By Olga R. Rodriguez
Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — A Northern California metropolis whose police division got here beneath nationwide scrutiny after it was revealed that some officers shared racist and sexist texts, used extreme drive and falsified data has reached a settlement settlement to implement a collection of reforms, officers introduced on Dec. 19.
The City of Antioch, within the San Francisco Bay Area, will improve police coaching applications, set up an unbiased assessment board to deal with complaints and implement a warning system to determine downside officers, in accordance with an settlement that settles a civil rights lawsuit filed in 2023.
| DOWNLOAD: 26 on 2026: A police management playbook
“This agreement allows the Antioch Police Department to start with a clean slate and oversee officers’ conduct and make sure they are compliant with new standards,” mentioned John Burris, who filed the criticism in federal courtroom on behalf of residents who mentioned they have been focused by Antioch cops.
Earlier in 2025, 23 individuals who have been a part of the lawsuit reached a $4.6 million settlement with Antioch for financial damages, Burris mentioned. In January 2025, town introduced it could rent a marketing consultant to replace its insurance policies, procedures and coaching on numerous subjects as a part of an settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice.
“A lot of the bad apples are gone, in jail, retired or left on their own, and there is a new command staff that seems committed to bring about change,” Burris mentioned.
Antioch City Manager Bessie Marie Scott mentioned in an announcement that the settlement settlement reinforces work already underway and “ensures sustainable transparency measures and updates core policies to modernize how APD continues to provide constitutional policing services to the residents of Antioch.”
The Federal Bureau of Investigation and county prosecutors in March 2022 launched an investigation into cops in Antioch and Pittsburg, a neighboring metropolis, over a broad vary of offenses. As a part of the investigation, officers launched racist and obscenity-laden textual content messages shared by 45 Antioch cops that shocked the group.
Officers referred to some suspects as “gorillas.” They additionally laughed and joked about harming individuals who apparently had surrendered or seemed to be asleep by setting a police canine on them or capturing them with a 40 mm “less-lethal” projectile launcher, in accordance with a federal indictment towards three former Antioch cops.
Federal prosecutors charged Morteza Amiri, Eric Rombough and Devon Christopher Wenger, saying the three former Antioch cops conspired between February 2019 and March 2022 “to injure, oppress, threaten and intimidate residents of Antioch, California” and later falsified stories in regards to the encounters.
Wenger was sentenced earlier this month to seven years and 6 months in federal jail for conspiring to injure, oppress, threaten, or intimidate residents of Antioch utilizing unreasonable drive, conspiring to distribute anabolic steroids, and obstructing justice, federal prosecutors mentioned.
Amiri, a former Antioch Ok-9 officer, was sentenced in June to seven years in jail for maiming somebody along with his police canine, falsifying stories on that case and being a part of a scheme to acquire pay raises from the Antioch Police Department for a college diploma he paid another person to acquire.
Rombough, accused of illegally capturing individuals along with his launcher, pleaded responsible and have become a authorities witness. He testified towards each Amiri and Wenger of their separate trials, the East Bay Times reported. He is scheduled to be sentenced on Jan. 13.
Antioch, a metropolis of 115,000 residents about 45 miles (72 kilometers) east of San Francisco, was as soon as predominantly white however has diversified within the final 30 years.
The girl mocked police and mentioned she’d “kill my kids if they ever became a cop,” in accordance with the East Greenwich police report
“That’s the goal of this, to really get ahead of what’s happening and remove as many surprises as possible,” St. Cloud Police Chief Douglas Goerke acknowledged
“Merry Christmas to the men and women of the NYPD who have delivered such an unprecedented reduction in violent crime this year,” NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch acknowledged
Syracuse Officer John Canestrare and Firefighter/EMT Rick Macheda carried out CPR for 10 minutes earlier than a pulse returned, saving the lady exterior a burning house

