Archive for the ‘Police in the Local Media’ Category

Cotati Cops Agree To Tiered Benefits

Friday, August 13th, 2010

originally published at: www.pressdemocrat.com

Cotati police concessions could impact other cities

By JEREMY HAY
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

Published: Thursday, August 12, 2010 at 3:26 p.m.

In a development likely to frame other law enforcement labor talks, Cotati police have agreed to a two-tier pension system and to begin contributing toward their pension plans and medical benefits.

The agreement, which reduces benefits for future officers, affects only five police officers, five dispatchers and a community service officer in Sonoma County’s smallest city.

But it is certain to be watched closely across the region, both by cities struggling to cut costs and by police and fire unions that fought long and hard to get the most generous pensions in the public sector.

The contract changes pension formulas so that newly hired officers will have to wait to retire until they are 55, when they would qualify for up to 87.5 percent of their salary. Officers can now retire at 50 with up to 90 percent. Similar changes were made for non-sworn police department employees.

The savings won’t be much in the next few years, but “further down the road they are considerable,” said Nick Franceschine, an actuary who owns North Bay Pensions, a retirement plan manager.

The 3-year agreement, signed Wednesday, was welcomed by city officials who, despite the recent passage of a half-cent sales tax measure, are facing a drum-tight budget.

“One of Cotati’s biggest financial challenges has been the increasing cost of employee-compensation packages,” said city manager Dianne Thompson. “Each of these changes is an important step towards the city’s goal of financial sustainability.”

And officials in other cities said the agreement was notable for what the city achieved.

“It’s a significant accomplishment,” said Fran Elm, director of human resources in Santa Rosa, where contract talks with officers start in about a year.

The new contract comes in the context of a furious national debate over public sector benefits.

“This is something they’re really pushing in all parts of the country, with very different degrees of success,” said Andy Merrifield, a political science professor at Sonoma State University.

The concern over benefits has been exacerbated by a severe recession that’s put government budgets under extraordinary pressure. Increasingly, the retirement plans are seen as a key factor undermining the long-term finances of local and state governments.

Defenders argue the benefits are just compensation for public service jobs that traditionally paid less well than private industry and, in the case of public safety workers, are more arduous and risky.

But critics of the benefit plans say they are too generous and a crippling future liability to cities and states trying to maintain services and staffing in the face of shrinking budgets that are unlikely to grow robustly for years.

Oakland police officers this week agreed to pay the full employees share of their pension premiums, equivalent to about 9 percent of pay. The pact also reduces benefits for new hires.

Cotati police representatives noted that last year they took a 14 percent pay cut; under the new contract they will gain it back over three years. And they said the new contract signaled their continued commitment to helping the city regain a sturdy financial footing.

“I think we stepped up to the plate again,” said Officer Chris Kaupe, president of the city’s 11-member police officers association, which also includes dispatchers.

But Kaupe acknowledged that the contract was negotiated against the backdrop of growing public scrutiny of public sector retirement benefits, in particular those for public safety personnel.

“There’s the political and financial environment and the way the public feels about the current retirement system — they want to see change and we are making those changes,” Kaupe said.

The benefits issue was central to the two-month negotiations, he said, and on Wednesday Mayor Robert Coleman-Senghor, in acknowledging the union’s concessions, also implicitly recognized a victory for the city at the bargaining table.

“These concessions were considerably more than many others in the state or the region,” he said.

In Sonoma County the debate over the benefits has been particularly vigorous in Santa Rosa and Rohnert Park, which among the county’s nine cities face perhaps the most pressing budget crises, and where altering public pension plans has been a focus of official’s efforts.

In those cities and others, Cotati’s new contract is more than likely to play a role in labor negotiations down the road.

“It certainly will be used by city managers or their negotiators to say, ‘Look, this can be done, this has been done, be responsible like the Cotati police officers,’” SSU’s Merrifield said. “It will be a tool in the tool box.”

In Santa Rosa, Councilman Gary Wysocky wouldn’t comment on whether the Cotati development would impact future labor negotiations with police officers, but said, “Our executive staff has to lead the way with shared sacrifice.”

Rohnert Park councilman Jake Mackenzie was more direct: “What the Cotati police did has to be on the table.”

Cop Shot at Training

Friday, August 13th, 2010

originally published at: www.pressdemocrat.com

Santa Rosa officer injured by bullet fragment in training accident

Published: Wednesday, August 11, 2010 at 3:00 a.m.

A Santa Rosa police officer was accidentally struck Tuesday by a bullet fragment during a training exercise, Marin County sheriff’s officials reported.

The officer was treated for minor injuries at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital, Sgt. Debra Barry said.

“The officer received the appropriate medical treatment and is doing well,” said Santa Rosa Police Chief Tom Schwedhelm.

Another officer was clearing a round from a .40-caliber firearm at about 4 p.m. when the weapon accidentally fired, Barry said.

The officers were at a training program at the Circle S Ranch and Shooting Range, a 196-acre ranch in western Marin County used by many law enforcement agencies for practice, Barry said.

The bullet shot into a concrete table and broke into fragments, which struck a nearby officer in her leg, hand and face, Barry said. She was airlifted to Memorial Hospital.

The shooting appeared to be an accident and Marin officials had no plans to investigate it further, Barry said.

Marin authorities withheld both officers’ names.

Schwedhelm wouldn’t give further information on how the accident occurred, stating that the incident was an internal personnel matter.

“When an accident occurs, we evaluate that and look at ways of improving the training,” he said.

— Julie Johnson

SRJC PD Chief Retires

Friday, August 13th, 2010

originally published at: www.pressdemocrat.com

Surprise farewell for retiring SRJC chief

Published: Thursday, July 29, 2010 at 6:14 p.m.

A man who’s worked as a police chief for 34 years figures life doesn’t hold many more surprises.

And yet, Terry Stewart was pleasantly stunned Thursday afternoon when he walked out of the Santa Rosa Junior College District Police office for his last time as chief.

Several officers switched on the Code 3 lights on their patrol cars and about a dozen SRJC Police cadets stood shoulder-to-shoulder and applauded their primary mentor.

“That’s the whole reason I came to the JC, to teach those kids,” said Stewart. “I’ve taught about 1,000 of them.”

His former students include several current chiefs of police, among them Sebastopol’s Jeff Weaver and Petaluma’s Dan Fish.

Though he’s retiring from SRJC’s police department, Stewart isn’t ready to stop instructing potential peace officers. When the fall semester begins he’ll teach a beginning criminal-justice class.

But first, Sonoma County’s longest-serving police chief will take a bit of vacation.

– Chris Smith

Ex-Santa Rosa police captain must pay legal costs

Friday, August 13th, 2010

originally published at: www.pressdemocrat.com

Ex-Santa Rosa police captain must pay legal costs
Second-in-command fired in ’08 amid discrimination claims vows to appeal judge’s ruling

By LORI A. CARTER
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

Published: Friday, July 30, 2010 at 4:03 a.m.

A judge has ordered a former Santa Rosa police captain to pay $32,000 in sanctions to the city for its costs to defend his wrongful termination lawsuit, but the amount is only a third of what the city sought.

U.S. District Judge Susan Illston, in a July 12 ruling, ordered Jamie Mitchel or his attorney to pay $31,600 to Santa Rosa. The city wanted $108,700.

In April, Illston dismissed Mitchel’s complaint, which argued that he was fired illegally because the city wanted to appease several police department employees who had complained about discriminatory treatment under former Chief Ed Flint and Mitchel, his second-in-command.

Mitchel was fired in 2008, and Flint was forced out by the former city manager. The city has spent about $1 million to get rid of the police managers, buy out the complainants and pay for additional training within the department to correct internal problems. Exact figures were unavailable this week.

Mitchel said this week he will appeal the sanctions payment, which is due by mid-September and payable by him or his lawyer, Scott Lewis of Santa Rosa. “You bet I’m going to appeal,” he said. “I’ll go to the Supreme Court. This issue is bigger than Jamie Mitchel. It’s now an erosion of the Peace Officer Bill Of Rights.”

City Attorney Caroline Fowler was on vacation and unavailable for comment.

Mitchel, 55, has argued that his rights were violated, he was discriminated against because he is a white man and that his arbitration hearing was improperly handled.

The city paid the six complainants a total of more than $120,000 to resolve their grievances, which included complaints alleging gender discrimination, harassment and retaliation by Flint. All four complaints named Flint, and two named Mitchel.

No lawsuits were filed by the employees, some of whom no longer work for the city.

After parts of Mitchel’s suit were dismissed last year, Illston tossed out the remainder this spring. The city sought sanctions against Mitchel and his attorney for what it argued were frivolous claims.

City-paid lawyers submitted paperwork seeking more than $108,700 in legal fees, including rates ranging from $421 an hour for the lead attorney to $136 an hour for a paralegal.

The judge ruled only costs incurred to fight the most recent amended complaint, filed in February, were recoverable, about a third of the total.

Mitchel’s attorney filed an appeal, which will move the case to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeal for further briefing and a hearing. It was unclear whether the order to pay the city’s costs would be stayed pending the appeal.

Staff Writer Lori A. Carter can be reached at 762-7297 or lori.carter@pressdemocrat.com.

A Rare Local Long Form Article on Impounds

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

originally published at: www.pressdemocrat.com

Clash over checkpoints
Activists decry impound policy at DUI checkpoints, say illegal immigrants face undue hardship

By MARTIN ESPINOZA
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

Published: Saturday, July 31, 2010 at 3:00 a.m.

Standing on the side of Old Redwood Highway, just south of Jay Palm’s saddle shop in Penngrove, a Latina held up a colorful sign with the word “Reten” written twice. About 500 yards down the road, local attorney Alicia Roman held up a similar sign.

For Spanish-speaking illegal immigrants, the meaning — “checkpoint” — was clear that Friday evening.

Some took heed and quickly turned off at Goodwin Avenue. Those who ignored the warning, or did not understand it, suddenly found themselves amid a sea of orange cones as Petaluma police officers slowed traffic and guided drivers through a stop aimed at nabbing drunken drivers, unlicensed drivers and those with suspended licenses.

One Petaluma woman, an illegal immigrant without a license, was pulled over and lost her husband’s ’98 Mustang convertible to a 30-day impound. Late for her job as a cleaner at the nearby shopping center, she walked toward North McDowell Boulevard, talking to her husband on her cell phone.

“I feel horrible,” she said, speaking in Spanish as she walked, hauling her son’s car safety seat.

“I’ve heard about these things, but I never imagined it would happen,” said the woman, who asked that her name not be used. “I need to work and I can’t get a driver’s license.”

She was one of four drivers that night whose cars were impounded for license infractions. They were snared in a state-funded program that has developed into a high-profile crackdown with two aims: Take drunken drivers off the road and enforce state law requiring drivers to have a license.

For every one DUI arrest made at a Petaluma checkpoint in the past five years, four people were cited or arrested for driving without a license.

Even as a tow truck hitched up the Mustang, an untold number of illegal immigrants successfully avoided the checkpoint in what has become a sort of cat-and-mouse game that pits traffic safety efforts with local immigrant-rights activists.

State officials say that what’s driving the $14 million that goes toward funding traffic safety checkpoints in California is a dramatic, 20 percent decline in “alcohol-impaired” deaths, from 1,298 in 2005 to 1,029 in 2008.

Immigrant-rights advocates like Roman, a Santa Rosa lawyer, focus on the economic and emotional hardship immigrant families suddenly face when their car is confiscated. The cost of recovering a car after 30 days can reach up to $2,000, a figure that includes a $50-a-day storage fee at a local tow yard, a towing fee and a police administrative fee.

“It’s just not right for police to impound cars of non-drunken drivers for 30 days,” Roman said. “Especially when they are allowing drunken drivers to pick up their cars the very next day.”

Preventing accidents

But Petaluma Police Sgt. Ken Savano, coordinator of the “Avoid the 13” Sonoma County DUI Task Force, which represents 13 law enforcement agencies in the county, says the checkpoints are first and foremost about traffic safety. He points to traffic safety studies that show that unlicensed drivers and those who drive with suspended or revoked licenses cause a disproportionate number of accidents.

“Traffic safety is saving lives and preventing injuries, and one of the tools that we have is to enforce the laws that the people have enacted that are designed to improve safety,” said Savano.

Late last year, the California Office of Traffic Safety dubbed 2010 “The Year of the Checkpoint,” alerting California drivers of record funding for checkpoint campaigns throughout the state, from $5 million in 2009 to $8 million this year.

The Petaluma Police Department, which last year became the county’s coordinator of state-funded “Avoid” checkpoints, has been involved in 15 checkpoints so far this year. Two more are planned in Sonoma and Cloverdale before Labor Day, and another two are scheduled for the Christmas and New Year’s holidays.

Since May 2005, Petaluma has staged 70 checkpoints, screening about 64,500 vehicles, conducting 2,027 field sobriety tests and arresting a total of 742 people. Of these arrests and citations, 111 have been for drunken driving, 134 for driving on a suspended license and 418 for driving without a license. There also have been 21 arrests for drug offenses and 30 arrests for other violations.

Checkpoints as deterrent

Chris Cochran, a state traffic safety office spokesman, said sobriety checkpoints nab fewer drunken drivers than so-called “saturation patrols,” where police units target specific roads to identify and arrest impaired drivers.

However, the checkpoints send a much stronger and visible message, one that is highly publicized, beginning with a press release from the local police department.

“You want there to be a large deterrent,” said Cochran.

New technologies have helped get out the word. When a checkpoint is encountered, he said, word of the operation spreads fast, via cell phone calls, Twitter messages and text messages.

“This is all fine with us,” Cochran said. “We want more and more people to know about them.”

“Those people who may have contemplated going out and drinking, they will be more likely to arrange for a designated driver or a cab or some way of getting around,” he said.

Two checkpoints on July 23 in Petaluma netted three suspected drunken drivers, one with an blood-alcohol level three times the legal limit.

The early checkpoint on Old Redwood Highway near North McDowell Boulevard was held between 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. and coincided with the happy-hour bar crowd.

The second was staged on Petaluma Boulevard North, near Gossage Avenue, between 11 p.m. and 2 a.m., and was aimed at late-night downtown bar-goers.

At the Old Redwood Highway checkpoint, motorcycle patrol officers kept a lookout for drivers who turned off the street. Savano said avoiding a checkpoint is illegal if the driver commits a traffic violation in the process, such as an illegal U-turn.

Fear of deportation

One driver, another illegal immigrant who asked that his name not be used for fear of deportation, drove through the checkpoint early in the evening and lost a 2000 Mercury Cougar to a 30-day impound.

The man, who works as a ranch hand, never strayed far from the checkpoint after losing his car. Something was troubling him, he later admitted. Several family members joined him on the sidewalk, waiting to talk to Savano.

The man asked why his citation called for an appearance in Sonoma County Superior Court, rather than traffic court. He wanted to know if immigration enforcement officials would be there waiting for him.

“Immigration is not going to deport you for driving without a license,” Savano said, adding later than he recognized the man’s fear.

“I feel bad about the financial impact,” Savano said in a follow-up interview last week. “But our fundamental duty is public safety.”

Immigration advocates call for the use of greater discretion in the 30-day impound rule.

Roman, who represents local tenants in eviction cases, is one of the main organizers of the checkpoint protests. Since last year, the loose-knit group of activists have mobilized up to 10 people for a checkpoint operation, she said.

She acknowledged that a possible fallout from warning Spanish-speaking drivers about the checkpoints is that a drunken driver could be tipped off, avoid the checkpoint and later cause an accident.

She said the signs used to be in both English and Spanish, but the group narrowed them down to Spanish to minimize the possibility of aiding drunken drivers avoid the checkpoints.

“That would be terrible,” Roman said. “I can’t say that there’s not going to be a Latino that’s not going to see our signs and drive drunk. ... I’m out here trying to help the families of the poor. The majority of the people at this time, it’s people coming home from work.”

Impound discretion

She said the police have a choice: “You don’t have to impound cars.”

Cochran said state law does give local law enforcement officials the discretion to avoid the 30-day impound rule for driver’s license violations.

“Some jurisdictions say, ‘I’ll give you 20 minutes to get a licensed driver to come here.’ That’s a local policy call which may or may not be actionable in court.”

But he added that such a call is “much more the exception than the rule” for the more than 470 law enforcement agencies in the state.

Savano said jurisdictions that enforce the 30-day impound law are “clearly concerned with improving traffic safety.” He said the intent of the legislature when it enacted the rule was to remove the vehicle from the drivers who statistically had been shown to cause anywhere from four to five times as many crashes as licensed drivers.

Savano said the primary concern of enforcement officers is applying traffic laws equally.

“If we were to suddenly change our policy to allow certain unlicensed drivers some different opportunity or policy, how then do we stay fair and impartial to other people who are caught or stopped for driving without a license?” he asked.

Last Tuesday, four days after the ranch hand lost his car, the man, his wife, a daughter and a friend visited the Petaluma police station to try to get his car out of the impound lot. The car, which was being held in the Petaluma Towing yard at 1800 Petaluma Boulevard, had already racked up hundreds of dollars in storage and tow fees.

Tow hearings are held at the police station between noon and 2 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Aside from a $140 administrative tow fee, Petaluma Towing charges a $186 tow fee and a $50-a-day storage fee. The administrative tow fee is authorized by the state and allows the city to recover costs associated with the storage and impound of the vehicle.

The man said he desperately wanted to get the Mercury Cougar out of impound so that he could sell it and keep his financial loss to a minimum. He said he figured he could get $4,000 for the car, though he would have to pay about $2,000 in impound costs after 30 days.

Amalia Greenberg Delgado, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, said the practice of impounding vehicles for 30 days where a traffic safety issue does not exist may violate some drivers’ Fourth Amendment rights, which limit the forfeiture of property without due process.

“The 30-day impound is discretionary,” she said.

Local law enforcement officials said the checkpoints will continue because they have been effective at raising public awareness about important traffic safety issues.

As a line of cars drove through the recent Old Redwood Highway checkpoint, Savano pointed out that there were a total of 608 DUI arrests in Petaluma last year.

Since 2005, DUI arrests are up 80percent, from 334 to 608, he said, and alcohol-related collisions have declined by 20 percent.

“Arrests are up, crashes are down,” Savano said. “But the most significant statistic is that nobody died from an alcohol-related collision in Petaluma in 2009, and so far the same is true in 2010.”

Petaluma Police Escalate from Impounds to Arrests

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

originally published at: www.pressdemocrat.com

Petaluma checkpoints net 3 DUI suspects

By MARTIN ESPINOZA
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

Published: Saturday, July 24, 2010 at 9:59 a.m.

Petaluma police arrested and cited 10 drivers during two DUI and driver’s license checkpoints Friday night. Three of the arrests were for drunk driving.

The first checkpoint was staged on Old Redwood Highway near the North McDowell Extension between 6 and 9 p.m., and the second was held from 11 p.m. until 2 a.m. on Petaluma Boulevard North near Gossage Avenue.

The stops are part of a series of at least 10 checkpoints, held mostly on weekends in Santa Rosa, Petaluma and Cotati, since March.

Of the 1,534 vehicles that passed through the two checkpoints, 1,494 were screened by officers for signs of DUI and driver’s license violations. Sixty-nine drivers were directed to nearby parking areas for further evaluation.

In addition to the three arrested for DUI, one driver was arrested for driving on a suspended license and three others were arrested for driving without having been issued a license. One person was cited for having an expired driver’s license and another person was arrested for an outstanding stolen vehicle warrant. One person was arrested for possession of marijuana in his car.

In the most serious DUI arrest, police reported that Shawn Kristoffer Cahoon, 34, of Rohnert Park entered the first checkpoint at about 6:28 p.m. with a blood alcohol level almost three times the legal limit.

Officers screening drivers detected the odor of alcohol and Cahoon displayed signs of intoxication, police said.

He was on probation for a previous DUI in February 2008. The terms of his probation require that he not drive a vehicle with alcohol in his blood and that he not refuse to take a blood alcohol test. Cahoon refused to take a chemical test and was booked into Sonoma County Jail for violating probation, officials said. His bail was set at $10,000.

A total of seven vehicles were towed and four were impounded for 30 days because the drivers either did not have a driver’s license or were driving on a suspended license.

The 30-day impound rule often affects illegal immigrants because California law does not allow them to obtain a state driver’s license.

As in previous checkpoints, about a half-dozen activists stationed themselves ahead of the police stop point. They warned drivers by holding signs that read, “Reten, Reten,” which is the Spanish word for checkpoint.

The program, funded through a state grant, involves 13 law enforcement agencies in Sonoma County and is coordinated by the Petaluma Police Department.

Rohnert Park Public Safety in Disarray

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

originally published at http://www.pressdemocrat.com

Rohnert Park fire commander says agency is in disarray

By JEREMY HAY
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

Published: Monday, July 26, 2010 at 6:01 p.m.

The Rohnert Park Public Safety Department is in disarray, its fire division commander said Monday.

The division lacks support from managers and the City Council, it is hampered by senior officers resistant to change, and it is beset by low morale, Fire Commander Jack Rosevear said.

“The department’s in crisis,” said Rosevear, who took over the fire division in June 2008 and plans to run for City Council this year. “I’m not exaggerating. It’s not a matter of perspective, it’s the truth.”

Rosevear, who has said he will retire in August partly to save the jobs of younger firefighters facing potential layoffs, made his concerns known in an unusually public manner, delivering a statement to The Press Democrat and the weekly Community Voice newspaper.

He said his motive is to shed light on problems within the department — which provides both police and fire services — and lay the groundwork for necessary improvements.

“I’m not after payback, retribution, vengeance, anything like that. I’m after success,” he said.

City officials unanimously rejected the substance of Rosevear’s concerns, but were varied in their reactions, expressing responses ranging from irritation to bewilderment to praise of his performance.

“This is all a personnel issue that he’s putting in public,” said Mayor Pam Stafford. “This council doesn’t deal with disgruntled employees, that’s not our purview.”

Public Safety Director Brian Masterson, Rosevear’s boss, said, “Jack did a good job for us…he made some positive changes and I would say he was supported by all the members of public safety.”

He added: “I’m a big believer that people have the right to express their opinions however they want to do it and certainly Jack has voiced his.”

Vice-Mayor Gina Belforte said, “I can honestly say I don’t know what he’s talking about…I haven’t had any reason to believe there’s been a problem with fire.”

In his statement, Rosevear said the city’s firefighters and police officers are “the finest and most courageous” he’s ever worked with, then laid out a blistering catalogue of charges. They include:

– “A small group of senior police officers” have tried to undermine him through a steady whispering campaign because they resent changes he made that reduced their overtime;

– City leaders and Masterson prioritize police services over fire services;

– Budget-related decisions or proposals — particularly related to layoffs — made by city leaders and supported by Masterson have contributed to low morale within the division.

Rosevear said younger firefighters have left or are planning to leave the department because they fear being laid off. And he said he was told twice since June 2009 that he would be laid off, which firefighters opposed because they thought it would hurt the division.

He said Masterson supported that proposal by then-City Manager Dan Schwarz, illustrating how police services are favored over fire services.

“At Rohnert Park, law enforcement is the dominant arm. Everything comes secondary to that, including fire,” Rosevear said. “So if there are decisions to be made, law enforcement staffing would be weighed first before fire.”

Masterson disputed that on several counts.

“I didn’t support laying off anybody,” he stated, while also saying that layoffs were an understandable recourse for a city teetering on bankruptcy.

Masterson said he transferred police officers to the fire division in early 2009, a plan implemented with Rosevear’s support. Since then, more police officers have been laid off than firefighters, he said.

“We’re not in a crisis,” Masterson said. “We were in a state of flux last year because we weren’t sure what was going to happen. It was stressful for everyone.”

Asked whether Rosevear’s statements surprised her, Stafford suggested the fire commander was playing politics.

“You know, he’s running for City Council, of course,” said Stafford, who is running for re-election.

“If there was not a council seat open I would be speaking out in this same manner,” Rosevear said. “I’m only running because I see a pending disaster, and I have been personally caught up in the disaster as an employee and as a resident.”

Stafford said Rosevear is alone in his concerns.

“Personally, I don’t think his position reflects the department, I think it reflects him,” she said.

Cop Vs Bike

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Bicyclist hit by Santa Rosa police car

By MARY CALLAHAN
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

Published: Thursday, July 15, 2010 at 8:24 a.m.

A bicyclist who was struck by a Santa Rosa policeman on Highway 12 late Wednesday night crossed from the eastbound bike lane in front of the officer’s car in an effort to turn left, officials said.

Dylan Debiase, 18, broke his baby toe and suffered scrapes and abrasions in the 10 p.m. collision at Boas Drive, police Lt. Ben Harlin said.

The officer, Eric Rhodes, a traffic investigator and DUI enforcement officer, was responding to a call about a suspected drunken driver on eastbound Highway 12 and was headed eastbound himself when Debiase crossed in front of him to turn onto Boas Drive, Harlin said.

Rhodes was in a marked police car, but Harlin said he did not believe his lights or siren were activated.

He said Debiase, who has a Highway 12 address, was in a marked bike lane before he crossed into the two eastbound car lanes.

Rhodes moved left to try to avoid the bike but they collided anyway, Harlin said.

Debiase was taken to an area hospital for treatment and later released, police said.

Authorities, meanwhile, closed down the eastbound lanes of Highway 12 into the early morning hours of Thursday to investigate and are still seeking witnesses, Harlin said.

Anyone who saw the incident is asked to call the Santa Rosa Police Department’s Traffic Bureau at (707) 543-3600

Petaluma Cops Get an RV

Friday, July 16th, 2010

originally published at www.pressdemocrat.com

Huge new police vehicle turns heads

By DAN JOHNSON,
ARGUS-COURIER STAFF

Published: Thursday, July 8, 2010 at 12:00 p.m.

The sudden appearance of a huge, new police vehicle at various spots in Petaluma may have some people wondering if the Petaluma Police Department has decided to close up its building and go completely mobile.

“Actually, if our police department building fell to the ground, we could run it from this new vehicle,” said Lt. Mike Cook. “It is a mobile command center, and can be used for any disaster emergencies and at all checkpoints we conduct.”

It also can be used during critical situations involving SWAT and hostage/crisis negotiators as well as during special events to promote public safety, and to help with crowd and traffic control.

The vehicle was designed to be a fully functional regional command, control and communications center for Petaluma and the Avoid the 13 Sonoma County DUI Task Force. It is equipped with telephones, multimedia systems, radios, computers and other specialized equipment that help to ensure public safety.

It cost a whopping $450,000, but the city didn’t have to pay a penny for it. The funding breakdown was: $260,000 from a California Office of Traffic Safety Avoid the 13 DUI grant and other OTS grants; $140,000 from the police department’s asset-seizure funds; $40,000 from an annual Homeland Security grant; and $10,000 from the Petaluma Police Officer Association’s Hostage Negotiation Golf Fund account.

The police department was able to obtain a large portion of the money because it is the lead agency for the regional DUI enforcement efforts in Sonoma County to reduce alcohol-related fatalities and injuries, as well as increase public awareness of problems associated with drinking and driving.

The vehicle, which was obtained about two months ago, has created quite a stir.

“We brought it to the Butter & Egg Days Parade, and it generated a lot of positive comments,” Cook said.

Grant money also has enabled the police department to recently purchase four other vehicles — a Chevrolet pickup for commercial-vehicle enforcement ($53,000), a Chevrolet Tahoe for its K-9 program ($50,000), and a mobile pet-adoption trailer ($35,000) and a pickup ($32,000) for its Animal Services division.

The commercial-enforcement pickup and K-9 vehicle were funded by American Investment and Recovery Act grants, while the PETCO Foundation supplied money for the pet-adoption trailer and Animal Services pickup.

“The pickup will be used for education and enforcement involving large trucks,” Cook said.

Jeff Charter, the manager of the Petaluma Animal Shelter & Adoption Center, applied for the grant for the trailer after a pilot program to increase pet adoptions was successful. In 2009, the animal shelter began displaying animals up for adoption at the Petaluma PETCO store, and allowed them to interact with customers. They are housed at the store and taken care of by volunteers.

This increased public exposure helped to increase the number of animals adopted into good homes.

The mobile-adoption trailer will build open the success of the program by allowing animal shelter workers to bring animals up for adoption to special events and thereby enable more of them to be shown to the public.

“We have found that taking the animals to the public reaches people who might not otherwise consider adopting or make a special trip to the center,” Charter said. “The exposure is great for the animals, and allows us to pair adoptable animals with good homes.

“We are very thankful to PETCO for the donation that will allow us to continue this program.”

Concerned Petaluman Documents Police Excess and Failure

Friday, July 16th, 2010

originally published at www.watchsonomacounty.com

Petaluma crusader wants an honest town

BY LORI A. CARTER
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

John Hanania is on a crusade.

Yet another crusade, his critics say.

The Petaluma resident has been hounding city leaders for two years about what he calls a double standard in the Police Department’s enforcement of illegally tinted vehicle windows.

At the same time regular motorists are cited for the traffic infraction, several Police Department employees flout the law, driving their personal vehicles with after-market darkened front windows, he said.

“It’s not right,” he said recently just outside the department’s fenced parking lot, where several vehicles sported dimmed front windows in violation of the state’s vehicle code.

Hanania can point out multiple violations on city employees’ personal vehicles: lack of a front license plate, covered plates, missing mud flaps and more.

“Why is it that they allow this stuff to continue without tickets when they give the public citations?” he said. “I don’t like abuse of power.”

For the past few months, Hanania has engaged in a written back-and-forth with interim police Chief Danny Fish about his complaints. He has spoken at City Council meetings, called the city manager and met with police on several occasions. He has met with city council members dozens of times over the years.

Capt. Dave Sears said last week that his department has given its employees a deadline to fix their vehicles. No one has been cited.

“It’s a minor infraction. Our people who had those vehicles not in compliance, we asked them to take care of it,” he said. “Most of them have gotten it fixed. Some need some time.”

Sears said officers often give citizens a warning for violating the statute, which says the front driver’s and passenger windows cannot be covered by any film. Nine motorists were cited for the violation in March and April.

This battle isn’t the first for Hanania. His quarrels with the way the city does business go back at least 16 years, through more than half a dozen city managers and police chiefs.

In 1994, he fought a traffic ticket he got for what police said was an illegal left turn. He won in court and it sparked Hanania’s indignation.

In 1997 and 1998, he stood up against a proposal to install surveillance cameras in downtown’s Putnam Plaza, arguing the move was unfair to teenagers. The city increased police patrols but declined to put up cameras.

In 2003, he led a crusade against junked cars, recreational vehicles, boats and trailers being left on city streets past the three-day limit. The City Council voted twice to tighten enforcement of such eyesores.

Hanania also has been the target of police action. Disagreements with a neighbor led to vehicles owned by both families being towed, although Hanania maintains his were towed improperly.

Hanania filed a small claims lawsuit against the city on May 3, demanding the towing fees be returned. He parks several vehicles in the cul-de-sac where he lives and tries to move the vehicles around before they are ticketed, he said.

Some city employees say privately that his latest complaints are an effort to pressure the city to refund the towing fees. Hanania has filed a series of Public Records Act requests seeking police records on citations, among other things.

“I have a great deal of respect for a lot of the police,” he said. “But what they are doing isn’t right.”

One city councilman has come under Hanania’s fire. He said the front windows of Mike Harris’ car have been modified. Harris said he doesn’t know if they are illegally tinted.

“I have no idea,” he said. “I’m not a car guy. If they are, I’ll have them checked and have them fixed.

“I’ve spoken to John probably 50 times in the last seven years I’ve been on the council. John is a good guy and I enjoy my discussions with him,” Harris said. He declined to comment further because of the recent claim against the city. The small claims suit is scheduled for a hearing next month.