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Search California public records about law enforcement use of force and misconduct from more than 700 agencies. Results are organized into cases attributed to the agency providing the records.
The database does not include crime scene photographs, audio recordings or videos. Police Records Access Project team members further redacted personal information about sexual assault and ...
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 ...
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.
It’s quite democracy-affirming, if somewhat startling in its frankness, to open up the website for the brand new Police ...
The Police Records Access Project, a database built by UC Berkeley and Stanford University, is being published by the Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, KQED and CalMatters.
LAist, KQED and CapRadio are among the partner organizations gathering and sharing thousands of documents made public since ...
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 ...
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-forc ...
It’s quite democracy-affirming, if somewhat startling in its frankness, to open up the website for the brand new Police Records Access Project database for the state of California.
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