Chad Bianco

American sheriff (born 1967) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chad Bianco (born October 9, 1967)[3][1][2] is an American law enforcement officer, who has served as sheriff of Riverside County, California since 2019. A member of the Republican Party, Bianco has been affiliated with the Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association. He is a candidate for governor of California in the 2026 election.[4]

Preceded byStanley Sniff
Born (1967-10-09) October 9, 1967 (age 58)[1][2]
SpouseDenise Bianco
Quick facts 14th Sheriff-Coroner of Riverside County, Preceded by ...
Chad Bianco
Official portrait, 2025
14th Sheriff-Coroner of Riverside County
Assumed office
January 7, 2019
Preceded byStanley Sniff
Personal details
Born (1967-10-09) October 9, 1967 (age 58)[1][2]
PartyRepublican
SpouseDenise Bianco
Children4
EducationCollege of Eastern Utah
University of Utah
Columbia Southern University (BS)
WebsiteOffice website
Campaign website
Police career
DepartmentRiverside Sheriff
Service years1993–present
RankSheriff
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Early life and education

Bianco was born on October 9, 1967, at Hill Air Force Base in Utah.[5] He has two younger brothers.[5]

Bianco moved from Utah to California in 1989,[6] and in 1993 attended the San Bernardino Sheriff's Academy. He graduated at the top of his class, and joined the Riverside County Sheriff's Department shortly after graduation.[5]

Career

Bianco first ran for sheriff in 2014, but was unsuccessful.[6]

Sheriff of Riverside County

Bianco was first elected Riverside County sheriff in 2018.[7] He was re-elected in 2022 with about 60% of votes for a term set to last until 2028 due to a state law changing sheriff election years to match presidential ones.[8][9] Bianco has been hosted on Fox News, as well as by conservative pastors on YouTube channels and podcasts.[8] As of 2023, Bianco's department had over 3,600 employees and was managing five jails.[10]

In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Bianco stated that he would not enforce Coronavirus mandates and did not plan to get vaccinated.[11][12] He tested positively for the virus in January 2021 with mild symptoms, after which he started quarantining at his home.[12]

His department has the lowest closure rate for Part 1 property crimes in California, performing at less than 25% of the overall average.[13] Democrat activist Stephen J. Cloobeck sued him for use of the uniform and badge during campaign events and media interviews, alleging a violation of California Government Code 3206. That law, addressing political activities of public employees, states: "No officer or employee of a local agency shall participate in political activities of any kind while in uniform.[14]

In 2022, Riverside County jails registered 18 inmate deaths, the biggest number in 15 years. The spike prompted multiple civil lawsuits against the county's prison facilities and Bianco himself.[15][16][17] In 2023, Bianco's department was placed under investigation by the California Department of Justice to determine if the organization had "engaged in a pattern or practice of unconstitutional policing amid deeply concerning allegations relating to conditions of confinement in its jail facilities, excessive force, and other misconduct."[18][19] In relation to those incidents, Bianco claimed that "every single one of these inmate deaths was out of anyone's control".[15]

Bianco was awarded the 2023 Sheriff Award by the conservative think tank the Claremont Institute.[9]

In 2025, Bianco's handling of the arrest of Las Vegas resident Vem Miller near a Donald Trump rally led to a $100 million federal lawsuit against him and Riverside County, with Miller alleging defamation and civil rights violations after Bianco claimed the arrest thwarted a potential assassination attempt.[20][21] The lawsuit was later dismissed; Miller was ordered in January 2026 to complete a gun-safety course and 40 hours of community service by a county judge.[22]

In September 2025, a female college student was arrested by California State University, San Marcos police, after allegedly making online death threats against Bianco. She posted bail one day after her arrest. Bianco described the threat as "sickening", and called on elected politicians to condemn political violence and "cool the temperature".[23]

2026 gubernatorial campaign

Bianco announced his run for Governor of California in the 2026 California gubernatorial election on February 17, 2025, becoming the first major Republican to enter the race.[4][24][25]

On February 21, Bianco attended a press conference in San Diego with Republican leaders to promote State Senate Republican Minority Leader Brian Jones' proposed bill SB554 to weaken the California Senate Bill 54 of 2017 that limits law enforcement's ability to cooperate with ICE.[26][27]

In April 2026, Bianco ordered the seizure of ballots from California's 2025 election, citing concerns about election integrity, a focus of his political campaign. A Riverside County judge and the California Supreme Court subsequently ordered the search warrants authorizing the seizure to be unsealed.[28] The affidavits revealed that their case rested solely on claims from a citizens' activist group.[29]

Political positions

Bianco has portrayed himself as a law and order candidate, and supported Proposition 36.[30] Bianco has proposed reducing homelessness in California by expanding alcohol and drug treatment centers.[31]

In June 2020, Bianco oversaw police presence at a Black Lives Matter protest in Riverside. Here, Bianco showed support for and knelt with protestors, during the George Floyd protests;[32] at the protest, he was hit with a thrown screwdriver.[33] He later became critical of the movement, describing the protests as destructive riots in 2023.[34]

During the 2024 presidential election, Bianco endorsed Donald Trump, stating in a sarcastic video that "It's time we put a felon in the White House", referring to Trump's felony conviction in May 2024.[35]

Personal life

Bianco and his wife Denise live in Woodcrest, California;[6] they attend Sandals Church in Riverside.[6] He is married and has children and grandchildren.

Following a hacking incident in September 2021 against a database belonging to the Oath Keepers, Bianco, along with over 200 law-enforcement officers, was exposed as a former member of the organization.[36][7][37] He later stated that he had paid for a $40 one-year membership in the organization in 2014 and did not renew it for the next year. Bianco has since disavowed the group's violent conduct.[38][36][39]

References

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