Crime & Safety

New Police Chief Chosen For Troubled Vallejo Police Department

A deputy police chief from another Bay Area department has been tapped for the job vacated in June by Chief Andrew Bidou.

Shawny Williams, deputy police chief for the San Jose Police Department, has been tapped to serve as the new chief of the Vallejo Police Department.
Shawny Williams, deputy police chief for the San Jose Police Department, has been tapped to serve as the new chief of the Vallejo Police Department. (Photo courtesy Vallejo Police Department)

VALLEJO, CA — A San Jose deputy police chief has been tapped to lead the troubled Vallejo Police Department, which had its chief step down earlier this year amid controversy over police shootings and allegations of unconstitutional policing.

San Jose Deputy Police Chief Shawny Williams, who heads the department's investigations division, will be appointed chief pending required background checks, Vallejo city manager Greg Nyhoff announced on Friday.

In a statement, Nyhoff called Williams "a solid professional with a stellar reputation who received broad accolades from our interview panels. I am excited to have Chief Williams and our leadership team."

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Williams will take over for Chief Andrew Bidou, who joined the Vallejo Police Department as chief in 2014.

Shawny Williams, deputy police chief for San Jose, has been chosen to serve as the new chief of police for Vallejo (Photo courtesy Vallejo Police Department)

Bidou announced his retirement in June after a series of controversial incidents, including Officer David McLaughlin's violent arrest in January of U.S. Marines veteran Adrian Burrell for filming on his own front porch and the February shooting of Willie McCoy, who was found unconscious in his car in a Taco Bell drive-through.

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Williams will have to contend with the aftermath of these incidents, which has led the city to call in the U.S. Department of Justice's Community Relations Service.

In particular, the McCoy shooting led to a lawsuit by civil rights attorney John Burris, which called for the Police Department to be placed under federal receivership for what Burris said was a broad pattern of unconstitutional policing by the department.

Williams has been with the San Jose Police Department for 26 years. As head of the operations division, he oversees 190 officers — a larger staff than the entire Vallejo Police Department, which employs about 120 officers.

Since Bidou retired in June, former Fairfield police Chief Joseph Allio has served in an interim capacity.

— Bay City News Service

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