CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 2021, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“RECALL BACKERS BARKING UP AT LEAST
ONE WRONG TREE”
The
latest crime statistics and a new study from the federal Department of Justice
reveal that backers of the effort to recall Gov. Gavin Newsom have spent months
barking up at least one wrong tree.
Since
early spring, Republican candidates to replace Newsom have blasted him for
spawning what they often describe as a crime wave.
But
mid-year numbers from some of the most heavily populated parts of California
demonstrate there really is no new statewide crime wave. Yes, some types of
crime are up in some areas: At midyear in Los Angeles, there had been 179
murders, the highest in a decade – which some lawyers have blamed on the
slowdown in anti-gang prosecutions spawned by local District Attorney George
Gascon. But overall crime was relatively stable.
In San
Diego, there was a 1.7 percent decrease in violent crime at mid-year compared
with last year. Overall crime was down 8 percent and San Diego was ranked the
safest of the ten largest American cities.
In San
Francisco, crimes involving guns stood at 119 at mid-year, roughly double the
mid-2019 figure from before the coronavirus pandemic shutdowns. Car break-ins
were down in the Bay Area, but shoplifting was up.
It’s a
decidedly mixed picture statewide, with local – not statewide – reasons generally
behind the varied local crime statistics.
But a crime wave may be coming
yet, because recidivism is another matter entirely. Under policies pushed hard
by ex-Gov. Jerry Brown and accelerated by Newsom, state prison rolls have been
cut by more than 30,000 since the early 2000s. The new 34-state study from the
federal Bureau of Justice Statistics suggests that about three-fourths of those
former convicts will have been arrested for something else within five years
after their releases.
Ironically, the study appeared
on a legal news service the same day state officials announced the impending
release of a 21-time arsonist from Madera County who was sentenced seven years
ago to 30 years in prison. Kenneth Jackson set his wildfires in 2013 in
Yosemite Lakes Park, an area near the town of Coarsegold, between Yosemite
National Park’s south entrance and Fresno.
Jackson’s sentence was reduced
in 2018, but Madera County officials twice blocked early parole. Local District
Attorney Sally Moreno now seeks to prevent him from being paroled back to the
county, wanting him sent elsewhere. She decried in a video statement the
state’s process for determining which convicts to release in cutting prison
population even further, partly to reduce COVID-19 risk.
The federal recidivism study
indicates a repeat arsonist like Jackson will try to set more wildfires, for
whatever psychological motive.
So far, Newsom and his
antagonists have said nothing about either the meaning of the federal study for
California or about the Jackson release.
If
Newsom’s challengers wanted a solid cause for attacking him, the Justice
Department has given them one. But recidivism is never as sexy as an alleged
crime wave. It’s possible to gin one of those up almost anytime. One longstanding
truism among reporters says that whenever a news organization wants to create a
"crime wave," it need only copy the daily police blotter. The same is
true for political candidates, who have been trying it all year.
But the
strong likelihood of recidivism among freed criminals ought to give pause to Newsom
and other state officials, if only because it does not appear likely to lessen
very soon, so the issue will be awaiting Newsom rivals next year even if he
survives the recall.
Some
might claim the federal study is racist because of the preponderance of
minorities in the prison system. But it concluded the rates of rearrest by
ethnic group were very similar. Among the 408,000 released inmates involved, 35
percent of whites were rearrested within the first year, compared with 37
percent of Latinos and 38 percent of Blacks.
So racism
does not seem a likely factor here.
It’s an
open question why the replacement candidates have not used any of this against
Newsom, when they appear to be trying every other angle imaginable.
But one thing the governor can be sure of if
he survives next month’s vote: Eventually, someone will pick up on this. As
they should.
-30-
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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