It鈥檚 not often that a public official admits that the agency they oversee has a transparency problem.

But that鈥檚 exactly what Honolulu Police Chief Louis Kealoha did on Thursday during a press conference about HPD鈥檚 domestic violence policies.

鈥淭he reason we have all this second guessing and confusion is because sometimes the police department isn鈥檛 as transparent as we should be,鈥 Kealoha told reporters.

It鈥檚 also one of the reasons many people have said they鈥檝e lost trust in HPD, especially when it comes to the agency investigating and disciplining its own officers.

The department has come under fire as of late for how it has handled the Sgt. Darren Cachola domestic violence case.

HPD Police Chief Louis Kealoha ponders a question from the media during a news conference concerning domestic violence.

PF Bentley/Civil Beat

Cachola was recently caught on a surveillance video taking multiple swings at his girlfriend in a Waipahu restaurant.

He鈥檚 currently under investigation by HPD as are the officers who responded to the incident because no arrests were made and questions have been raised about proper protocol being followed.

But the department has a long history of protecting its officers from the public eye when they break the rules, in part due to the strong police union.

(For more on that you can read Civil Beat鈥檚 investigative series, In the Name of the Law, that examines the lack of transparency surrounding police misconduct.)

Now, Kealoha is considering opening up his department to more scrutiny, at least when it comes to its policies and procedures.

During the press conference, he said he鈥檚 been in discussions with others to post HPD鈥檚 policies online for the public to view.

That would be a big change for the department, which today charges for access to those policies and sometimes redacts certain information from the documents, which is also charged to the person requesting the document.

鈥淲e support any efforts toward greater transparency in government.” 鈥 Dan Gluck, ACLU of Hawaii attorney

For example, Civil Beat in the past requested 鈥 and paid for 鈥 HPD鈥檚 policies on officer-involved shootings and use of force. Passages and sometimes pages are blacked out of those documents.

Dan Gluck is the senior staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Hawaii. He鈥檚 has also been been charged for access to HPD鈥檚 policies, including those regarding response to school violence, crime scene investigations and the Hawaiian Sovereignty Movement.

The ACLU posts all of these policies after receiving them from HPD, but Gluck said he would welcome having that information made widely available.

鈥淲e support any efforts toward greater transparency in government,鈥 Gluck said. 鈥淭o the extent that HPD wants to make more of its policies and procedures available to the public that鈥檚 probably a good step.鈥

Kealoha said there are more than 200 policies. The department still hasn鈥檛 decided whether it will follow through with its idea putting all that information online.

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