Agency profiles
Los Angeles P.D. logo
Official source profile

Los Angeles P.D.

Police Department | Los Angeles, CA

5
Tracked releases

Published incidents tied to this agency

37.2 days
Average release

5 measured releases

5/5
Within 45 days

Measured against this state's listed release deadline

4
Official videos

0 TBL video views

Release Timing

Calculated from published incidents with both an incident date and release date.

5 releases measured
Average release
37.2 days
Median release
45 days
Fastest release
6 days
Slowest release
45 days

Source Coverage

Published incidents
5
Official videos
4
Cited sources
22
Latest release
Jun 19, 2026

Latest Release Timing

Recent tracked releases with incident date, release date, and measured delay.

100% within 45 days

Agency Transparency Indicators

These indicators describe source availability and release infrastructure. They do not grade the agency or determine whether any action in a specific incident was lawful or unlawful.

9 / 10 located

Dedicated transparency page

Located

Agency maintains or links to a public critical incident, transparency, or release page.

Public video channel

Located

Agency uses YouTube, Vimeo, or a similar public platform for video releases.

Release timing visible

Located

Incident and release dates can be identified for at least one tracked release.

Source records linked

Located

Tracked releases include cited source records or source links.

Official video located

Located

At least one tracked release includes an official video source.

Official website available

Located

Users can identify the agency's official website for additional public-record context.

Public-record instructions available

Not located

Users can identify how to request public records or submit a records request.

Bodycam policy public

Located

A body-worn camera policy or related public-safety video policy is linked.

Use-of-force policy public

Located

A use-of-force policy or policy manual section is linked.

Complaint or oversight process linked

Located

Complaint process or oversight body information is linked.

Linked Incidents

5 published incidents tied to this agency.

Official SourceCritical
8:04
Incident Date
Jun 13, 2026
Released
Jun 19, 2026
TBL-CA-2026-0014

LAPD Releases Bodycam Video Of Dog Shooting, Canoga Park

The Los Angeles Police Department released body-worn video related to the fatal shooting of a dog in Canoga Park on June 13, 2026. Officers responding to a ‘Screaming Woman’ call at the 7500 block of Jordan Avenue encountered a large dog that charged at an officer, leading to an officer-involved shooting. The dog died at the scene, the Los Angeles Department of Animal Services took custody of the remains, and the incident is under investigation by the LAPD’s Force Investigation Division. No officers or civilians were reported injured.

Los Angeles P.D.Los Angeles, CAOfficer-Involved Shooting, Dog
Official SourceCritical
13:17
Incident Date
May 5, 2026
Released
Jun 19, 2026
TBL-CA-2026-0015

LAPD Releases Bodycam Video of Officer-Involved Shooting, Mission Area

The Los Angeles Police Department released the names of officers involved in an Officer-Involved Shooting in the Mission Area, following a preliminary investigation into an incident that began on May 5, 2026. The suspect, Jason Vega, was armed and fled from officers when the shooting occurred; a handgun was recovered and Vega was taken into custody. No injuries were reported, and the Force Investigation Division is handling the investigation.

Los Angeles P.D.Los Angeles, CAOfficer-Involved Shooting, Gun
Official SourceMajor
15:53
Incident Date
May 2, 2026
Released
Jun 16, 2026
TBL-CA-2026-0012NRF022-26

LAPD – Use of Force Incident Video Release – Los Angeles, CA

The Los Angeles Police Department released a preliminary summary of a May 2, 2026 incident in Los Angeles in which officers used a 40mm less-lethal launcher during an encounter with a knife-wielding suspect; the suspect was transported to a hospital for treatment and no officers or bystanders were injured. The investigation is ongoing, with the Force Investigation Division handling the inquiry.

Los Angeles P.D.Los Angeles, CAUse of Force, Projectile
Official SourceCritical
10:40
Incident Date
May 1, 2026
Released
Jun 15, 2026
TBL-CA-2026-0011NRF021-26

LAPD releases Bodycam Footage of Officer-Involved Shooting in the 77th Street Area

The LAPD states that two brothers were fighting inside a residence when officers encountered the suspect, Fredrick Spells, during a struggle over a knife. An officer-involved shooting occurred after verbal commands and an intermediate force option failed. No injuries to community members or officers were reported, and the knife was recovered as evidence.

Los Angeles P.D.Los Angeles, CAOfficer-Involved Shooting, Knife
Official SourceCritical
17:20
Incident Date
Apr 8, 2026
Released
May 23, 2026
TBL-CA-2026-0005NRF019-26

LAPD Vehicle Pursuit of Wanted Suspect Ends In Officer-Involved Shooting

On April 08, 2026, around 9:40 a.m., Central Patrol Division Police Officers were patrolling in the area of Central Avenue and Towne Avenue when they observed a newer model BMW wanted for a felony crime. The officers followed the vehicle onto the 5 Freeway while requesting additional units. When the BMW began to accelerate away in an apparent attempt to evade, the officers initiated a vehicle pursuit.

Los Angeles P.D.Los Angeles, CAOfficer-Involved Shooting, Pursuit

Researcher Quick Facts

Jurisdiction
Los Angeles, CA
Agency type
Police Department
Latest tracked release
Jun 19, 2026
Video platforms
youtube

Last profile review: not yet recorded

State Disclosure Context

Public-records and body-camera release context for Los Angeles P.D..

Short summary for reporters: (1) California law treats body-camera footage as public-records subject to the CPRA but creates both mandatory-disclosure rules for certain police‑misconduct/critical incidents (SB 1421) and limited, time‑bound exceptions for active investigations (AB 748). (2) For incidents that meet the 'critical incident' definition (officer fires at person, or use-of-force resulting in death/great bodily injury), agencies must disclose recordings unless they show that disclosure would substantially interfere with an active investigation — initial delay allowed up to 45 days, with possible extensions up to one year (and beyond only on clear‑and‑convincing showing). (3) Agencies must have BWC policies and retention schedules (Pen. Code §832.18). (4) Any person can request footage under the CPRA; if denied, you can demand a written basis and may sue to compel disclosure. ([leginfo.legislature.ca.gov](https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtml?bill_id=201720180AB748))
Release deadline
For recordings that qualify as a 'critical incident' under AB 748, agencies may delay disclosure for up to 45 calendar days from the date the agency knew or reasonably should have known of the incident if disclosure would substantially interfere with an active criminal or administrative investigation; after 45 days the agency may continue to delay (up to one year) only by demonstrating ongoing substantial interference, and beyond one year only by clear and convincing evidence. When withholding, agencies must (a) provide a written justification to the requester stating the specific basis and an estimated disclosure date and (b) reassess and notify the requester at least every 30 days. AB 748/recodified CPRA provisions are the controlling timeline. ([leginfo.legislature.ca.gov](https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtml?bill_id=201720180AB748))
View state resource map

Incident Types

Officer-Involved Shooting, Dog1
Officer-Involved Shooting, Gun1
Officer-Involved Shooting, Knife1
Officer-Involved Shooting, Pursuit1
Use of Force, Projectile1

Severity Mix

Critical4
Major1