What the Sheriff Promised, What the Sheriff Delivered
Citizens board, researchers rebuke sheriff for withholding jail death data San Diego's jails have killed more inmates per capita than any other large county in California for nearly two decades. Sheriff Kelly Martinez ran in 2022 promising reform, transparency, and outside audits. Three and a half years on, the auditors she promised to welcome say her office stonewalled them — and a federal judge has now sanctioned the county for destroying video evidence in a $16 million wrongful-death case. Voters next get a say in June 2028. SAN DIEGO · May 8, 2026 BOTTOM LINE UP FRONT: San Diego County's seven jails have recorded among the highest in-custody death rates in California for nearly two decades. A 2022 California State Auditor report found 185 inmates died from 2006 through 2020 — more deaths per average daily population than any other large county in the state — and faulted both the Sheriff's Department and the Citizens' Law Enforcement Review Board ...