker for the Sonoma County ACLU’s Annual Awards Celebration and Luncheon to be held at noon Sunday, May 3, at the Flamingo Hotel in Santa Rosa . officer on New Year’s Day 2009. Burris will speak about “Litigating Cases to Bring About Social Change.” Burris and his law firm have represented hundreds of victims of police misconduct throughout California, as well as clients in class-action employment cases and criminal matters. He is a founding board member of the National Lawyers Guild’s National Police Accountability Project and a frequent lecturer about police, criminal justice and race and gender issues.. As always, the event will gather supporters of civil liberties and the ACLU’s struggle to defend them in Sonoma County. Highlights will include presentation of the 2015 Jack Green Civil Liberties Award to Elbert “Big Man” Howard, a founder of the Black Panther Party, and his wife and collaborator in human rights action in Sonoma County, Lunch in the Ballroom of the Flamingo, a Santa Carole Hyams-Howard. The Mario Savio Student Rosa landmark at 2777 Fourth St., will feature a Activist Award will go to Sandy Espino-Valenciano, choice of entrees among chicken, fish and vegetara Sonoma State University student and organizer ian dishes. There will be a cash bar. with the North Bay Immigrant Youth Union. Cost of the lunch is $55 full price and $25 for Keynote speaker Burris has successfully han- low-income, students and children under 12. A dled many high-profile cases including the Los limited number of free meals will be available for Angles homeless woman beaten by a California those unable to pay. Highway Patrol officer in July 2014 and Oscar Reservations are required. Please see the orGrant, who was shot to death by a BART police der form on Page 3. Task force studies plan for oversight Nearly 17 months after 13-year-old Andy Lopez was killed by seven bullets fired by a Sonoma County sheriff’’s deputy, a citizens’ task force appointed by the Board of Supervisors continues to wrestle with the aftermath, including a proposal for a law enforcement oversight body. The 21-member task force and its three subcommittees have held discussions week after week, looking into ways to heal the community after Andy’s death and to try to prevent such a thing from happening again. Formally known as the Community and Local Law Enforcement Task Force and chaired by community activist Caroline Bañuelos, the group has come up with 21 draft recommendations. They include separation of the offices of coroner and sheriff -- now joined -- in the interests of greater transparency and avoiding a conflict of interest in the investigation of officer-involved fatalities. Other recommendations address ways to reach out to the community and build trust between residents and law enforcement. One recommendation – ignored so far – calls (Continued on Page 2) Keynote speaker May 3 — Civil Rights Attorney John L. Burris. Smile, you’re on police body camera Sonoma County law enforcement agencies are moving rapidly toward using video devices known as body cams to record encounters between officers and members of the public. The Board of Supervisors voted in December to spend nearly $1.2 million to outfit all 241 county sheriff’’s deputies with body-mounted cameras for five years, according to the Santa Rosa Press Democrat. The contract was awarded to Taser International, which will provide each deputy with a $400 camera called the Axon Body, as well as data storage and camera maintenance, the newspaper reported. The Sheriff’s Office expects to have deputies equipped with the cameras by late March or early April. (On March 3, the Associated Press reported Taser International has cultivated financial ties to police chiefs (Continued on Page 4) Page 2 Winter 2015 Meet your ACLU Chapter Board of Directors Omar Figueroa Carole Guffanti Notley Evan Livingstone Erik Hawkins Bonnie Madrid On Jan. 20, Sonoma County ACLU members filled the Peace and Justice Center in Santa Rosa for a movie, “American Violet,” and the election of the Chapter Board of Directors for 2015. Marty McReynolds Nancy Palandati Kimberly Barbosa Soeiro Task Force studies oversight (Continued from Page 1 ) for the Board of Supervisors to ask Sheriff Steve Freitas to remove Erick Gelhaus, the deputy who shot Andy Lopez, from active patrol duty. Gelhaus was restored to his former duties after being cleared of any wrongdoing. A key recommendation is the establishment of an Office of Independent Auditor (OIA) modeled on an oversight body in San Jose, which would have its own budget and staff, and be housed separately from the Sheriff’s Office. Auditor staff would include attorneys who would be able to review confidential personnel files related to complaints against sheriff’s deputies, jail staff and probation officers. They would field complaints and set up mediation of low-level complaints when both parties agree to it. The OIA would not have the power to subpoena witnesses – a main feature of the ACLU’s 11-point list of requirements for effective oversight. And it would function only for county law enforcement personnel, not the police forces of Sonoma County’s cities. The task force is scheduling public meetings before every city council in the county, as well as the Santa Rosa City School Board and various community organizations through March and early April. A decision on the group’s final recommendations is expected in April, followed by presentation to the Board of Supervisors on May 12. Books worth reading Wherever There's a Fight: How Runaway Slaves, Suffraby ElaineImmigrants, Elinson (Stan Yogi (Author) and gists, Strikers, Poets Shaped Civil Liberties in California By Elaine Elinson and Stan Yogi ----------------------In Defense of American Liberties: A History of the ACLU By Samuel Walker ---------------------Freedom’s Orator: Mario Savio and the Radical Legacy of the 1960s By Robert Cohen ---------------------The Essential Mario Savio: Speeches and Writings that Changed America By Robert Cohen and Lynn Hollander Savio Winter 2015 Page 3 ORDER YOUR TICKETS TO ACLU’S AWARD LUNCH SUNDAY MAY 3, 2015 12:00 - 3:00 pm FLAMINGO HOTEL Reserve your tickets at aclusonomalunch.brownpapertickets.com or use the form below to reserve your space. Luncheon Tickets: $55 (Regular Price), $25 (Student, Low Income, Child Price) Please Print or Type Name:_________________________________________________________________________ Address: _______________________________________________________________________ City, State, Zip: __________________________________________________________________ _____ Regular Tickets @ $55 = $ _________ _____ Reduced Cost @ $25 = $ _________ No one will be turned away for lack of funds* Menu choice & number: ____Chicken ____Fish ____Vegetarian _____ Regular Sponsorship: $150: Includes 2 lunch tickets and business card ad in program _____ Silver Sponsorship: $200: Includes 2 lunch tickets and 1/3 page ad in program _____ Gold Sponsorship: $250: Includes 2 lunch tickets and 1/2 page ad in program _____ Sponsor a Table: $750: Includes 8 lunch tickets and full page ad in program Ad Only: _____ Business card ad in program: $60 _____ 1/3 page ad in program: $100 _____ 1/2 page ad in program: $200 _____ Full page ad in program: $300 Donation Only: ADS: B&W camera ready, PDF or JPEG formats 300-600 PPI _____ I wish to make a donation of $ _________to ACLU of Sonoma County Return registration and check to: ACLU of Sonoma County, PO Box 14181, Santa Rosa, CA 95402 For more information call (707) 765-5005 or visit www.aclusonoma.org *If you are not able to afford the low-cost ticket please contact [email protected] Sonoma Civil Liberties P.O. BOX 14181 SANTA ROSA, CA 95402 (707) 765-5005 WWW.ACLUSONOMA.ORG Winter 2015 #68 NON PROFIT ORG. U.S. POSTAGE PAID SANTA ROSA, CA PERMIT #165 TIME VALUE Teachers, Community Groups: Want a speaker to discuss civil liberties issues? Contact us! We’ll provide a speaker! Printed on recycled paper Page 4 Winter 2015 Smile, you could be on a police body camera Continued from Page 1 ) whose departments have bought the recording devices, raising a host of conflict-of-interest questions. Taser is covering airfare and hotel stays for police chiefs who speak at promotional conferences, according to interviews and a review of records by the AP. The firm is also hiring recently retired chiefs as consultants, sometimes just months after their cities signed contracts with Taser, the AP said.) The cameras have the potential to help protect the public against police misconduct, and at the same time help protect police against false accusations of abuse, according to an ACLU policy statement. “The challenge of on-officer cameras is the tension between their potential to invade privacy and their strong benefit in promoting police accountability,” the ACLU statement said. “Overall, we think they can be a win-win— but only if they are deployed within a framework of strong policies to ensure they protect the public without becoming yet another system for routine surveillance of the public, and maintain public confidence in the integrity of those privacy protections. Without such a framework, their accountability benefits would not exceed their privacy risks.” The Board of Supervisors authorized the purchase of cameras without spelling out such policies, however, leaving it up to the Sheriff’s Office to determine when deputies will be required to turn on or off the cameras and how the video recordings will be handled and stored. “The current policies allow deputies to deactivate their cameras any time they believe the use of the camera is no longer necessary,” Jim Duffy, a Rohnert Park resident active in the discussion of police conduct in the wake of the killing of Andy Lopez by a sheriff’s deputy in October 2013, told The Press Democrat. “If deputies are free to turn the cameras off as they please, then the role in providing a check and balance against law enforcement misbehavior is destroyed,” Duffy said. By the end of this year, most law enforcement officers patrolling Sonoma County’s streets will be wearing cameras capable of capturing events as they unfold, according to the Press Democrat. Police forces in Cotati, Healdsburg and Sebastopol have been recording traffic stops, field sobriety tests and other encounters with the public for much or all of 2014, the newspaper reported. It said some officers of the Santa Rosa Police Department and Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office have been wearing cameras since last spring, and both agencies expect to outfit most patrol personnel with cameras by the end of 2015. The Axon body camera