
A federal judge ordered the sheriff’s department Wednesday to unseal internal records on people’s deaths in jails, siding with The San Diego Union-Tribune and other media outlets seeking documents previously turned over to a plaintiff’s lawyers in litigation that was recently settled.
But the documents, which are related to deaths and injuries sustained by 12 people in San Diego County custody, will not be immediately released to the public.
Instead, Judge Jinsook Ohta ruled, records of the sheriff’s Critical Incident Review Board, or CIRB, will be provided to the news organizations’ legal team by next Wednesday. The team will then meet with county lawyers within two weeks to determine what details to redact in the interest of privacy.
“There are valid and compelling reasons for the public to be informed about conditions inside the county jails,” the judge said. “The public has an interest in those documents.”
The sheriff’s Critical Incident Review Board is made up of the department’s top leaders. It meets regularly to review allegations of misconduct and excessive force among deputies and also to consider legal threats against the department.
Ohta said a final order would be entered into the court docket soon. The written decision also would address a request by county lawyers to stay her ruling so they could appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit, she said.
At issue is a set of reports that were filed under seal in a civil case against San Diego County brought by Frankie Greer, who was seriously injured while being held at the Men’s Central Jail in 2018.
The lawsuit was settled for $7.75 million in March before the question of whether the CIRB reports should be unsealed was resolved. The Union-Tribune, Voice of San Diego and Prison Legal News magazine intervened later in March to request that the records be released.
San Diego attorney Timothy Blood, one of the lawyers who filed the request on behalf of the news organizations, praised the decision outside court.
“Everything the public would be interested in reviewing would be unsealed,” he said. “The public can start the dialogue and analyses that the sheriff promised but isn’t doing as far as examining the jail deaths and injuries.”
Steven Boehmer, one of the private-sector lawyers hired to defend the county in the Greer case, declined to comment on the ruling.
“I don’t have authority to make a statement,” he said after the hearing.
The decision comes as a growing number of people have expressed an interest in seeing the findings from the sheriff’s internal review .
While running for sheriff last year, Kelly Martinez pledged to release CIRB reports to the public if she was elected. But after winning in November, Martinez reversed course and decided to instead release only brief summaries of the internal meetings.
Separate reports from the California State Auditor and the county’s Citizens’ Law Enforcement Review Board also recommended that the CIRB reports be released publicly. At the same time, a bill working through the state Legislature also would require the reports be disclosed.
Lawyers for San Diego County argued that the records should be withheld under the attorney-client privilege and that disclosing them would undermine the sheriff’s department’s ability to examine missteps and misconduct by staff.
“These communications were made in private meetings between 2011 and 2017,” attorney Carrie Mitchell told Ohta. “People felt free to express their opinion openly and honestly without being judged 10 years later.”
But the judge disagreed.
“The court is not convinced by the arguments here that releasing the records would have a chilling effect” on future sheriff’s department deliberations, she said.
The lawyers who represented Greer had tried unsuccessfully to obtain CIRB reports in two earlier jail-death lawsuits. But in 2021, a federal appeals court ruled in an unrelated case that businesses and public entities cannot withhold such records under the attorney-client privilege.
In that case, the court said documents need to a “primary-purpose test,” meaning that in order for a record to be reasonably withheld, delivering legal advice must be its primary purpose — not just one of several purposes.
Greer’s lawyers argued that the Critical Incident Review Board serves multiple purposes: reviewing staff behavior for possible discipline or termination and also evaluating potential legal threats to the sheriff’s department.
They also submitted a sworn declaration from former Cmdr. David Myers, who served on the internal review .
“I was never given warnings not to share the documents or to keep them confidential or secret,” wrote Myers, who ran unsuccessfully for sheriff in 2018 and again in 2022. “I was never told the documents were privileged.”
Myers also said in his declaration that CIRB documents were not routinely secured. At one point when moving into a new office, he said, he found old review board records loose and discarded.
Lawyers for the Union-Tribune and the other news outlets will review the CIRB reports from a dozen other cases once they are received from the county. Both sides will then propose specific rules over how medical and other private information will be handled.
If the two sides agree to a process that would protect the subjects, the CIRB reports from the 12 other deaths and injuries could be released in the coming weeks. Other documents generated by the review board would not be part of that potential release.
However, the county lawyers indicated they plan to appeal Ohta’s ruling, which would likely delay any release of the reports.
Whether to appeal will be up to the Board of Supervisors, which is responsible for approving the county’s legal strategy.
San Diego County has the highest jail-mortality rate among California’s largest counties, the Union-Tribune found in 2019 in a six-month investigation.
Taxpayers have now spent almost $60 million on legal settlements for jail deaths, injuries and other misconduct by sheriff’s deputies in the past five years, civil court records show.
Last year, a record 20 people died in San Diego County jails, including one man who was comionately released hours before he died.
So far in 2023, six men and women have died in sheriff’s department custody.