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Tag: public forum

  • Sheriff finalists face public as San Mateo County board prepares to appoint new leader

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    With a final decision set for Wednesday, the three finalists vying to become San Mateo County’s next sheriff faced questions from the public Monday about how they would lead a department still reeling from the fallout of former Sheriff Christina Corpus’ ouster.

    Moderators selected 11 questions from more than 400 submissions that touched on key issues, including how the candidates would build trust with immigrant communities, address the mental health and homelessness crisis, improve morale within the department and manage the agency’s more than $300 million budget.

    The three-hour forum gave residents a chance to gauge how the contenders would lead the county’s 800-member law enforcement agency after years of scandal, and comment on how what they would prioritize actions during their first 90 days in office.

    The finalists are David Lazar, a retired San Francisco Police Department assistant chief; Kenneth Binder, interim police chief in Gilroy and former Santa Clara County undersheriff; and Brian Wynn Huynh Travis, chief of police and director of public safety for the Solano Community College District.

    The final decision for a new sheriff comes on the one-year anniversary of a county-commissioned report by retired Judge LaDoris Cordell detailing allegations of conflict of interest, retaliation, and misconduct by Corpus. The report set off a yearlong battle, with the county dedicating massive resources — disclosing at least $4.6 million in spending so far — to remove Corpus, who continues to challenge the process.

    That same day the report was released, Deputy Sheriffs’ Association (DSA) President Carlos Tapia was arrested on suspicion of timecard fraud — an action union leaders said was retaliatory for his criticism of Corpus. While San Mateo County District Attorney Stephen Wagstaffe declined to file criminal charges against Tapia, he remains on administrative leave pending an internal investigation.

    Corpus, the first Latina sheriff in the county, was elected in 2022 and removed from office last month. She became the first sheriff in California to be removed by a county board.

    Her removal followed a voter-approved charter amendment giving the Board of Supervisors the authority to remove a sheriff after a two-week hearing in August, during which a hearing officer found she had engaged in conflict-of-interest and retaliation while in office. The amendment also allows the board to appoint the next sheriff, a power it will retain through 2028.

    Corpus has denied allegations against her, including claims that Tapia’s arrest was retaliatory, insisting it stemmed from a legitimate timecard fraud investigation. She has appeals pending and maintains that her removal violated her rights and due process.

    While the questions posed to her replacement candidates Monday covered a wide range of topics, the three men agreed on one key priority: in their first 90 days, they would focus on building an executive team and making strategic hiring decisions to implement reforms and stabilize a department in turmoil.

    Lazar, who served more than 33 years with the San Francisco Police Department before retiring earlier this year, said he would move quickly to rebuild internal trust. He said he plans to meet with union leaders, rank-and-file staff, and county officials to draft a strategic plan addressing staffing and morale.

    “My first 48 hours is really to sit down with the leadership team and the DSA, Organization of Sheriffs Sergeants, and both professional staff and sworn staff and develop a strategic plan on moving forward, on rebuilding,” he said.

    He also expressed willingness to reinstate employees who left or were removed amid the fallout from the former sheriff, including Tapia.

    Binder said his top priority would be installing an executive leadership team “that has the respect and trust of the organization” and either reinstating individuals unfairly investigated by the internal affairs department or holding accountable those with legitimate issues.

    “But we need to do it fast. We can’t let that linger,” Binder said.

    Binder previously said he plans to include former Assistant Sheriff Ryan Monaghan, whom Corpus fired in September 2024, and former Undersheriff Chris Hsiung, who resigned in June 2024, on his executive team. Both testified against Corpus during the August removal hearings.

    Binder briefly served as Santa Clara County’s acting sheriff for about two months after former Sheriff Laurie Smith resigned in 2022 amid a civil corruption trial over allegedly granting concealed carry permits to political donors and VIPs.

    Originally from San Mateo County, Travis, who spent most of his policing career in the North Bay, said his first 90 days would focus on restoring morale and fairness, starting with a listening tour of deputies, sergeants, and professional staff, while forming a new executive team and revisiting personnel decisions he described as unjust.

    “I would go on a listening tour … just to make sure that we’re all on the same page. I want them to be heard. I want them to feel respected,” Travis said.

    About 40 people spoke during public comment Monday, with most from San Francisco, to voice their support for Lazar as the county’s next sheriff. One speaker backed Travis, another supported Binder, and several others addressed broader public safety priorities in the county.

    On Tuesday afternoon, the Deputy Sheriff’s Association announced it would not be endorsing any candidates.

    “This is not a reflection on the candidates, who we find to be highly qualified for the position, but rather a reflection on the tight timeline afforded for this process, which has made it impossible to thoroughly vet each of the candidates to make a full and fair assessment of them,” the union said in a statement.

    Though the influential union withheld endorsements, it emphasized that it views each candidate as a step forward for the department.

    “The DSA believes each of the candidates represents a significant improvement in leadership over what the membership has had to endure for the last several years, and we appreciate every candidate agreeing that rebuilding this agency begins with a competitive contract to attract and retain the highest-caliber employees,” the union said. “We look forward to working collaboratively with whichever candidate the Board of Supervisors appoints to serve the remainder of this current term.”

    The Board of Supervisors is scheduled to make its final decision at 9 a.m. Wednesday.

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    Ryan Macasero

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  • The Biggest Takeaway from the January 6 Report

    The Biggest Takeaway from the January 6 Report

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    The congressional committee investigating the January 6 insurrection delivered a comprehensive and compelling case for the criminal prosecution of Donald Trump and his closest allies for their attempt to overturn the 2020 election.

    But the committee zoomed in so tightly on the culpability of Trump and his inner circle that it largely cropped out the dozens of other state and federal Republican officials who supported or enabled the president’s multifaceted, months-long plot. The committee downplayed the involvement of the legion of local Republican officials who enlisted as fake electors and said almost nothing about the dozens of congressional Republicans who supported Trump’s efforts—even to the point, in one case, of urging him to declare “Marshall Law” to overturn the result.

    With these choices, the committee likely increased the odds that Trump and his allies will face personal accountability—but diminished the prospect of a complete reckoning within the GOP.

    That reality points to the larger question lingering over the committee’s final report: Would convicting Trump defang the threat to democracy that culminated on January 6, or does that require a much broader confrontation with all of the forces in extremist movements, and even the mainstream Republican coalition, that rallied behind Trump’s efforts?

    “If we imagine” that preventing another assault on the democratic process “is only about preventing the misconduct of a single person,” Grant Tudor, a policy advocate at the nonpartisan group Protect Democracy, told me, “we are probably not setting up ourselves for success.”

    Both the 154-page executive summary unveiled Monday and the 845-page final report released last night made clear that the committee is focused preponderantly on Trump. The summary in particular read more like a draft criminal indictment than a typical congressional report. It contained breathtaking detail on Trump’s efforts to overturn the election and concluded with an extensive legal analysis recommending that the Justice Department indict Trump on four separate offenses, including obstruction of a government proceeding and providing “aid and comfort” to an insurrection.

    Norm Eisen, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and the former special counsel to the House Judiciary Committee during the first Trump impeachment, told me the report showed that the committee members and staff “were thinking like prosecutors.” The report’s structure, he said, made clear that for the committee, criminal referrals for Trump and his closest allies were the endpoint that all of the hearings were building toward. “I think they believe that it’s important not to dilute the narrative,” he said. “The utmost imperative is to have some actual consequences and to tell a story to the American people.” Harry Litman, a former U.S. attorney who has closely followed the investigation, agreed that the report underscored the committee’s prioritization of a single goal: making the case that the Justice Department should prosecute Trump and some of the people around him.

    “If they wind up with Trump facing charges, I think they will see it as a victory,” Litman told me. “My sense is they are also a little suspicious about the [Justice] Department; they think it’s overly conservative or wussy and if they served up too big an agenda to them, it might have been rejected. The real focus was on Trump.”

    In one sense, the committee’s single-minded focus on Trump has already recorded a significant though largely unrecognized achievement. Although there’s no exact parallel to what the Justice Department now faces, in scandals during previous decades, many people thought it would be too divisive and turbulent for one administration to “look back” with criminal proceedings against a former administration’s officials. President Gerald Ford raised that argument when he pardoned his disgraced predecessor Richard Nixon, who had resigned while facing impeachment over the Watergate scandal, in 1974. Barack Obama made a similar case in 2009 when he opted against prosecuting officials from the George W. Bush administration for the torture of alleged terrorists. (“Nothing will be gained by spending our time and energy laying blame for the past,” Obama said at the time.)

    As Tudor pointed out, it is a measure of the committee’s impact that virtually no political or opinion leaders outside of hard-core Trump allies are making such arguments against looking back. If anything, the opposite argument—that the real risk to U.S. society would come from not holding Trump accountable—is much more common.

    “There are very few folks in elite opinion-making who are not advocating for accountability in some form, and that was not a given two years ago,” Tudor told me.

    Yet Tudor is one of several experts I spoke with who expressed ambivalence about the committee’s choice to focus so tightly on Trump while downplaying the role of other Republicans, either in the states or in Congress. “I think it’s an important lost opportunity,” he said, that could “narrow the public’s understanding as to the totality of what happened and, in some respects, to risk trivializing it.”

    Bill Kristol, the longtime conservative strategist turned staunch Trump critic, similarly told me that although he believes the committee was mostly correct to focus its limited time and resources primarily on Trump’s role, the report “doesn’t quite convey how much the antidemocratic, authoritarian sentiments have metastasized” across the GOP.

    Perhaps the most surprising element of the executive summary was its treatment of the dozens of state Republicans who signed on as “fake electors,” who Trump hoped could supplant the actual electors pledged to Joe Biden in the decisive states. The committee suggested that the fake electors—some of whom face federal and state investigations for their actions—were largely duped by Trump and his allies. “Multiple Republicans who were persuaded to sign the fake certificates also testified that they felt misled or betrayed, and would not have done so had they known that the fake votes would be used on January 6th without an intervening court ruling,” the committee wrote. Likewise, the report portrays Republican National Committee Chair Ronna Romney McDaniel, who agreed to help organize the fake electors, as more of a victim than an ally in the effort. The full report does note that “some officials eagerly assisted President Trump with his plans,” but it identifies only one by name: Doug Mastriano, the GOP state senator and losing Pennsylvania gubernatorial candidate this year. Even more than the executive summary, the full report emphasizes testimony from the fake electors in which they claimed to harbor doubts and concerns about the scheme.

    Eisen, a co-author of a recent Brookings Institution report on the fake electors, told me that the committee seemed “to go out of their way” to give the fake electors the benefit of the doubt. Some of them may have been misled, he said, and in other cases, it’s not clear whether their actions cross the standard for criminal liability. But, Eisen said, “if you ask me do I think these fake electors knew exactly what was going on, I believe a bunch of them did.” When the fake electors met in Georgia, for instance, Eisen said that they already knew Trump “had not won the state, it was clear he had not won in court and had no prospect of winning in court, they were invited to the gathering of the fake electors in secrecy, and they knew that the governor had not and would not sign these fake electoral certificates.” It’s hard to view the participants in such a process as innocent dupes.

    The executive summary and final report both said very little about the role of other members of Congress in Trump’s drive to overturn the election. The committee did recommend Ethics Committee investigations of four House Republicans who had defied its subpoenas (including GOP Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, the presumptive incoming speaker). And it identified GOP Representative Jim Jordan, the incoming chair of the House Judiciary Committee, as “a significant player in President Trump’s efforts” while also citing the sustained involvement of Representatives Scott Perry and Andy Biggs.

    But neither the executive summary nor the full report chose quoted exchanges involving House and Senate Republicans in the trove of texts the committee obtained from former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows. The website Talking Points Memo, quoting from those texts, recently reported that 34 congressional Republicans exchanged ideas with Meadows on how to overturn the election, including the suggestion from Representative Ralph Norman of South Carolina that Trump simply declare “Marshall Law” to remain in power. Even Representative Adam Schiff of California, a member of the committee, acknowledged in an op-ed published today that the report devoted “scant attention …[to] the willingness of so many members of Congress to vote to overturn it.”

    Nor did the committee recommend disciplinary action against the House members who strategized with Meadows or Trump about overturning the result—although it did say that such members “should be questioned in a public forum about their advance knowledge of and role in President Trump’s plan to prevent the peaceful transition of power.” (While one of the committee’s concluding recommendations was that lawyers who participated in the efforts to overturn the election face disciplinary action, the report is silent on whether that same standard should apply to members of Congress.) In that, the committee stopped short of the call from a bipartisan group of former House members for discipline (potentially to the point of expulsion) against any participants in Trump’s plot. “Surely, taking part in an effort to overturn an election warrants an institutional response; previous colleagues have been investigated and disciplined for far less,” the group wrote.

    By any measure, experts agree, the January 6 committee has provided a model of tenacity in investigation and creativity in presentation. The record it has compiled offers both a powerful testament for history and a spur to immediate action by the Justice Department. It has buried, under a mountain of evidence, the Trump apologists who tried to whitewash the riot as “a normal tourist visit” or minimize the former president’s responsibility for it. In all of these ways, the committee has made it more difficult for Trump to obscure how gravely he abused the power of the presidency as he begins his campaign to re-obtain it. As Tudor said, “It’s pretty hard to imagine January 6 would still be headline news day in and day out absent the committee’s work.”

    But Trump could not have mounted such a threat to American democracy alone. Thousands of far-right extremists responded to his call to assemble in Washington. Seventeen Republican state attorneys general signed on to a lawsuit to invalidate the election results in key states; 139 Republican House members and eight GOP senators voted to reject the outcome even after the riot on January 6. Nearly three dozen congressional Republicans exchanged ideas with Meadows on how to overturn the result, or exhorted him to do so. Dozens of prominent Republicans across the key battleground states signed on as fake electors. Nearly 300 Republicans who echoed Trump’s lies about the 2020 election were nominated in November—more than half of all GOP candidates, according to The Washington Post. And although many of the highest-profile election deniers were defeated, about 170 deniers won their campaign and now hold office, where they could be in position to threaten the integrity of future elections.

    The January 6 committee’s dogged investigation has stripped Trump’s defenses and revealed the full magnitude of his assault on democracy. But whatever happens next to Trump, it would be naive to assume that the committee has extinguished, or even fully mapped, a threat that has now spread far beyond him.

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    Ronald Brownstein

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