Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Public Safety

Release Of San Diego Police Racial Profiling Analysis Delayed

A San Diego police officer pulls over a driver in Valencia Park in this undated photo.
Sam Hodgson
A San Diego police officer pulls over a driver in Valencia Park in this undated photo.
Release Of San Diego Police Racial Profiling Analysis Delayed
Councilwoman Marti Emerald wants to release the three-stage study in full despite an existing plan to release information as it becomes available.

Speak City Heights is a media collaborative aimed at amplifying the voices of residents in one of San Diego’s most diverse neighborhoods. (Read more)

San Diegans concerned about police racial profiling will have to wait eight more months for the results of an independent study on the San Diego Police Department.

Councilwoman Marti Emerald announced Wednesday she's postponing a report promised this month until all three stages of the study are complete.

Advertisement

The decision was made in private and discussed only in a non-agenda public comment at Wednesday's public safety committee meeting.

American Civil Liberties Union attorney Kellen Russoniello told the committee the decision contradicts earlier rhetoric promising transparency. Emerald ordered the study by San Diego State researchers in February in response to months of public scrutiny of the department.

"SDPD has consistently kicked the can on providing any meaningful analysis of the data," Russoniello said, referring to previous reports by the department that offered raw data but no analysis. "SDPD and this committee both committed to open, honest dialogue about this data and other community concerns by promising to hear the results this fall. The public deserves to have the information as it is available."

Emerald said she delayed the report until next summer because she learned in recent days the report is only a third of the way done and she doesn't want the information to come out piecemeal.

"They're just not done yet," Emerald said. "And we don't feel that it's responsible to release partial information along the way."

Advertisement

But that was always the plan. The researchers told KPBS in June — shortly after the city approved the plan — that the study would come out in three stages. The analysis of racial data from traffic stops was to be released in the fall, interviews with residents in the spring and interviews with police in the summer.

Emerald, who led the Public Safety and Livable Neighborhoods Committee meeting Wednesday afternoon, didn't respond to a request for clarification before this story was published.

She said at the meeting she has not been given a preview of the results and will see them when the public does next summer.

KPBS has created a public safety coverage policy to guide decisions on what stories we prioritize, as well as whose narratives we need to include to tell complete stories that best serve our audiences. This policy was shaped through months of training with the Poynter Institute and feedback from the community. You can read the full policy here.