CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 2024 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“STATE SEE-SAWS BACK TO TOUGH
ON CRIME”
Crime has been a see-saw
issue in California for most of the last 40 years. Leniency was the vogue for
awhile recently. But now the balance is back to getting tougher, as polls this
fall showed many voters believed property crimes have vastly increased since
the 2014 passage of Proposition 47.
The clearest manifestation of
this was the strong performance of Prop. 36 on this month’s ballot, drawing a
huge 70 to 30 percent majority.
There was also the easy
defeat of Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascon, who fell to
Republican-turned-independent Nathan Hochman. And the recall of Alameda County
DA Pamela Price. If he ever reverts to the GOP, Hochman would become the highest-ranking
Republican officeholder in California.
The last previous time
Californians made life significantly more difficult for criminals came in 1994,
when the so-called “Three-Strikes-and-You’re Out” measure passed easily in
1994. That result was in part a reaction to the brutal murders of Kimber Reynolds
and Polly Klaas in 1992 and 1993.
Polly and two fellow
12-year-olds were enjoying a slumber party in Petaluma when Richard Allen Davis
abducted and murdered her. Her body was discovered about two months later, in
late 1993. Kimber, 18, was shot and killed in Fresno the previous year.
Only 13 months after Polly’s
abduction, voters passed three-strikes, which imposed increasingly tough
sentences on any criminal’s first, second and third felonies, with an automatic
25-years-to-life for the third.
Polly’s murderer, convicted
in 1996 after a long trial, remains on Death Row in San Quentin Prison today.
But just a few years later,
in 2012, voters decided three-strikes was a bit too much, and passed a Prop. 36
very different from this month's. It eased sentences for third strike offenses
that were neither violent nor legally designated as serious crimes. Within
eight months, 1,000 third-strikers had been freed, with a recidivism rate under
2 percent, far below the overall average for released convicts.
This was a major step toward
Prop. 47, portrayed as the villain in this year’s campaign for the confusingly
numbered most recent Prop. 36.
Because of the wide belief
that Prop. 47 increased crime rates, especially for property crimes, voters
strongly favored the new Prop. 36 from the moment sponsoring prosecutors
announced it.
Prop. 47 did reach at least
one of its goals, reducing incarceration significantly by reclassifying many
drug- and theft-related crimes as misdemeanors, downgraded from felonies that
carry more serious penalties. It set the minimum take for a theft to become a
felony at $950 per crime.
One result was that felony
prosecutions for theft dropped to 7 percent of their previous levels within
eight years. At the same time, say the latest state statistics, the property
crime rate dropped slightly (1.8 percent) between 2018 and 2023. Many take
those numbers to mean the number of thefts may have fallen slightly, but the
value of what was taken rose greatly.
So comes the new Prop. 36,
which allows aggregation of the value of thefts by repeat offenders. That
figures to shoot up the prosecution rate for property crimes and raise prison
populations, all part of California’s crime seesaw.
Seeking to keep prison
populations – and budgets – down, Gov. Gavin Newsom spurred the Legislature to
pass several measures in August that accomplish much of what Prop. 36 sought.
But it was not enough for voters, who clearly want stricter treatment for criminals
like those behind the “smash-and-grab” burglaries that have seen well-organized
groups of marauders break store windows and take expensive merchandise that
often turns up for sale later on the Internet.
As usual, Republicans tried
this fall to tar Democrats as “soft-on-crime,” even as they were passing their
get-tough package of new laws, some of which will now be superceded by Prop.
36, which takes precedence wherever it conflicts with existing laws because it
was a voter-backed initiative.
As for Gascon, he never had a
prayer of reelection this fall after getting only one-fourth of the vote in the
March primary election. His often-controversial moves drew eight primary
opponents and the enmity of the potent local Association of Deputy District
Attorneys.
So the pendulum has swung to
the tough-on-crime side, but it’s anyone’s guess when it may again move back
the other way.
-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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