CONCORD — New Hampshire began making public Wednesday its long-secret list of police officers with possible credibility issues, and it includes the names of several Upper Valley police officers.

The “Laurie List” tracks officers whose credibility may be called into question during a trial because of something in their personnel records.

Prosecutors are required to turn the information over to defendants before trial, but public access has been limited to heavily redacted versions of the list. But under a new state law, the Department of Justice is required to gradually release the list after a period during which officers can contest their placement on it.

The first batch of 80 names was made public Wednesday, along with brief descriptions of the officers’ alleged wrongdoing. Truthfulness was the issue listed for 53 of the officers. Eleven were cited for criminal conduct, with smaller numbers cited for excessive force, falsification of records or dereliction of duty.

The Attorney General’s Office amended the list, which initially had 90 names, Wednesday afternoon, cutting 10 names because it learned of lawsuits it had not previously been made aware of. At least two were from the Upper Valley.

The amended list includes officers from more than 50 agencies, including four county sheriff’s offices and the state police. The Attorney General’s Office noted that some of the officers may no longer be employed by the agencies listed, and some may have died.

It names four former Lebanon police officers and their categories for being on the list: Jeffrey Cibulski, from a 2012 incident categorized as “unknown;” Dakota Derego, 2017, truthfulness; Todd Lique, 2012, category unknown; and Ashley Mills, 2019, truthfulness.

“None of the names you inquired about are employed by the Lebanon Police Department,” Lebanon Police Chief Phil Roberts said via email on Wednesday.

Lique resigned from the Lebanon Police Department in 2011 after the police chief and city manager at the time recommended his termination following an investigation into an incident involving Lique and a woman in a downtown bar. Then-Chief James Alexander told the Valley News in 2012 that roughly five misdemeanor cases involving Lique were dropped in Lebanon Circuit Court because of concerns about his credibility.

In Hanover, Patrol Officer Joseph Landry is listed for dereliction of duty in December 2017.

Lyme Police Chief Shaun O’Keefe is listed under the truthfulness category for an incident where the date is listed as unknown. He said on Wednesday his inclusion on the list stems from an incident that occurred in December 2008 while he was deer hunting in Pennsylvania.

He was among 11 hunters, most of them from New Hampshire and Vermont, who were accused by the Pennsylvania Game Commission of illegally killing/possessing deer. A local magistrate judge found him guilty of a “summary offense,” which in Pennsylvania is below a misdemeanor.

O’Keefe, a Lyme patrol officer at the time, was ordered to pay fines and costs of $1,272.

Then-Lyme Police Chief Pauline Field disciplined him “for not reporting it in a timely manner,” O’Keefe said in a telephone interview Wednesday.

The offense has since been expunged from Pennsylvania court records, he said.

“This had nothing to do with my law enforcement career whatsoever,” said O’Keefe, who has been Lyme’s chief for about 10 years.

Canaan Police Officer Matthew Bunten is also on the list for truthfulness. Bunten has been on the police force since 2008 and the incident took place in his early years in the department, Town Administrator Mike Samson said.

“The incident does not give the town any concern and it goes well beyond my time and tenure in Canaan,” said Samson, who started working for the town in 2010. He declined to elaborate further, except to say that every member of current and former Selectboards “were aware of the situation and it did not give us any concern.”

Former Haverhill police officer Gregory Collins was listed for an incident regarding truthfulness that took place in 2017. He has not been on the force for several years, said Haverhill Town Manager Brigitte Codling.

“He’s not serving as a police officer anymore anywhere either,” she added, declining to elaborate on the incident.

The new law’s provisions match a recommendation by the Commission on Law Enforcement Accountability, Community and Transparency that was established in the wake of the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

The list’s official title is the “exculpatory evidence schedule.” It is often called the “Laurie List” after Carl Laurie, whose murder conviction was overturned in 1995 after a court determined that defense attorneys were not told about poor behavior by a detective involved in his confession.

Several media outlets including Newspapers of New England, which owns the Valley News, and the American Civil Liberties Union of New Hampshire sued seeking access to the list in 2018.

Valley News staff writers contributed to this report.