Seattle enters new era of police oversight as 13-Year federal supervision ends
Wed, 05/06/2026
The City of Seattle has reached what officials are calling a "defining milestone" in its long journey toward police reform. According to the Office of Inspector General (OIG) 2025 Annual Report out as of April 20, the formal lifting of the Federal Consent Decree in September 2025 has concluded 13 years of federal oversight, marking a transition to full local authority over the Seattle Police Department (SPD).
A Shift in Responsibility
For over a decade, a Federal Monitor oversaw SPD’s compliance with constitutional policing standards. Now, that responsibility rests squarely with the OIG. In her opening letter, Inspector General for Public Safety Lisa A. Judge characterized 2025 as a pivotal year that "signals the beginning of a new chapter for Seattle public safety".
"This moment reflects more than the end of court supervision," Judge stated, noting that the OIG was instrumental in revising use-of-force policies and institutionalizing de-escalation training during the Consent Decree era. However, she cautioned that the work is far from finished. "Progress is continuous and never complete," Judge wrote. "The progress achieved during the Consent Decree provides a strong foundation, while reminding us that trust between the community and law enforcement can improve",.
High-Stakes Audits and "Exemplary" Findings
The 2025 report highlights several critical audits that shaped public safety policy throughout the year. One of the most significant was an Audit of SPD Vehicle Pursuits, which earned the OIG an "Exemplary" Knighton Award from the Association of Local Government Auditors (ALGA),.
The audit revealed a startling trend: while SPD apprehended suspects in roughly half of its vehicle pursuits between 2021 and 2024, the majority of these captures resulted from suspects crashing or abandoning their vehicles rather than specific police intervention. The OIG also noted that SPD lacks the technology to disengage from pursuits while maintaining visual contact, a tool available in many comparable departments.
Other key oversight activities included:
- Surveillance Oversight: The OIG reviewed 11 technologies, including Automated License Plate Readers and "Wires",. New reviews are slated for 2026 to cover the city's recently acquired CCTV and Fusus Real-Time Crime Center software.
- The "Excited Delirium" Ban: In a major policy shift, the OIG recommended that SPD, the Fire Department, and the CARE team reject the term "excited delirium" and "acute behavior disorder" from all policies and trainings, citing the terms as medically unsound and disproportionately applied to Black men in custody.
- Body-Worn Video (BWV) Research: The OIG collaborated with Chicago’s OIG to publish a guide on Using Body-Worn Camera Footage as Evidence in Auditing (via the ALGA Quarterly) to standardize how civilian oversight bodies use video data.
Testing the New System: The Cal Anderson Event
The transition to local oversight was immediately tested in May 2025 following a rally at Cal Anderson Park that resulted in significant community concern and police use of force,. The OIG initiated a Sentinel Event Review (SER)—a rigorous tool that brings community members and law enforcement together to assess systemic failures.
The SER process identified 66 contributing factors to the escalation, ranging from park permitting issues to "unwarranted anticipatory defensiveness" by SPD. However, the process faced a setback when it was cut short due to a "violation of ground rules by a panelist," preventing the group from collectively finalizing all recommendations. Despite this, the OIG published a separate analysis identifying critical needs for better cultural leadership and tactical communication.
Accountability by the Numbers
The report also provides a transparent look at the city’s legal and disciplinary landscape:
- Police Misconduct: The OIG certified 96.9% of the Office of Police Accountability (OPA) investigations as thorough, timely, and objective in 2025,.
- Financial Impact: The City tracked 174 claims against SPD in 2025, with total payouts for claims reaching $411,221. Additionally, resolved labor lawsuits cost the city $4,256,000 in settlements.
- New Leadership: The appointment of Shon Barnes as the 38th Chief of Police marked a leadership transition that the OIG is navigating with "deliberate steps to build a collaborative yet independent relationship".
As Seattle moves forward, the OIG has launched a new web portal to allow residents to submit complaints and inquiries online more easily, receiving over 1,900 submissions in its first year,.
"OIG is committed to building trust and assuming key roles of federal oversight," Judge concluded, "with an unwavering dedication towards a safer Seattle".
For more information and to view the full 2025 Annual Report, visit www.seattle.gov/oig/reports
