A California city council voted Tuesday to conduct three audits of its police department after a district attorney’s office report revealed racist, homophobic and sexually explicit text messages sent by officers.

The report has prompted community protests and spurred the Antioch City Council to unanimously approve audits of the department’s internal affairs process, its hiring and promotional practices, as well as an “equity audit.”

Contra Costa County District Attorney’s officials released two redactedreports last week detailing derogatory messages sent and received by more than a dozen members of the department. 

Mayor Lamar Thorpe, who is mentioned  in the messages, told USA TODAY on Thursday that the city plans to launch an independent investigation into the texts. A federal investigation into officers with the Antioch and nearby Pittsburg police departments is ongoing.

“I’m disappointed, I’m angry, I’m frustrated,” Thorpe said Thursday. “It’s just a lot, but there’s also a feeling of vindication because for the last two years, I’ve been attacked. Myself and the other two African American council members have been attacked as a result of the reforms that we’ve instituted at the police department.

What do the messages say?

Officers repeatedly use racial slurs and share images of gorillas in messages quoted in the reports. In some instances, the report says the photos and slurs are sent in reference to the arrest or detention of people who are not named.

In one exchange, officers appear to agree to target specific areas with traffic citations. In another, an Antioch officer appears to admit to fabricating evidence.

“Since we don’t have video I sometimes just say people gave me a full confession when they didn’t, get filed easier,” an officer said in an April 2020 message

In another example, an officer offered a steak dinner in June 2020 to anyone who could “40” Thorpe at a protest, a reference to a “.40mm less lethal launcher,” according to the report.