CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JULY 13, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“LEGISLATURE MUST FIX LIST OF ‘NON-VIOLENT’ CRIMES”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JULY 13, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“LEGISLATURE MUST FIX LIST OF ‘NON-VIOLENT’ CRIMES”
There isn’t a woman alive who was ever raped while either intoxicated
or unconscious who doesn’t consider the entire experience violent.
But that’s not how these crimes are defined legally in
California. The same for human trafficking of a child, abducting a minor for
prostitution, drive-by shootings at inhabited homes or cars, felony domestic
violence, solicitation to commit murder, among others.
The failure to designate these heinous offenses as violent
is an aberration that can be fixed by the state Legislature, one that should
have been accomplished last year, after passage of the 2016 Proposition 57
began allowing early paroles of non-violent criminals in exchange for certain
achievements and good behavior in custody.
No sociologist or psychologist has ever claimed that
earning a college degree (one achievement that can help create eligibility for
early prison releases) reduces the likelihood a parolee will repeat his or her
prior crime.
Official state statistics now do not link Proposition 57’s
early paroles with crime increases. But the Association of Los Angeles Deputy District
Attorneys early this year claimed violent crime in some cities was up by 50
percent since 2013, about the time Gov. Jerry Brown’s prison realignment
program took hold. Under that plan, designed to comply with federal court
orders to ease crowded conditions inside state prisons, many inmates have been
shifted to county jails, while lesser offenders sometimes serve little or no
jail time.
Combining that with the early releases of Proposition 57 is
a sure-fire ticket to increased crime, says the prosecutors’ group.
One way to decrease the exodus of felons from prison would
be to change some definitions, something a few lawmakers tried to accomplish
last year.
But a series of bills aiming to expand the list of crimes
defined as violent died in legislative financial committees. Too expensive, was
the verdict. That was the reason given when the Assembly Appropriations
Committee just about one year ago killed a bipartisan measure aiming to
classify all rapes and all human trafficking as violent.
Keeping in custody the approximately 120 prisoners who
could then have been affected by that proposed change would have cost $1
million a year. If just one of the men involved were prevented from repeating
such a crime, those dollars would likely have been among the best-spent in the
state budget.
No one has tracked how defeat of the measure actually
affected crime in the streets. But Fresno County Sheriff Margaret Mims told one
reporter the new parole laws combine with realignment to erode public faith in
the justice system.
She cited reports of arrestees saying immediately after their
capture that Proposition 57 and the 2014 Proposition 47 (which lowered many
felonies to the misdemeanor level) would cut their prison time by half or more.
Soon after, Whittier Police Chief Jeff Piper blamed lenient new laws for the
early 2017 slaying of Police Officer Keith Boyer, shot by a recently paroled
felon involved in a car accident. “We need to wake up,” said Piper, whose claim
was never proved. “Enough is enough. This is a senseless, senseless tragedy
that did not need to be.”
Meanwhile, in the final proposed state budget of his long
career, Brown wants to spend $50 million more in the next year (on top of more than
$100 million spent last year) on programs to help former inmates stay out of
jail. Currently, 46 percent of state inmates released in the latest year for
which data is available were convicted of new crimes less than three years after
release.
Official numbers are not yet in on the effects of
Proposition 57 on violent crime, but there is no doubt property crimes in big
cities rose sharply in the two years after Proposition 47 passed.
Efforts are underway again in the Legislature to change at
least some crime designations to violent. This time, they must succeed, or it’s
a good bet that lives will be lost as public safety is diminished.
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Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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