Antioch, Calif., audits police over racist text messages - Los Angeles Times
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Antioch launches audit of police department over racist, sexist, homophobic text messages

Protesters rallying outside police headquarters in Antioch, Calif.
Protesters rally outside police headquarters in Antioch, Calif., where officers traded racist and homophobic text messages.
(Jane Tyska / Bay Area News Group)
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Officials in the Bay Area city of Antioch are undertaking an audit of the troubled Police Department, the latest development in a yearlong federal investigation that blew up this month with the disclosure of racist and hostile text messages sent by officers.

Angry residents crowded City Hall on Tuesday evening as the Antioch City Council unanimously approved audits of the Police Department’s internal affairs unit, its hiring and promotional practices, and the department’s culture. Officials have named 17 officers who sent text messages, including the president of the Antioch police union, although Contra Costa County’s public defender said that nearly half of the 100-officer department was included in the text chains.

Defense attorney Ellen McDonnell has asked Dist. Atty. Diana Becton to dismiss all cases involving the public defender’s office and the Antioch Police Department. Becton said she is reviewing cases for potential dismissal or resentencing. It’s unclear how many cases are at stake.

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“The public simply cannot have trust or confidence in any criminal prosecution involving the Antioch Police Department,†McDonnell said in an email Wednesday. “No one should be charged with a crime based on the report of a police department so thoroughly riddled with corruption.â€

The incendiary text messages, which were heavily redacted, contain derogatory, racist, homophobic and sexually explicit language. Officers brag about making up evidence and beating up suspects. They refer to women as water buffalo, share photos of gorillas, freely use racial slurs and make light of the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis in 2020.

In September 2020, two officers agreed by text to write a large number of traffic citations by targeting a specific group in a specific area. A male officer referred to Black people by a racist slur and said authorities should make them “eat s—.†A female officer responded, “Yes that will be easy. And it will be a good time lol start off quick with the numbers.â€

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In the past 10 days, there have been three earthquakes of magnitude 3.0 or greater centered nearby in Northern California.

The city of 115,000 residents, about 45 miles east of San Francisco, was once predominantly white but has diversified in the last 30 years.

Mayor Lamar Thorpe is among three Black, progressive members of the five-person council who have said they are committed to holding police accountable and protecting tenants’ rights. In 2021, the city issued an apology for its treatment of early Chinese immigrants.

“What you’re seeing is a maturation process — it’s like watching a teenage kid develop pimples,†he said in an interview Wednesday. “The institutions have taken a long time to catch up with where the voters and public have been.â€

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The text messages came out as part of an investigation launched in March 2022 by the FBI and the Contra Costa district attorney’s office into a broad range of offenses, including what prosecutors called crimes of “moral turpitude,†by officers with the Antioch and nearby Pittsburg police departments.

Antioch Mayor Lamar Thorpe says he was punched in the chest by a man during a confrontation that had racial overtones. He adds that the incident happened after a speech.

The district attorney’s office released two batches of text messages to reporters after a judge April 7 ordered the messages shared with defense attorneys in a pending felony case involving some of the officers. The reports did not identify the races of the officers who sent the text messages, and none has yet been charged with a crime.

The messages disclosed to date were sent largely in 2020 and 2021. Sgt. Rick Hoffman, president of the Antioch Police Officers Assn., is named as sending communications. The association did not respond to requests for comment.

In April 2020, one Antioch officer texted an officer at another police department: “Since we don’t have video I sometimes just say people gave me a full confession when they didn’t, get filed easier.â€

In June 2020, one officer offered a steak dinner to anyone who could “40†Thorpe at a protest, referring to a “.40mm less lethal launcher,†a senior inspector for the district attorney’s office explained in a report. Such a device could shoot rubber bullets or bean-bag rounds.

Northern California city of Antioch apologizes to Chinese American community for how its early immigrants were treated.

Antioch Police Chief Steve Ford issued a statement last week condemning the “the racially abhorrent content and incomprehensible behavior being attributed to members of the Antioch Police Department in media reports.â€

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His department also established an email address and phone line where community members could give feedback.

Police officers have been busted before for sending bigoted messages to each other. In 2015, then-San Francisco Police Chief Greg Suhr moved to fire or discipline 14 officers involved in trading racist text messages.

Authorities have given no timeline for when their joint investigation might finish.

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