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With the Police Records Access Project database, attorneys can now look up officers who’ve been dishonest or biased. (Illustration by Anna Vignet/KQED) In 2019, in one of the first cases unsealed by ...
This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. The public can now search internal affairs documents and other police-misconduct records from nearly 700 California ...
A close-up photo of a San Diego Police officer. (File photo courtesy San Diego Police Department) The public can now search internal affairs documents and other police-misconduct records from nearly ...
The Police Records Access Project database, now available to the public, contains roughly 1.5 million pages of records from 12,000 officer-misconduct and use-of-force cases in California. This story ...
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 ...
A searchable database of public records concerning use of force and misconduct by California law enforcement officers — some 1.5 million pages from nearly 700 law enforcement agencies — is now ...
This article was originally published by CalMatters. Go to CalMatters.org to read this investigation or others. The public can now search internal affairs documents and other police-misconduct records ...
The Police Records Access Project encompasses 12,000 cases over about 1.5 million pages obtained from nearly 500 law ...
California allocated $6.87 million in its 2023-24 budget to UC Berkeley to develop the Police Records Access Project, a first-of-its-kind, state-wide database of police misconduct and use-of-force ...
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