biglocalnews
biglocalnews.bsky.social
biglocalnews
@biglocalnews.bsky.social
Data, tools and collaborations that empower journalists to better cover their community. A project at @Stanford University.
Reposted by biglocalnews
Because this database is for everyone. Victims of police violence, law enforcement hiring officials, civil rights advocates, researchers, attorneys and journalists can now investigate these once-secret records for themselves. 6/
CLEAN - San Francisco Chronicle
Search California public records about law enforcement violence and misconduct.
clean.sfchronicle.com
August 4, 2025 at 4:23 PM
Reposted by biglocalnews
Once files are grouped together, we use LLMs to better extract key facts about each case. Data like dates, case type and providing agency help people filter through the nearly 12,000 cases of police force and misconduct. 5/
CLEAN - Los Angeles Times
Search California public records about law enforcement violence and misconduct.
clean.latimes.com
August 4, 2025 at 4:20 PM
Reposted by biglocalnews
We get police reports, IA investigations, 911 calls, autopsies, taser logs. Files vary significantly in format and level of information, coming from hundreds of agencies. We use LLMs and computer vision to extract key data from files, which helped us place files into nearly 12,000 cases. 4/
CLEAN - CalMatters
Search California public records about law enforcement violence and misconduct.
clean.calmatters.org
August 4, 2025 at 4:19 PM
Reposted by biglocalnews
With journalists across the state I co-founded the California Reporting Project. We’ve filed more than 3,500 requests and fought for transparency in court.

While reporting, journalists and data scientists also built tools to organize files, extract data and prepare them for publishing. 3/
California Reporting Project
The California Reporting Project is a multi-newsroom collaborative formed to research and report on law enforcement documents that became public Jan. 1, 2019 under California’s new transparency law.
projects.scpr.org
August 4, 2025 at 4:17 PM
Reposted by biglocalnews
State law changed in 2019, allowing people to request internal investigations into police violence and misconduct for the first time.

We knew collecting this information would require fielding hundreds of record requests and working with thousands of documents.

So we decided to work together. 2/
Thousands of Once-Secret Police Records Are Now Public. Here’s How You Can Use Them | KQED
The database, which includes about 12,000 cases detailing police misconduct and serious use of force from hundreds of agencies, is the first of its kind in California.
www.kqed.org
August 4, 2025 at 4:14 PM
Reposted by biglocalnews
This database is the product of 7 years of work by a multidisciplinary team of journalists, data scientists, lawyers and civil rights advocates.

We’re not done. We’re still requesting records + building new features at @biglocalnews.bsky.social @berkeleyjournalism.bsky.social @ucbids.bsky.social 7
August 4, 2025 at 4:28 PM