Oakland police chief candidates will face public in open forum

In a new twist to the long search for a permanent Oakland police chief, the civilian body responsible for choosing finalists for the job is opening the process to the public.

Not everything thinks that’s a great idea.

The open forum next Thursday will allow candidates for the full-time chief position — which has been vacant for just over a year — to be interviewed by members of the Oakland Police Commission, a group of volunteers with the power to establish a shortlist of prospects. It’s expected to shed light on the latest group of hopefuls to lead the embattled department, which is struggling to emerge from two decades of federal oversight.

It may also be a step toward resolving a political standoff between the civilian-led commission and Mayor Sheng Thao — tensions that have persisted since last February when she fired then-Chief LeRonne Armstrong over his response to an internal OPD scandal.

Members of the public will likely be able to ask questions of the candidates at the 6:30 p.m. forum at Oakland City Hall. That part of the plan has its share of critics, who contend that conducting the search in public actually discourages transparency among the candidates.

“It was like a pageant on Zoom,” said Barry Donelan, an outspoken member of the Oakland police officers’ union, of the panel forum held before Armstrong’s hiring in 2021. “I don’t know what the returns are, and you also scare off candidates who don’t want to apply to an employer who is not their own.”

An open forum is a new approach to the current chief search. In December, the commission sent a list of three candidates to Thao’s office for consideration, but did not publicize the names. At the time, Thao had said that she would review the finalists privately — a departure from the public interview process of her predecessor, former Mayor Libby Schaaf, who had held via a virtual panel of public-safety experts the last time a chief was hired.

Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao announces the firing of Oakland police Chief LeRonne Armstrong during a press conference at City Hall in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2023. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group) (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group)

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