As first reported by The Stranger, Seattle Chief of Police Adrian Diaz stepped down from his position on Tuesday amid a flurry of lawsuits over a culture of sexism and racism at the Seattle Police Department (SPD) andย rumors about an inappropriate relationship with a top aide.
King County Sheriff Sue Rahr has stepped up to replace him as Interim Chief of Police,ย Mayor Bruce Harrell announced at a press conference Wednesday. Harrell emphasized her expertise in recruitment, particularly as it relates to hiring women.ย
Harrell said Rahr, the former Executive Director of the Washington State Criminal Justice Training Commission, has no plans to apply for the top job permanently, and he expects to keep her in the role for up to six months as the City launches a national search for a new permanent police chief. Harrell said the department plans to consider internal candidates, but he pretty clearly gave a preference to external applications, saying he had concerns that an internal candidate couldnโt make the type of cultural changes that SPD requires.
BREAKING: Hearing from credible sources that Adrian Diaz is no longer SPD Chief, reaching out to mayorโs office to confirm.
โ Ashley Nerbovig (@AshleyNerbovig) May 29, 2024
While discussing Diazโs demotion, Harrell said the chief inherited a cultural problem at SPD. Harrell stressed his confidence in Diaz and announced that Diaz would stay on to work on special assignments for SPD with the Mayorโs Office. The Mayor gave no details about the duties of that role, which rank Diaz would assume, or whether heโd keep his approximately $370,000 per year salary. Those decisions would be left up to Rahr, who steps into the role of Interim Chief first thing Thursday.ย
Harrell denied that any one thing led to Diaz stepping down, but he did say the number of investigations and complaints against the chief would distract him from running the Seattle Police Department effectively. Harrell also said keeping Diaz as head of the department could lead people with complaints to fear retaliation.ย
The announcement comes the day after the Office of Inspector General (OIG) sent an internal email about a complaint against Diaz over allegations about his hiring of a top aide, with whom he allegedly had an intimate relationship. The investigation breathes new life into the rumors about the relationship, which Diaz had ferociously tried to quash last year, and which an employee admitted to inventing.
The complaint to OIG comes after seven employees filed claims and lawsuits against Diaz for fostering a sexist and racist working environment at SPD and retaliating against officers who spoke up. These complaints led the Mayor to hire an outside firm to investigate the allegations, an investigation which is still ongoing. Earlier in the month in an interview with KOMO, Harrell promised to let the investigation play out and afford Diaz โdue process,โ but he noted that the allegations had gotten his administrationโs attention.
Near the end of the press conference, SPD Community Outreach Coordinator Victoria Beach laid into Harrell for Diazโs demotion, saying the investigation into the allegations hadnโt yet finished.ย
โThis is wrong. Nobody is safe in the Seattle Police Department, nobody,โ Beach said.ย
Editor’s note: This article was clarified regarding the OIG complaint.

How embarrassing for the women who “spoke for him” last week.
This is the first decent article I’ve read explaining what happened. It’s weird, though, how there’s all this Washington DC influence coming in – outsiders to the city and the local government. This interim is coming in from the Obama administration, and now Kamala Harris flying in to meet with her for a few hours. It seems like it’s being used to impose outside will and control on the city and subvert local and more independent control. They want their person in charge of the police dept – to be able to be pulling his strings from DC.
IOW they have an outside person coming in for the appointment and from DC. The rest is a charade – the national search, the potential picks, the interviews, so on … they already have the person.
@1 Only if you park your brain any time the Democratic Party establishment accuses people of something sleazy, and therefore think they must be guilty. And when, actually, what’s sleazy is what they’re doing.