Civilian Complaint Center
Civilian Complaint Center
Declaration and Donate $10
Review & Deliberate$20/ Session
The Civilian Complaint Center will take the Complaint and Declaration and find a Prosecutor that will take the case;
Ask;
What type of Complaint do you have? And How would you Resolve it, Civilian can schedule Review and Deliberate Sessions to Narrow? (Monetary and non-monetary or combo)
Prosecutors will Call the Civilian and Discuss the Case Worth? Settlement Opportunities and or (custom payment schedules) for non-monetary relief cases?
Declaration and Donate $10
Review & Deliberate$20/ Session
The Civilian Complaint Center will take the Complaint and Declaration and find a Prosecutor that will take the case;
Ask;
What type of Complaint do you have? And How would you Resolve it, Civilian can schedule Review and Deliberate Sessions to Narrow? (Monetary and non-monetary or combo)
Prosecutors will Call the Civilian and Discuss the Case Worth? Settlement Opportunities and or (custom payment schedules) for non-monetary relief cases?
Bounty Hunter
A bounty hunter is a private agent working for bonds who captures fugitives or criminals for a commission or bounty. The occupation, officially known as bail enforcement agent, or fugitive recovery agent, has traditionally operated outside the legal constraints that govern police officers and other agents of the state.
Citizen’s Arrest in California – Penal Code 837 PC California Penal Code 837 PC allows a private person to make a citizen’s arrest of a perpetrator who commits a misdemeanor in a citizen’s presence, or commits a felony and a citizen has reasonable cause to believe the perpetrator committed it. 837. A private person may arrest another:
1. For a public offense committed or attempted in his presence.
2. When the person arrested has committed a felony, although not in his presence.
3. When a felony has been in fact committed, and he has reasonable cause for believing the person arrested to have committed it. If a citizen decides to make a lawful arrest, there are certain procedures California law recommends the citizen to follow. Some include for the arresting person to:
inform the arrestee that he is under arrest, give the reason for the arrest, and express the authority for making the arrest.
888-381-1116
Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department
For general custody related questions and help with inmate location, call: (213) 473-6100
For Healthcare Concerns which require immediate assistance, please call the medical command center at: (213) 893-5544
Inmate Records will not be available for bookings that occured within the last 2 hours
Prosecution of illegal acts (racism)
The Police pay $100 Million a year for illegal and unwarranted arrest;

Video can’t be displayed
This video is not available.
Biggest Police Settlements

Video can’t be displayed
This video is not available.
The former Henry County police officer accused of choking Marrow during a traffic stop pleaded guilty in September 2020.
Settlement - $300,000

Video can’t be displayed
This video is not available.
The City Council Finance committee on Thursday signed off on more than $16 million in payouts to sue two more lawsuits filed against Chicago police.
Settlement - $16 Million

Video can’t be displayed
This video is not available.

Video can’t be displayed
This video is not available.
Settlement - $10 Million

Video can’t be displayed
This video is not available.
.

Video can’t be displayed
This video is not available.
$19 million settlement reached for Christian Glass case in Colorado

Video can’t be displayed
This video is not available.

Video can’t be displayed
This video is not available.
Metro agrees to pay nearly $250K in wrongful arrest settlement

Video can’t be displayed
This video is not available.
Woman Wins $57K Settlement After Suing for Wrongful Arrest

Video can’t be displayed
This video is not available.
California to pay $24 million settlement to family of Burbank man who died in police custody
The Office of Independent Review (OIR) issued a report detailing the Orange County Sheriff’s Department’s force policies, training and practice. While the report found that OCSD “has in place many critical components that effectively govern the use of force by its deputies,” the department is “out of step with best practices that would better enable its deputies to carry out their work in the most safe and effective manner.”
The report hits the department for not providing “enough information on de-escalation and other critical areas, including the use of lethal force.” These policies allow “avoid high-risk force practices,” including “avoidable high-risk force practices, like warning shots and what OCSD calls ‘alternative’ force.
The report hits the department for not providing “enough information on de-escalation and other critical areas, including the use of lethal force.” These policies allow “avoid high-risk force practices,” including “avoidable high-risk force practices, like warning shots and what OCSD calls ‘alternative’ force.