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Riverside Independent_12/7/2023

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Santa Claus to collect donations in Murrieta, visit PS Aerial Tramway

Girls interested in fire service careers invited to attend Cal Fire camps

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VISIT RIVERSIDEINDEPENDENT.COM

Thursday, December 07-December 13, 2023

Local. Relevant. Trusted.

VOL. 9,

NO. 149 150

Board votes to study costs, benefits of an independent coroner's office

California School Boards Association honors Riverside County programs, educators

By City News Service

By Staff

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he Board of Supervisors on Tuesday directed staff to conduct an analysis of the prospective pros and cons of separating the coroner's office from the Riverside County Sheriff's Department. The 5-0 vote came after multiple members of the public voiced their support for the proposal, with no comment from sheriff's representatives. "Separating the offices of the coroner and sheriff will enhance transparency and mitigate the appearance of a conflict of interest," said Lisa Matus, whose son Richard died while in custody. "The loss of my son was a painful chapter in my life. Not being able to see his body after his death was tragic. The body was not released from the sheriff's custody. They're really still in custody even after death." Matus said that while foul play was ruled out, there were a number of inconsistencies identified, including apparent "blunt force trauma," when the remains were finally released to the family for burial and autopsy findings were obtained. "Concerns about botched autopsy reports and coverups are serious," she said, pointing to a high turnover rate of pathologists in the coroner's office as a sign of administrative instability and low morale. "The coroner's office should be independent in the pursuit of justice for all," Vonya Quarles told the board. "There is an actual conflict every time there is sheriff

involvement with a death" and an autopsy is performed by a sheriff-supervised medical examiner. "Separation of these two offices is one way to bridge the growing divide between the people and the sheriff's department," Quarles said. "Separation is not an attack on law enforcement ... and it could not come at a better time in the county's history." Board Chairman Kevin Jeffries and Supervisor Manuel Perez jointly introduced the request for a separation study, noting in documents posted to the board's agenda that over the last year, residents had been regularly voicing concerns about coroner's operations during public comment sessions. "A recurring theme has been the potential conflict of interest — or even the perception of a conflict of interest — involved in having the coroner and the sheriff as one entity," the supervisors wrote. "Confidence in our law enforcement institutions and the perception of fairness are important goals, but before taking further specific steps, a complete cost-benefit analysis of options should be performed." The analysis of possibly changing the sheriff's administrative structure involves converting both the coroner and public administrator's offices into independent agencies. The public administrator handles the disposition of estates where there are no heirs. The offices have been under the sheriff's umbrella since Jan. 1, 1999, when an

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| Image courtesy of the Riverside County Sheriff's Department

ordinance adopted by the board roughly three years earlier took effect, placing the coroner and public administrator functions — and budgets — under the sheriff's control. Before that time, the offices had been stand- alone operations. The idea behind the consolidation was rooted in a Riverside County Commission on Reorganization report that suggested there were more advantages than disadvantages to integration. California is one of only three states nationwide that doesn't require county coroner's offices to be separate from sheriff's departments, according to the Executive Office. "While there is no evidence of any improprieties in Riverside County regarding the operations of the coroner's office under the sheriff, the optics of a potential conflict of interest can lead to a loss of confidence in our institutions," Jeffries and Perez wrote. Speakers highlighted the

inherent distrust people feel when a loved one has died in custody or been killed in a confrontation with deputies and the party's autopsy is then managed by a doctor on the sheriff's payroll. The sheriff's department is the leading target of lawsuits among county agencies and routinely has the highest annual payouts to litigants. The department is currently being sued by families whose relatives died while in the local correctional system over the last two to three years. The civil action acknowledged that most of the deaths stemmed from drug overdoses and suicides. Some of the complaints to the board in recent months have related to the coroner's reporting standards, protracted delays in providing autopsy determinations and other potential liabilities. The board did not set a specific timeline for the Executive Office to complete the separation study.

ight programs in Riverside County school districts and the Riverside County Office of Education were acclaimed at the recent California School Boards Association’s Annual Education Conference, officials announced Monday. The 2023 Golden Bell Awards, which were awarded at the conference that took place Nov. 30 to Dec. 2 in San Francisco, "honor the hard work and dedication of governing boards and district staff in creating innovative programs that improve student achievement and well-being in the state’s preK-12 public schools," according to a statement by Office of Education spokesman Craig Petinak. The Golden Bells also recognize quality "governance and boardsmanship" of individual board members and highlight the role education journalists play to promote issue-awareness in the community, Petinak said. “These outstanding programs in Riverside County schools are making a difference for our scholars and their families inside and outside of the classrooms,” Riverside County Superintendent of Schools Edwin Gomez said in a statement. “The innovative thinking and student-focused approach of these award-winning programs are building a solid foundation for our earliest learners, supporting staff See Riverside schools Page 27

82nd anniversary of 'Day of Infamy' to be observed Thursday in Norco

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By City News Service

he 82nd anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor will be commemorated Thursday during a ceremony in Norco, featuring patriotic music and recollections from that "Day of Infamy" that prompted the United States to go from neutral to Allied leader in World War II. The Lake Norconian Club Foundation is hosting the commemoration, which is free and open to the public, getting underway at 10 a.m. within Veterans Memorial Plaza at the George Ingalls Equestrian Event Center. The event is intended to honor all service branches, not only the U.S. Navy, which will have representatives from the nearby Corona Naval Surface Warfare Center, part of U.S. Naval Sea Systems Command, on hand. There will be multiple speakers, including Lake Norconian Club Foundation President Su Bacon and Norco City Councilman Kevin Bash, who will impart a brief history of Dec. 7, 1941, as well as pay homage to those who made the See 'Day of Infamy' Page 15


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