City of Vallejo v. Super. Ct.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 27, 2025
DocketA171451
StatusPublished

This text of City of Vallejo v. Super. Ct. (City of Vallejo v. Super. Ct.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Vallejo v. Super. Ct., (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 6/27/25 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

CITY OF VALLEJO, Petitioner, v. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SOLANO COUNTY, A171451 Respondent; (Solano County AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION Superior Ct. No. FCS059257) OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA, Real Party in Interest.

AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION OF NORTHERN CALIFORNIA, Petitioner, v. A171570 THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SOLANO (Solano County COUNTY, Superior Ct. No. FCS059257) Respondent; CITY OF VALLEJO, Real Party in Interest.

In 2020, allegations surfaced that certain officers within the Vallejo Police Department were bending a point of their star-shaped badge after using potentially lethal fire power during a police action. The department

1 promptly retained an independent third party to investigate the alleged practice, but did not make the results of the investigation public. The American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California (ACLU) filed a request for records related to the investigation, including the written report prepared by the investigator, under the California Public Records Act (CPRA) (Gov. Code, § 7921.000 et seq.). The department released some records but maintained the bulk of the materials sought—including the investigative report—are confidential peace officer personnel records statutorily exempt from public disclosure under the Pitchess 1 statutes. (Pen. Code, §§ 832.5, 832.7, 832.8.) 2 The ACLU filed a petition for writ of mandate in the superior court challenging the sufficiency of the department’s response. After extensive briefing and several hearings, the court ordered disclosure of portions of the investigative report and related materials, with identifying information regarding officers and witnesses, and their families, redacted. Neither party is satisfied with the superior court’s ruling, and both seek writ review by this court. The principal issue before us is whether the materials sought by the ACLU are records “relating to” the “report, investigation, or findings” of “an incident involving the discharge of a firearm at a person by a peace officer or custodial officer,” and therefore subject to public disclosure under 2018 amendments to the Pitchess statutes, codified as section 832.7, subdivision (b). The secondary issue is whether, if we conclude the requested records are subject to public disclosure under section 832.7, subdivision (b), police officer names were properly ordered redacted.

1 Pitchess v. Superior Court (1974) 11 Cal.3d 531. 2All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.

2 We conclude the documents sought are not confidential personnel records, but instead personnel records that are now subject to public disclosure under section 832.7, subdivision (b). We further conclude the redaction of officer names cannot be sustained on the grounds relied on by the superior court. However, given the magnitude of the potentially disclosable materials in these proceedings, and the minimal briefing by the parties on issues of redaction, we shall remand for further proceedings in this regard. BACKGROUND 3 The Badge Bending Investigation The parties largely agree on the pertinent facts. In July 2020, Open Vallejo, a local news outlet, published an article alleging a secretive group of officers within the police department “commemorated fatal shootings with beers, backyard barbecues, and by bending the points of their badges each time they kill[ed] in the line of duty.” (King, Vallejo police bend badges to mark fatal shootings (July 28, 2020) Open Vallejo [as of June 27, 2025] (Open Vallejo).) Members of this group reportedly called a badge modified in this way a “ ‘Badge of Honor.’ ” One source described the purpose of the practice as follows: “ ‘The cops who shoot someone bend the tabs on their badges[.]’ . . . ‘Kind of like a notch on the bedpost. It’s an indicator to each other how many hoodlums they’ve shot. They think it’s funny.’ ” (Ibid.) An attorney for the Vallejo Police Officers

3 To the extent our discussion references information that was filed with this court under seal, we modify our sealing orders to allow for its dissemination in light of our conclusion that the materials sought are disclosable under section 832.7, subdivision (b). All other portions of the sealed record shall remain sealed pending further order of this court. 3 Association disagreed with this supposed purpose of the practice, stating it had been done to signify officers “ ‘surviving officer-involved shootings’ and not deaths by their hand.” (St. Clair, VPOA attorney says badge bending occurred at Vallejo Police Department, but for a different reason (July 30, 2021) Vallejo Times Herald [as of June 27, 2025].) The media report of the badge-bending practice was made during a time of escalating concern about the culture within the city’s police department. The previous month, then-Attorney General Xavier Becerra had announced an “ ‘expansive review’ ” of the department’s policies, practices, and procedures. (Open Vallejo.) Current and former employees reportedly described “a department where bullies thrive[d], whistleblowers [were] dealt with harshly, and the pressure to shoot and kill civilians [was] strong.” (Ibid.) One current member of the department told Open Vallejo, “ ‘Some days I feel like I work with a bunch of thugs who take pleasure out of hurting people.’ ” (Ibid.) 4 Within days of the Open Vallejo article, the police department issued a press release announcing an independent, third-party investigation into the allegations of badge bending, a practice the chief of police called “ ‘very troubling and disturbing.’ ” The department subsequently hired former Sonoma County Sheriff Robert Giordano to conduct the investigation and make findings as to

4The ACLU referenced a number of other media reports and investigations on shootings by city officers. We need not, and do not, consider this material in resolving the issue before us.

4 whether any department policies were violated. The investigation was opened as an internal affairs investigation, and it focused on officers who had been involved in shootings during the previous 17 years. To this end, Giordano requested information from the department about officers involved in “ ‘critical incidents’ ” involving shootings. Fourteen officers were issued interview notices stating, “ ‘it is alleged that you potentially violated Vallejo Police Department policies . . . including but not limited to . . . Department Policy 300,’ ” which governs the use of deadly force. (Italics omitted.) The investigator ultimately prepared a 167-page report with one supplement and 27 attached exhibits (the “investigative report”). The investigator found the alleged practice of badge bending had, indeed, occurred and “ ‘related to the officer’s action of firing a weapon in a critical incident regardless of whether a suspect was hit, injured, or killed.’ ” He further found, however, there was insufficient evidence to characterize the practice as celebratory of shooting incidents. Rather, he found the practice was “ ‘a manner of recognizing an officer involved in a shooting who did their job in a stressful situation, did not “run from the fight,” and survived.’ ” The investigator nevertheless found the practice troubling and that it presented a problem for the department, stating, “Modifying the badge to mark an officer’s engagement and survival in a critical shooting incident . . .

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