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California promised accountability for jail deaths. What it delivered was another failure dressed up as reform.
Senate Bill 519, authored by then-Senator Toni Atkins, was sold as a turning point. A statewide office would finally review deaths in county jails. Families were told transparency was coming. Oversight would be independent. Lessons would be learned.
Nearly a year after the law took effect, the scorecard is damning: Not a single completed review.
This is not a startup problem. It is a design failure, rooted in concessions made by the bill’s sponsor, embraced by the state and enabled by silence from the Attorney General.
The sponsor knew that sheriffs investigating deaths in their own jails was a conflict. That was the premise of the bill. But instead of building a watchdog with real authority, the final law preserved sheriff control at every critical point.
In some California counties, the conflict is even more extreme. The elected sheriff is also the coroner, the official who determines the cause and manner of death. The same office that runs the jail decides whether a death was accidental, natural, suicidal, or the result of force. That structure would be unacceptable in almost any other context. California allowed it to persist, even while claiming to fix the problem.
The state’s new In-Custody Death Review Division can request records. It can issue recommendations. It cannot compel compliance. It cannot enforce deadlines. It cannot sanction obstruction. Those powers were stripped away to secure political comfort and law enforcement support.
Even worse, the law allows sweeping redactions. Sheriffs under review can still shape what the public sees. Transparency becomes conditional. Accountability becomes negotiable.
The predictable result is paralysis. Reviews stall when agencies delay records. Nothing happens when they resist. The state shrugs. The Attorney General stays quiet.
Californians have seen this before. In San Diego County, the Law Enforcement Review Board dismissed roughly two dozen jail death cases without review because it fell too far behind. No findings. No accountability. Delay won.
SB 519 scaled that failure statewide. An oversight system that collapses under a backlog is not broken. It is functioning as designed.
Responsibility does not stop with sheriffs. The Legislature weakened its own promise. The Governor signed it. And the Attorney General, charged with enforcing state law, has failed to act when counties obstruct or ignore the process.
An oversight law without enforcement invites defiance. Silence from the state’s top law enforcement officer validates it.
Families grieving loved ones do not need another task force. They need answers. Deputies working unsafe jails do not need platitudes. They need change.
California did not fail for lack of knowledge. It failed for lack of courage. Oversight without consequences is theater. Theater does not save lives.
If the state is serious, SB 519 must be fixed: Enforceable deadlines. Penalties for obstruction. Limits on redactions. Mandatory escalation to the Attorney General. And an end to allowing sheriffs to police themselves while wearing the coroner’s badge.
Until then, California’s promise of transparency remains empty. Another law. Another delay. Another system that protects institutions while people die.




