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San Francisco Police Union Demands Chief's Resignation Over Raid Of Journalist's Home

San Francisco Police Chief William Scott answers questions during a May 21 news conference. Scott has apologized for a raid on a freelance journalist's home.
Eric Risberg
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AP
San Francisco Police Chief William Scott answers questions during a May 21 news conference. Scott has apologized for a raid on a freelance journalist's home.

Updated Saturday at 5:15 p.m. ET

The San Francisco Police Officers' Association is calling for the city's police chief, William Scott, to resign over the raid of a freelance journalist's home and office.

In a statement released on Saturday, the police union wrote, "It is time for Chief Scott to go. There's no other way around it."

Scott had issued an apology Friday for a recent raid on the home of a freelance journalist, Bryan Carmody, in connection with the unauthorized leak of a police report about the death of the city's former public defender, Jeff Adachi.

He told the San Francisco Chronicle that applications for warrants to search Carmody's home did not adequately identify him as a journalist. Scott also said the officers who executed the warrants violated department policy by not first consulting with the district attorney's office.

The police union said Scott knew Carmody was a journalist, ordered the investigation and deceived the author of the search warrant about Carmody's press status.

In a statement, the union said, "Chief Scott not only followed every twist and turn of the investigation, but he knew every element of the investigation, directed the investigation and has clearly either come down with the most debilitating case of amnesia or is flat-out not telling the truth about his direct involvement and the horribly flawed direction he gave to find the leak of the police report."

"A true leader accepts responsibility," the statement continued.

The sudden death of 59-year-old Adachi in February, the subsequent leak of a police report, and a May 10 police raid executed with a sledgehammer has roiled local sensibilities in a city that takes pride in its reputation as a progressive haven for free expression and respect for the First Amendment.

Scott told the San Francisco Chronicle that the searches of Carmody's home and office were probably illegal, saying, "I'm sorry it happened."

In a statement issued late Friday, Scott said he is asking outside agencies for an independent criminal investigation of his department to determine the source of a leak about the death of Adachi. The former public defender had been critical of the police. Scott said he is concerned about the lack of due diligence by his department investigators in obtaining search warrants and the possible violation of California's law that shields reporters from divulging their sources.

The controversy has dogged the police department and Mayor London Breed ever since officers, armed with warrants, appeared at Carmody's home and used a sledgehammer on the front gate of his home, seizing his computers, phones and other devices. Police handcuffed and detained Carmody for several hours, interrogating him about how he had come to possess a police report on Adachi's death.

As NPR's Laurel Wamsley reported,

"Within hours of Adachi's collapse in a San Francisco apartment, details from a leaked police investigation into his death were already showing up in news reports, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

"A number of the details in the police report were salacious, suggesting that perhaps one or more members of the police department were trying to tarnish the reputation of Adachi, who was known as a police watchdog and fierce advocate for criminal justice reform. In San Francisco, the public defender is an elected position.

"The city's supervisors harshly criticized the police department for the improper leak of the report. Adachi's widow called the release 'despicable.'

"The coroner later determined that Adachi died as the result of an accidental overdose of cocaine and alcohol."

Carmody's attorneys, Ben Berkowitz and Tom Burke, responded to Scott's apology Friday night with a statement.

"Having represented Bryan in this action, we are pleased to see that Chief Scott apologized to Mayor Breed and to the people of San Francisco. We think he owes an apology to Mr. Carmody also," the statement said.

Berkowitz and Burke added, "We were also encouraged to see that Mayor Breed called for an independent, external investigation of the San Francisco Police Department's conduct in this matter. There needs to be real reform in the Department to ensure that the SFPD respects the First Amendment and the independence of a free press."

Scott's apology is a reversal from just two days ago when he suggested that Carmody had been involved in a criminal conspiracy to obtain the police report. Last week, he defended the raid.

The San Francisco controversy has set off a firestorm over the First Amendment and protections of press freedom.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Richard Gonzales is NPR's National Desk Correspondent based in San Francisco. Along with covering the daily news of region, Gonzales' reporting has included medical marijuana, gay marriage, drive-by shootings, Jerry Brown, Willie Brown, the U.S. Ninth Circuit, the California State Supreme Court and any other legal, political, or social development occurring in Northern California relevant to the rest of the country.