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The Riders Come Out at Night

Brutality, Corruption, and Cover-up in Oakland

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the Polk Award–winning investigative duo comes "a meticulously researched and enraging account" (Shane Bauer, New York Times bestselling author) of the systematic corruption and brutality within the Oakland Police Department, and the more than two-decades-long saga of attempted reforms and explosive scandals.
No municipality has been under court oversight to reform its police department as long as the city of Oakland. It is, quite simply, the edge case in American law enforcement.

The Riders Come Out at Night is the culmination of over twenty-one years of fearless reporting. Ali Winston and Darwin BondGraham shine a light on the jackbooted and sadistic cops known as "The Riders," and the lack of political will and misguided leadership that have conspired to stymie meaningful reform. The authors trace the history of Oakland since its inception through the lens of the city's police department, through the Palmer Raids, McCarthyism, and the Civil Rights struggle, the Black Panthers and crack eras, to Oakland's present-day revival.

Those who have fought for reform are also revealed, including Keith Batt, a wide-eyed rookie cop turned whistleblower, who was unwittingly partnered with the leader of the Riders, and Jim Chanin and John Burris, two dedicated civil rights attorneys. Meanwhile, Oakland's deep history of law enforcement corruption, reactionary politics, and social movement organizing is retold through historical figures like Black Panther Huey Newton, drug kingpin Felix Mitchell, district attorney and future Supreme Court Justice Earl Warren, and Mayor Jerry Brown.

"As thrilling as the best noir fiction" (Whiting Foundation, 2021 Creative Nonfiction Grant Jury), The Riders Come Out at Night is the story of one city and its police department, but it's also the story of American policing—and where it's headed.
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    • Library Journal

      August 1, 2022

      George Polk Award--winning journalists Winston and BondGrahan chronicle brutality and corruption within the Oakland Police Department over 13 years, even as the department was under the longest-running federal reform program in the United States. They focus on a group of officers dubbed the Riders, who felt justified in using violence to address crime. Winner of a 2021 Creative Nonfiction grant from the Whiting Foundation.

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 7, 2022
      Reporters Winston and BondGraham debut with a comprehensive look at why the Oakland, Calif., police department has been under federal oversight for two decades, longer than any other department in the country. Sketching the history of Oakland’s insular “cop culture” from early crackdowns on labor movements through the war on drugs, the authors spotlight the Riders, a group of police officers who abused and framed predominantly Black suspects in the 1990s. Rookie police officer Keith Batt exposed four of the Riders, leading to their expulsion from the force (though none were convicted of misconduct charges), and civil rights attorneys Jim Chanin and John Burris sued the department on behalf of 119 victims, resulting in the 2003 “consent decree” requiring reforms under the supervision of independent monitors. In granular detail, the authors describe the fits and starts of the department’s efforts at reform, taking note of improvements in diversity training and transparency, as well as fatal police shootings of unarmed suspects, a botched SWAT team raid that resulted in four officers’ deaths, and other scandals. Though occasionally plodding, this impressive work of reportage highlights the challenges of changing police culture. Agent: David Patterson, Stuart Krichevsky Literary.

    • Kirkus

      December 1, 2022
      A searching history of the central problems of policing in America, focused on one once-notorious department. It didn't take the killing of George Floyd to convince minority communities that in most places in America, the police are the enemy. This was especially true of Oakland, California, with a large Black and Latine population brutalized by a White-led police force. Down the chain of command, write Polk Award-winning journalists Winston and BondGraham in this deeply reported book, were the "Riders," who practiced vigilante justice in the streets, beating and torturing suspected drug dealers and other lawbreakers. As the narrative unfolds, one brave young rookie risks his career and life to expose these criminals with badges. The Oakland police were hardly alone. "If they are allowed to do so--or encouraged, as they so often are--police will frequently subject a society's poor and racially oppressed to violence, surveillance, and harassment, all in the name of maintaining social order," write the authors. Thankfully, the whistleblowing led to hard-won reforms. For one thing, the criminal cops were prosecuted in 2002. One disappeared, probably deep inside Mexico, and has never been found, while the others were fired. (One became a military contractor in Iraq, and another joined a distant police force.) Meanwhile, the Oakland Police Department became something of a ward of the state, overseen by the federal court. While still not quite a model, OPD has changed markedly. Its records are transparent, its officers no longer terrorize the community, the N-word is no longer uttered by contemptuous cops, and, even under criticism, OPD "never attempted to punish the city's residents with a de-policing backlash." The wholly timely--if surely controversial--lesson that the authors draw, in a time of reform, is that all police departments require at least some outside, civilian monitoring. A fiercely argued case that the police can't be trusted to police themselves--and that such policing is essential.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      October 16, 2023
      Journalists Winston and BondGraham, who together won the 2017 George Polk Award for Local Reporting in Oakland, offer an explosive, gut-wrenching narrative account of brutality and corruption in the Oakland Police Department, ripping back a curtain for readers and plunging them into the heart of the terror that the so-called ""Riders"" inflicted on the Oakland community in the 1990s and early 2000s. Off-the-clock beatdowns, drug planting, Internal Affairs cover-ups: the stark reality of what the Riders got away with for so long will shock some readers, devastate others, and leave every one with aching knowledge. The authors seamlessly turn their years of journalistic coverage into a compelling, well-paced narrative account of crimes almost too vile to be believed. Winston and BondGraham's care for the victims, and their dogged pursuit of the deeper story, make this a must-read for anyone interested in criminal justice reform and a book that easily threads the needle between nonfiction journalism and true crime. For readers of His Name is George Floyd by Robert Samuels and Toluse Olorunnipa, Say Nothing by Patrick Radden Keefe, and When They Call You a Terrorist by Patrisse Khan-Cullors and asha bandele.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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