Imperial Valley Press

Prosecutor­s feud over criminal sentencing laws

- DAN WALTERS

The starkest aspect to California’s evolution from a relatively conservati­ve state into a blue bastion has been an evolving attitude toward crime and punishment.

In the 1980s and 1990s, California became a national leader in increasing penalties for crimes large and small, symbolized by a three-strikes-and-you’re-out law calling for life imprisonme­nt of repeat offenders. Not surprising­ly, despite constructi­on of many new prisons, they became horrendous­ly overcrowde­d with inmates.

However, as California made its almost 180-degree political turn to the left over the last couple of decades, attitudes about crime also evolved, culminatin­g in legislativ­e acts, ballot measures and administra­tive policies that repealed or softened the state’s sentencing laws. The number of felons locked up in state prisons has dropped by at least one-third in recent years.

That said, what supporters call “criminal justice reform” is not universall­y accepted. Some law enforcemen­t officials believe it’s gone too far and has contribute­d to recent upticks in violent crime — a conflict now rippling through the state’s local district attorneys.

In 2020, George Gascón, who had been district attorney of San Francisco, challenged and defeated Los Angeles District Attorney Jackie Lacey and immediatel­y issued new operationa­l rules that downplayed punishment.

He prohibited his deputies from seeking the death penalty, prosecutin­g juveniles as adults, attending parole hearings or seeking “enhancemen­ts” that increase a defendant’s prison term. The union representi­ng those deputies sued, alleging that Gascón was ordering them to violate criminal laws, and won an initial judgement.

What really blew up the conflict politicall­y was support from the California District Attorneys Associatio­n (CDAA) for the union position. In its supporting brief, the District Attorneys said Gascón’s orders meant that “the voices of victims fall silent and the might of the state has failed its most vulnerable.”

Last week, Gascón resigned from the organizati­on with a two-page letter that he posted on Twitter, accusing the associatio­n of being racially insensitiv­e, closed-minded about criminal justice reform and even corrupt.

“CDAA continues to be a member organizati­on solely for those willing to toe the ‘tough on crime’ line,” Gascón wrote. “For the rest of us, it is a place that fails to support us, our communitie­s, or the pursuit of justice.”

Gascón and several other like-minded district attorneys have founded their own group, the Prosecutor­s Alliance of California, to push for criminal justice reforms. It includes Gascón, San Joaquin County’s Tori Salazar, Chesa Boudin of San Francisco and Contra Costa County’s Diana Becton.

Gascón’s election and the burgeoning conflict with more traditiona­l prosecutor­s is part of a larger phenomenon — a nationwide effort by left-of-center organizati­ons to change criminal justice policies one election at a time.

Billionair­e businessma­n George Soros is a major figure in the campaign, having donated millions of dollars to reform-minded candidates. The movement has scored some victories, such as Gascón’s election, and also suffered some losses, such as a failed challenge to Sacramento County District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert.

The conflict also colors Gov. Gavin Newsom’s selection of a replacemen­t for Attorney General Xavier Becerra if he is confirmed as the federal health and human services secretary.

Newsom seemingly supports the criminal justice reform movement. He sponsored a ballot measure to make marijuana legal, has sped up reductions in prison population­s and declared a moratorium on executions.

He could appoint a new attorney general sympatheti­c to the Gascón-led faction, such as Oakland Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta, but such a move would carry some political risk. Were Newsom to face a recall election this year, as seems likely, opposition from police and prosecutor­s could be a critical factor.

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