San Mateo County Supervisors Accept Recommendation to Remove Sheriff Corpus from Office; 5 Days to Appeal, 60 Days for Evidentiary Hearing, 45 Days to Render Decision then Final BOS Vote

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PRESS RELEASE and VIDEO. From the San Mateo County Executive’s Office on June 24th, 2025.
Video from San Mateo County Supervisors meeting on Tuesday, June 24th, 2025 at 8:00am, as a hybrid meeting. Agenda. Staff Report #2A-D.

VIDEO
Starts at 26:36

Press Release. The County of San Mateo Board of Supervisors voted 5-0 today to accept a recommendation to proceed with removing Sheriff Christina Corpus from office.

In accordance with the removal procedures adopted by the Board, John Keene, the County’s Chief Probation Officer, conducted a pre-removal conference, which the sheriff attended with her counsel at their offices. During this pre-removal conference, Chief Keene afforded the sheriff and her counsel the opportunity to respond to the allegations contained in the Notice of Intent to Remove, which was approved by the Board at its meeting on June 5, 2025 and provided to the sheriff.

At today’s hearing, County Attorney John Nibbelin quoted from Keene’s written recommendation: “After considering the content of [the sheriff’s] presentation during the pre-removal conference, and in accordance with the removal procedures, I found that the sheriff’s conduct, as described in the Notice of Intent, violated the for cause provisions in County Charter section 412.5(B) as articulated in the Notice of Intent.”

The Notice of Intent to Remove, which reflected the results of a comprehensive investigation prepared by the law firm Keker, Van Nest & Peters LLP and which is supported by 524 pages of documentary evidence and 42 witness interviews, concluded that the sheriff engaged in multiple acts of misconduct that, if true, would support removal from office based on causes set forth in Section 412.5(B)(1) of the San Mateo County Charter (violation of law related to the performance of the sheriff’s duties); 412.5(B)(2) of the Charter (flagrant and repeated neglect of the sheriff’s duties); and 412.5(B)(5) of the Charter (obstruction of an investigation into the conduct of the sheriff).

Today’s decision to proceed required a four-fifths vote by the Board of Supervisors and follows a process that the voters authorized the Board to develop and implement under Measure A, a County Charter amendment passed by 84* percent of voters in March 2025 (*84% of votes based on a 24% turnout).

Under the Removal Procedures adopted by the Board, following today’s unanimous vote, the sheriff has five days to appeal the Board’s decision and request a full evidentiary hearing with sworn testimony before a neutral hearing officer selected from the list approved by the Board at today’s meeting. The hearing officer may issue subpoenas, consider evidence and hear live testimony.

The evidentiary hearing, which must be completed within 60 days after selection of the hearing officer, would be open to the public unless the sheriff objects in writing. Unless excused by the hearing officer, the Sheriff must personally attend the hearing and provide testimony if called.  Otherwise, her appeal may be dismissed by the hearing officer.

At the end of the evidentiary hearing, the hearing officer has 45 calendar days to issue a written advisory opinion, which the Board will consider at a public meeting. If the Board ultimately decides to move forward with removal, the vote requires a four-fifths majority.

Measure A amended the County Charter through Dec. 31, 2028 to allow for the removal of a sheriff by the Board if it finds on a four-fifths vote that there is cause to do so.

Cause includes violating the law related to a sheriff’s duties, flagrant or repeated neglect of duties, misappropriation of public funds, willful falsification of documents or obstructing an investigation.

The duration of proceedings depends on a number of factors that are not yet fully known, but the County’s outside counsel has indicated that the earliest the matter could likely conclude is within approximately four months.


Read Judge Cordell’s 400 page independent investigator’s report.

The Sheriff vs SMCo Executive Report can be found here.



More on the Sheriff Corpus Lawsuit and the Measure A Election on Coastside Buzz

San Mateo County Supervisors Vote Unanimously to Begin Process to Remove Sheriff Corpus with Notice of Intent; Pre-Removal Conference to Occur within 5 Days;

Independent Investigation Clears San Mateo County Executive of All Allegations by Sheriff Corpus; Board of Supervisors Permits Report’s Public Release; May 22, 2025

After Complicated Discussion on Due Process and Bias, San Mateo County Supervisors Adopt Steps for Consideration of Sheriff Corpus’ Removal; May 15, 2025

San Mateo County Supervisors Accept Measure A Special Election Results and Discuss Next Steps for Consideration of Sheriff’s Removal; April 9, 2025

Semi-Official Results are 84%-Yes to 16%-No with 24% Turnout for Sheriff Corpus 2025 Measure A Special Election and Next Steps; March 13, 2025

San Mateo County Judge Denies Sheriff Corpus Lawsuit and Allows Measure A Special Election to Continue; Future Board of Supervisors’ Action May be Heard Separately; February 28, 2025

Sheriff Corpus Files Petitioner’s Brief Insisting the March 4th 2025 Measure A Vote During an Off-cycle Election will Violate her Due Process; February 13, 2025

San Mateo County Supervisors Approve $1.5M for Printing, Mailing and Communications for the March 2025 Special Election to Remove Sheriff Corpus; January 23, 2025

Sheriff Corpus Legal Team Seeks Emergency Relief from “Improperly Calendared” March 2025 Election Rather than a Statewide General Election; January 14, 2025

Statement from the County of San Mateo Regarding Sheriff Corpus’s $10 Million Government Claim & Release of Full Report Transcript which Cost $200k; January 9, 2025

After San Mateo County District Attorney’s Investigation Deputy Carlos Tapia was Found Not Guilty of Any Criminal Conduct and Should Not Have Been Arrested by the Sheriff’s Office; December 17, 2024

San Mateo County BOS Adopt Ordinance for Special Election to Amend County Charter to Remove Sheriff Corpus with Invite to Next Meeting with Attorneys Prior to Election Deadline; December 5, 2024

San Mateo County Independent Civilian Advisory Commission on the Sheriff’s Office Holds Special Meeting to Review Judge Cordell’s Report on Sheriff Christina Corpus; November 28, 2024

San Mateo County Supervisors Demand Sheriff’s Immediate Resignation, Terminate Executive Director of Administration Position; November 14, 2024

San Mateo County Supervisors to Consider Seeking Sheriff’s Immediate Resignation over Findings from Independent Investigation; November 13, 2024

San Mateo County Supervisors Approve the First Appointments to Independent Civilian Advisory Commission on the Sheriff’s Office; June 12, 2024

With 250 Unique Sheriff Oversight Models Nationwide, Supervisors Explore Oversight that will Work for San Mateo County; November 2, 2023


More on Sheriff Corpus in Coastside Buzz


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