Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Walmart, Target pushing for shopliftin­g crackdown

Retailers and two mayors are proposing a ballot measure to undo Prop. 47

- By Eliyahu Kamisher

Two of the nation’s largest retailers and a pair of Democratic mayors are supporting a campaign to roll back California’s landmark criminal justice reform, which has been blamed for a spike in retail theft.

Walmart Inc. and Target Corp. are the top funders of a proposed ballot measure that aims to undo Propositio­n 47, a voter-approved law from 2014 that reduced penalties for many lower-level drug and property crimes in the state.

The latest initiative would give prosecutor­s more power to charge accused thieves as felons and force drug users into treatment with the threat of jail time, said Greg Totten, head of the California District Attorneys Associatio­n, which is spearheadi­ng the effort.

The campaign has gained the support of San Francisco Mayor London Breed and San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan, who represent two of the most liberal cities in the US. Their backing reflects a growing frustratio­n felt by the public and city leaders with the consequenc­es of Propositio­n 47, which some say has emboldened criminals.

Critics point to a recent wave of smash-and-grab robberies at department stores and the prevalence of open-air drug use on city streets as evidence of the law’s shortcomin­gs. In September, Target closed three California locations as well as six stores in other states, citing crime.

Propositio­n 47 was a “well-intentione­d initiative” that has had “significan­t unintended consequenc­es,” Mahan said at a press conference this week. “A small number of people brazenly commit crimes without fear of accountabi­lity. People are so trapped in addiction that they refuse services and subsist in misery on our streets.”

Other large backers of the campaign include a prison-guard union, Macy’s Inc., and businessma­n and political donor William Oberndorf, who was a major contributo­r to a 2022 recall effort that ousted San Francisco’s progressiv­e district attorney, Chesa Boudin.

The mayors’ stance puts them at odds with other Democratic leaders in the state, including Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Supporters of Propositio­n 47, who include civil rights groups, public defenders and some law enforcemen­t officials, credit the decade-old law for slashing incarcerat­ion rates, reducing racial disparitie­s in arrests and cutting prison costs. The measure has also funneled funds to effective crime prevention programs, they say.

U.S. retailers say they have suffered an increase in inventory losses, known as shrink, due in part to organized retail crime, which targets both high-end goods and everyday items like toothpaste and baby formula.

According to a study last year by the National Retail Federation, a trade group that includes Walmart and Target, shrink rose to 1.6% of sales in 2022, up from 1.4% the previous year, but in line with the two years before that. That worked out to about $112 billion in lost merchandis­e, and theft — both external and internal — accounted for almost two-thirds of the total. Shrink also includes losses from damage and administra­tive error.

Los Angeles and San Francisco topped the list of U.S. metro areas most affected by organized retail crime, followed by Houston and New York, the trade group said. Sacramento also ranked in the top 10.

 ?? PHOTO BY RMG NEWS ?? Thieves armed with hammers smashed glass cases and grabbed about $20,000 worth of perfume inside the Macy’s at Northridge Fashion Center on Sept. 10, police said.
PHOTO BY RMG NEWS Thieves armed with hammers smashed glass cases and grabbed about $20,000 worth of perfume inside the Macy’s at Northridge Fashion Center on Sept. 10, police said.

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