Oaklanders deserve to know the truth. So we follow the money and investigate the powerful. Will you chip in to help hold leaders accountable to the people they serve?

Oakland’s Community Police Review Agency — a civilian-run bureau that investigates allegations of police misconduct — has appointed a new executive director.

Never miss a story. Sign up for The Oaklandside’s free daily newsletter.

Antonio Lawson, who most recently served as the agency’s interim executive director, officially assumed the role on Feb. 17, Police Commission Chair Ricardo Garcia-Acosta announced in a press release Thursday.

The Community Police Review Agency, widely known as CPRA (pronounced “sip-ruh”), is the investigative arm of the Police Commission, a civilian and volunteer body tasked with overseeing the Oakland Police Department. CPRA investigates public complaints involving police use of force, in-custody deaths, protests, profiling, and dishonesty.

Lawson joined CPRA as staff counsel in November 2024 and was named interim executive director in March 2025.

He brings more than three decades of experience in civil rights and employment litigation. Lawson previously served as associate chief counsel at the California Civil Rights Department, where he was lead counsel in two sexual harassment and gender discrimination class-action lawsuits against Activision Blizzard and Riot Games.

A graduate of UC Berkeley and Harvard Law School, Lawson also founded Lawson Law Offices, where he handled individual and class-action civil rights and labor cases. He has argued before the California Supreme Court, California Courts of Appeal, California Superior Courts, and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

… We rely on your support

Hey, we know that most readers only scan a headline and a couple of paragraphs. Thank you for reading to the end of our story. Since you clearly appreciate the in-depth approach we take in reporting the stories that matter to Oaklanders, please consider chipping in to supercharge our newsroom.

“*” indicates required fields