The Antioch Police Department faces a complete overhaul through a federal settlement that mandates independent oversight, enhanced training, and early warning systems after a racist texting scandal exposed deep-seated corruption, multiple criminal convictions, and systemic abuse that shattered community trust.
The City of Antioch has reached a landmark federal settlement that will fundamentally transform its police department after explosive revelations of racist text messaging, excessive force, and evidence falsification led to multiple officer convictions and shattered public trust. The agreement, announced Friday, represents one of the most comprehensive police reform mandates in recent California history.
This settlement resolves a civil rights lawsuit filed in 2023 on behalf of residents who claimed they were targeted by Antioch police officers. The case emerged from an FBI and county prosecutor investigation launched in March 2022 that uncovered a culture of racism and violence within the department, as documented by The New York Post.
The Settlement’s Core Reforms
The agreement mandates three critical structural changes designed to prevent future abuses:
- Enhanced Training Programs: Comprehensive retraining on constitutional policing, de-escalation techniques, and implicit bias
- Independent Review Board: Creation of civilian oversight to handle complaints and monitor officer conduct
- Early Warning System: Implementation of technology to identify problematic behavior patterns before they escalate
Antioch City Manager Bessie Marie Scott stated the settlement “ensures sustainable transparency measures and updates core policies to modernize how APD continues to provide constitutional policing services to the residents of Antioch.”
Explosive Text Messages Reveal Department Culture
The investigation uncovered shocking text exchanges among 45 Antioch police officers that revealed a deeply entrenched culture of racism and violence. Officers referred to suspects as “gorillas” and joked about using excessive force against individuals who had surrendered or were asleep.
According to federal indictments, officers laughed about setting police dogs on compliant suspects and shooting them with “less-lethal” projectile launchers. These revelations fundamentally undermined community trust and exposed systemic problems within the department’s leadership and oversight structures.
Criminal Convictions and Fallout
The scandal resulted in multiple criminal convictions that demonstrate the severity of the misconduct:
- Devon Christopher Wenger: Sentenced to 7.5 years for conspiracy to injure residents, steroid distribution, and obstruction of justice
- Morteza Amiri: Received 7 years for maiming someone with his police dog, falsifying reports, and education fraud
- Eric Rombough: Pleaded guilty and testified against colleagues; sentencing scheduled for January 2025
John Burris, the attorney who filed the civil rights lawsuit, noted that “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.”
Monetary Settlements and Community Impact
Earlier this year, 23 plaintiffs in the lawsuit reached a $4.6 million settlement with Antioch for monetary damages. The city had already begun reform efforts in January by hiring a consultant to update policies and procedures as part of an agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice.
Antioch, a city of 115,000 residents located 45 miles east of San Francisco, has undergone significant demographic changes over the past 30 years, transforming from a predominantly white community to a diverse population. The racist texts and abuse specifically targeted this changing community, creating deep divisions between police and residents.
National Implications for Police Reform
The Antioch case represents a growing trend of federal intervention in local police departments plagued by systemic misconduct. The settlement’s emphasis on independent oversight and early warning systems mirrors reform models implemented in other cities facing similar challenges.
Unlike temporary measures that often fail to create lasting change, the Antioch agreement includes mechanisms for continuous monitoring and accountability. The independent review board represents a significant shift toward civilian oversight, while the warning system aims to identify problematic officers before their behavior escalates to criminal conduct.
Path Forward for Antioch
The settlement comes at a critical juncture for Antioch as the city works to rebuild trust between law enforcement and the community. The reforms mandated by the agreement will require years of implementation and monitoring to ensure they achieve their intended effect.
Legal experts note that while the settlement addresses structural issues, the true test will be whether the cultural transformation within the department matches the procedural changes. The involvement of federal monitors and independent reviewers provides a framework for sustained accountability that previous reform efforts have lacked.
The Antioch police reform settlement represents a watershed moment for constitutional policing in California. As communities across the nation grapple with similar challenges, the comprehensive nature of this agreement offers a potential blueprint for addressing systemic law enforcement corruption while providing meaningful accountability for past abuses.
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