CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2024 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“FAILURE TO COMPROMISE BRINGS CRIME
INITIATIVE BATTLE”
This fall’s campaign over the anti-crime Proposition 36 now
promises to be one of the more expensive and unnecessary ballot measure
campaigns California has seen, as avid supporters of the 2014 Proposition 47
battle to keep it alive in more than just name.
It's apolitical fight that could have been avoided fairly
easily by Gov. Gavin Newsom and the several district attorneys and big box
store chains behind the new ballot initiative. They could have (should have)
used a decade-old process letting initiative sponsors reach agreements with
legislators who have opposed their measures, leading to new compromise laws and
then withdrawal of the initiatives involved.
The clear-cut conflict between Newsom and liberal Democrats
who dominate the Legislature and the sponsors of Prop. 36, who called their
measure the Homelessness, Drug Addiction and Theft Reduction Act (even though
its link to homelessness is unclear) was always plain: Newsom’s side sees Prop.
47 as largely successful in reducing repeat crimes and treating the drug
addictions that motivate many offenses.
But much of law enforcement views Prop. 47 as an abject
failure that’s caused more crime by reducing many former felony offenses to
misdemeanors and setting $950 as the lower limit for the value of felony
thefts. Never mind, they say, official statistics that suggest most crime
levels are now near all-time lows.
The get-tough side in this dispute had no problem gathering
more than 600,000 voter signatures to qualify its plan for the ballot. It would
allow prosecutors to aggregate the value of goods an accused has stolen and
conduct a felony prosecution when the total goes over the $950 limit. It would
also crack down hard on fentanyl users, dealers and illicit manufacturers.
The obvious compromise could have been to aggregate the take
from thefts by individuals, but leave all the anti-drug addiction benefits of
Prop. 47 intact. Such a deal would have restored some crimes reduced by Prop.
47 from felonies back to that status, including things like burglary of stores
during business hours and forgery. At the same time, a compromise could have
left things like drug possession and writing bad checks as misdemeanors.
But there was no attempt at compromise. Rather, under
pressure from Newsom, legislators passed a package of new laws allowing felony
prosecutions on the third theft offense, regardless of value. The new laws also
let judges impose restraining orders preventing “minor” thieves from revisiting
stores they’ve shoplifted, while eliminating time limits for prosecution of
organized retail thievery like last year’s well publicized smash-and-grab
burglaries of major retail stores.
This lets the governor and his legislative allies claim
they’ve solved the Prop. 47-related problems that led large companies like
Walmart, Walgreens and Nordstrom to close multiple California stores in part
because of major losses from thefts enabled by Prop. 47.
But the laws they passed are not as tough as Prop. 36, with
its extreme emphasis on shoplifting offenses.
Still, some lawmakers who voted against the Newsom-linked
package maintained its increased emphasis on repeat thievery will increase mass
jailings of minorities.
“These measures deepen mass incarceration and (that) is going
in reverse of where Californians (wanted to go via Prop. 47),” said Democratic
state Sen./ Lola Smallwood-Cuevas of Los Angeles.
Her statement added that “Increased criminalization too often
falls on the backs of Black and Latino Californians.”
Other Democrats opposed the bill package because it creates
two new crimes they say are already covered under existing laws: breaking into
a vehicle with intent to steal and possessing property stolen from a vehicle
with intent to sell it.
If it looks like the conflicts between the new bill package
and Prop. 36 seem fairly small, with both aiming at alleged flaws in Prop. 47,
that’s because they are. That’s also why it was plain from the moment Prop. 36
qualified for the ballot that it would essentially be unneeded if legislators
passed new laws accomplishing many of its aims.
They’ve now done that. Which means voters will be wasting
their time and psychic energy if they get very caught up in the upcoming ballot
measure fight.
The basic reality is that most of this exercise and expense
could and should have been avoided.
-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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