Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles police accidentally release photos of undercover officers to watchdog website

Hamid Khan of Stop LAPD Spying Coalition holds a Feb. 1 news conference with other organizations including Black Lives Matter to oppose Mayor Karen Bass’ decision to reappoint Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore.

LOS ANGELES — In a still-unfolding drama that has reached its top ranks, the Los Angeles Police Department accidentally released the names and photos of numerous undercover officers to a watchdog group that posted them on its website.

The controversy began late last week when the Stop LAPD Spying Coalition launched a searchable online database — called Watch the Watchers — of more than 9,300 city police officers’ photos, complete with their names, ethnicity, rank, date of hire, division/bureau and badge numbers. The group called the site the first of its kind in the country.

Stop LAPD Spying officials said they believe police officers are not entitled to the same expectation of privacy as other residents because of their status as civil servants. They said in an interview about the site that what they published was obtained through a public records request by

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