SAN JOSE (BCN)– San Jose’s Independent Police Auditor and former judge LaDoris

Cordell, known for her criticism of “curb sitting” detainees by San Jose

police, will retire as auditor as of July 3, Mayor Sam Liccardo’s office

announced Wednesday.

Cordell, who has held the position that monitors the San Jose

Police Department for the past five years, has informed Liccardo and the City

Council of her intention to retire, Liccardo spokeswoman Michelle McGurk

said.

Liccardo, who was in Washington, D.C. Wednesday, in a prepared

statement thanked Cordell for her service and said that as auditor she

“increased outreach to all of San Jose’s communities and encouraged

thoughtful discussion of policy issues at a time of national debate over

public safety.”

Cordell, whose annual salary is about $175,000, graduated from

Stanford Law School in 1974 and became the first African American woman to

serve as a judge in Northern California when Gov. Jerry Brown appointed her

to the municipal court bench in Santa Clara County in 1982, according to city

officials.

She won election as judge to the Superior Court in San Jose in

1988 and remained there for 19 years.

After her appointment as police auditor in 2010, Cordell sought to

focus on equality and fairness in policing, specifically enforcement stops

and the potential for people of color to be unfairly targeted, McGurk said.

In 2012, Cordell, in her IPA Year End report to the City Council

for 2011, criticized the police practice of “curb sitting,” or making people

stopped by officers to sit on the curb, claiming that blacks and Latinos may

have been detained that way disproportionately compared to people of other

ethnic groups.

She also complained that the process used by the Police

Department’s Internal Affairs unit to investigate police misconduct took too

long and needed to have fewer layers of review to remove potential biases

from intruding on complaints against officers.

That year, Cordell said that her outreach to the community,

including about 13,000 people, resulted in a 26 percent increase in

complaints about police conduct received by her office.

Then in 2013, Cordell reported that officers disciplined for

misconduct in 2012 had fallen to the lowest level since the IPA was formed 19

years earlier, with only 11 officers disciplined compared to 42 in 2011.

Cordell asked that the department revive a practice started by

former Chief Chris Moore in 2012 to document the names, ethnicities and other

information about persons detained by officers but not arrested, after Acting

Chief Larry Esquivel suspended the program in 2013.

In December 2013, San Jose State University president Mohammad

Qayoumi appointed Cordell to lead a task force to review alleged hate crimes

against a black freshman student by his four Caucasian dormitory roommates

and make recommendations on how to make the campus more welcoming and

tolerant.

Cordell chaired the 18-member task force, made up of students,

faculty and administrators, that met six times on campus to address race

relations at SJSU.

A fact-finding report for the task force, prepared by San

Francisco lawyer Myron Moye, found that the university met promptly with the

black student, relocated and suspended the four students and acted

appropriately “in accordance with applicable policies and past practices” but

that Qayoumi was not fully briefed about the incidents until six weeks after

they were reported.

Cordell, in the statement issued by Liccardo’s office, stated that

she was honored to serve as auditor and during her tenure she “strived to

increase the trust between the residents of San Jose and their police

department by advocating for policy changes that increased transparency of

the police force.”

She said following her retirement, she planed to write a book

about her years as a judge, pursue her artwork and her talents as a vocalist

and pianist with the African American Composers Initiative, a non-profit live

concert program in East Palo Alto that she co-founded.

McGurk said that the City Council would appoint Cordell’s

replacement and that Liccardo would shortly issue a memo detailing the

selection process.