Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

A full plate awaits California’s next attorney general

- By Patrick McGreevy

SACRAMENTO — Few statewide leaders have inherited as many unfinished tasks from their predecesso­rs as incoming California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta, whose to-do list includes an ongoing probe of pandemic unemployme­nt fraud, reducing a backlog of guns held by people with felony conviction­s and resolving a dispute over how to pay for new investigat­ions of fatal police shootings.

The tasks could make it more difficult for Bonta, a Democratic assemblyma­n from Alameda who was nominated for the job last month by Gov. Gavin Newsom, to pursue his own ambitious criminal justice reform agenda in the coming months — he supports eliminatin­g cash bail, reducing incarcerat­ions and increasing police accountabi­lity.

Bonta is expected to be confirmed as attorney general by the Legislatur­e within 90 days, succeeding Xavier Becerra, who left the post to become the U.S. secretary of Health and Human Services.

In his new post, Bonta faces a long list of business that includes defending the state’s toughest-in-the nation gun laws against a barrage of more than half a dozen pending lawsuits by groups including the National Rifle Assn.

In an interview with The Times, Bonta said he is preparing for the confirmati­on process in which he will be questioned about his views during committee hearings on issues within the purview of the attorney general.

“First things first, I need to get confirmed,” Bonta said when asked about what he will do on matters he will take on as the state’s top attorney. “Should I have that

honor and privilege, I’m going to dig in and wrap my arms and head around those issues.”

Former state Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer said that while the new attorney general may have a lot of problems on his plate, he’s certain Bonta will be able to work through them.

“There are many different challenges, and they are never easy, but they are always solvable,” Lockyer said.

One early test involves implementi­ng a state law supported by Bonta, AB 1506, that requires the state attorney general’s office to investigat­e all police shootings that result in the death of an unarmed civilian.

Newsom’s proposed budget provides $13 million for the fiscal year starting July 1 to provide about 67 staffers for three teams assigned to probe shootings in different parts of the state.

But officials from the state Department of Justice said in recent weeks that they will need twice as much, $26 million, to properly investigat­e the 40 deadly police shootings that the state averages each year.

The current budget proposal has “not enough resources to stand up profession­al teams to perform these new investigat­ive and prosecutor­ial duties,” the agency said in a letter to lawmakers.

The Newsom administra­tion defends the budget.

“We believe the funding provided in the budget allows the Department of Justice to establish this program, collect data and actual workload, and submit a request in the future for any additional resources that are needed,” said H.D. Palmer, an administra­tion spokesman.

At the news conference where Newsom announced his appointmen­t, Bonta said properly implementi­ng the new law is a priority for him.

“The attorney general’s office needs to be able to have enough resources to fund the new responsibi­lities that the Legislatur­e wants to give it,” Bonta told

reporters. “That’s an important part of a successful implementa­tion of AB 1506. We’ve got to be able to get on the ground quickly in any part of the state to begin an investigat­ion and collect the evidence at the drop of a hat.”

Another immediate challenge for Bonta will be the ongoing investigat­ion of fraudulent unemployme­nt claims during the COVID-19 pandemic that state officials estimate total at least $11 billion.

The attorney general’s office is part of a task force set up by the governor in November to coordinate the many investigat­ions by local, state and federal authoritie­s into bogus claims, including thousands submitted in the names of state prison inmates.

The state Department of Justice has yet to announce any significan­t charges as a result of the investigat­ions, although federal agencies have brought several.

“To protect its integrity, we are unable to comment on a potential or ongoing investigat­ion,”

the state DOJ said in a statement last week.

Lawmakers including state Sen. Jim Nielsen (RRed Bluff) are calling on Bonta to prioritize catching and prosecutin­g those who have stolen unemployme­nt benefits from the state Employment Developmen­t Department through fraud, including large crime rings.

“The EDD is completely a failure, top to bottom, and the attorney general’s office is likewise a failure,” Nielsen said. “Billions of dollars of fraud, and they are not doing a thing about it. I hope Rob makes that a very high priority.”

Bonta said in the interview that he is alarmed by reports of significan­t fraud.

“I think the A.G. could have a role in helping make sure there is integrity in that process and that criminal activity and fraudulent activity is rooted out,” Bonta said. “We should use the tools that we have to prevent that and hold those accountabl­e and, if possible, be able to reclaim those funds.”

After a spate of recent mass shootings, gun issues are also once again front and center for the attorney general. One challenge facing Bonta was highlighte­d Thursday, when the state Department of Justice released its annual report identifyin­g problems in a program to seize guns from people convicted of felonies and those struggling with mental illness who are disqualifi­ed from owning firearms.

California’s Armed and Prohibited Persons System, or APPS, matches gun sales data against court records to create a list of people who buy firearms but are later convicted of a crime or found to have serious mental illness.

The DOJ report released Thursday said that as of the start of this year, 23,598 California­ns had guns despite being barred from owning them, up more than 1,000 from the year before and higher than the tally has been in more than a decade.

Lawmakers have criticized the attorney general’s

office for years for failing to significan­tly reduce the backlog to make sure guns are not in the hands of those who should not have them.

“That did not get done,” Nielsen said. “There is no dang reason why it couldn’t get done. They have just not made it important.”

In explaining why the state was unable to reduce the backlog, the agency report released Thursday cited factors including the pandemic and new laws creating more disqualify­ing crimes.

“Because APPS work requires extensive interactio­n with the public, the Bureau was forced to scale back its efforts,” the report said.

The DOJ said the program could be made more effective if the state better funded county efforts to enforce the law and provided higher pay for investigat­ors to beef up staffing.

The agency is also facing criticism for recently proposing rules that lawmakers say would limit the ability of researcher­s to access DOJ data on people subject to gun violence restrainin­g orders, hindering state-funded research by the University of California Firearm Violence Research Center on the effectiven­ess of gun laws.

Eleven legislator­s, led by Assemblyma­n Phil Ting (DSan Francisco), wrote a letter to Becerra on March 9 objecting to a proposal that would limit a researcher’s ability to access personal identifyin­g informatio­n involving restrainin­g orders.

“If the proposed regulation­s are adopted, it will be impossible for the Center to update its work on the effectiven­ess” of restrainin­g orders, the lawmakers wrote.

The attorney general’s office said in a statement that it “values data-driven research” but takes “seriously our duty to protect California­ns’ sensitive personally identifyin­g informatio­n.”

Ting said he hopes Bonta will change the DOJ’s position on the release of gun data. “Once confirmed, my hope is he’ll grant researcher­s access to state firearms records, allowing their work to continue,” Ting said.

California has pioneered some of the toughest gun laws in the country, and many are currently being challenged in court by groups such as the NRA.

As the state’s lawyer, the attorney general has been defending those laws in court, but many cases are expected to come to a head after Bonta takes the reins. For example, a federal appeals court in February said it will reconsider a ruling that threw out California’s ban on high-capacity ammunition magazines.

Other gun laws challenged in court include the state’s assault weapons ban and a prohibitio­n on the sale of semiautoma­tic rifles equipped with so-called bullet buttons.

Bonta signaled that he is prepared to defend California’s gun laws.

“The work I’ve done in the past represents those values, including making sure that California­ns are safe from gun violence,” Bonta said.

 ?? ROB BONTA Alexis Cuarezma For The Times ?? is expected to be confirmed as California attorney general by the Legislatur­e within 90 days.
ROB BONTA Alexis Cuarezma For The Times is expected to be confirmed as California attorney general by the Legislatur­e within 90 days.
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