Imperial Valley Press

California bill would remove youth from career criminal law

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Los Angeles’ new reform-minded top prosecutor said Friday that it’s time to remove youthful offenders from California’s tough career criminal law that can greatly extend their prison time later in life.

District Attorney George Gascón, who runs the nation’s largest prosecutor­s’ office, backed pending legislatio­n that would prevent juvenile “strikes” from counting toward future sentencing enhancemen­ts under the state’s “three-strikes” law that can lead to life prison sentences for repeat serious offenders.

“The juvenile system is based on rehabilita­tion, not on punishment,” he said. Juvenile cases are not considered criminal proceeding­s, and he noted juvenile offenders lack the same constituti­onal protection­s as adults, such as the right to jury trials.

Yet state law treats juvenile strikes for youths age 16 and older the same as for adults, subjecting them to longer prison terms if they are later convicted of second- and third strikes. A second strike doubles the underlying sentence and a third serious or violent felony can trigger a life sentence.

That helps crowd prisons and disproport­ionately affects people of color, Gascón argued.

The California District Attorneys Associatio­n, which has sparred with Gascón on other actions, has not yet taken a position on the proposal, said legislativ­e director and former prosecutor Larry Morse.

“I expect there will be a wide range of opinions among the DAs on that bill. It’s obviously a provocativ­e and intriguing proposal,” Morse said, in part because of the argument that state law treats juveniles differentl­y than adults.

“It makes absolutely no sense that a kid who can’t go to prom would have an action at that point ... that could be used down the line to count as a third strike,” said Democratic Assemblyma­n Miguel Santiago of Los Angeles, who is carrying the bill.

His proposed legislatio­n would allow those who were previously issued a strike in juvenile court to have it vacated and to seek resentenci­ng if they are currently incarcerat­ed.

Michele Hanisee, a deputy district attorney and president of the Associatio­n of Deputy District Attorneys for Los Angeles County that also has sparred with Gascón, said through a spokesman that she couldn’t comment because the union’s board has not taken a position on the bill.

Youths ages 16 and 17 “are not fully developed adults” and are much more likely to be driven by impulsive behavior or their peers, said Rahn Minagawa, a clinical psychologi­st based in San Diego. So to toughen their punishment years later for things they did as adolescent­s “is just inherently unfair,” he said in arguing for the bill.

It would take a twothirds vote by legislator­s to change the threestrik­es law first approved by voters in 1994 and softened in a 2012 ballot measure to avoid imposing life sentences for minor crimes. But Democrats have that margin in the Legislatur­e.

Gascón defeated the incumbent in the nation’s largest prosecutor­s’ office last year while running on a reform platform. But he since has faced blowback including legal actions from his own employees, public criticism from the state prosecutor­s’ associatio­n, and may be challenged with a recall election.

He has also criticized the broader adult three strikes law, saying it brings excessive and costly sentences without improving public safety.

 ?? PHOTO/RICH PEDRONCELL­I
AP ?? In this June 14 2016 file photo, Assemblyma­n Miguel Santiago, D-Los Angeles, appears before the Senate Public Safety Committee, in Sacramento, Calif. Santiago of Los Angeles, is carrying proposed legislatio­n that would allow those who were previously issued a strike in juvenile court to have it vacated and to seek resentenci­ng if they are currently incarcerat­ed.
PHOTO/RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP In this June 14 2016 file photo, Assemblyma­n Miguel Santiago, D-Los Angeles, appears before the Senate Public Safety Committee, in Sacramento, Calif. Santiago of Los Angeles, is carrying proposed legislatio­n that would allow those who were previously issued a strike in juvenile court to have it vacated and to seek resentenci­ng if they are currently incarcerat­ed.

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