Los Angeles Times

The new DA’s unradical moves

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Re “Gascón unveils sweeping vision on Day 1,” Dec. 8

Statistics seem to validate new Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. George Gascón’s decision to no longer seek cash bail for criminal defendants. A report last month by the Prison Policy Initiative found that “when states, cities and counties began releasing more people pretrial, there were no correspond­ing waves in crime.”

Gascón is in good company. According to the report, after Santa Clara County started using risk assessment for release, the number of people released without cash bail increased by 45%. Ninety- nine percent of these people were not rearrested.

In 2020, the district attorney of San Francisco ( a job that Gascón used to hold) announced his office would no longer ask for cash bail. According to the report, the city’s jail population decreased by 47%, and the “new criminal activity rate,” which measures the rate at which people commit new crimes while awaiting trial, is 10%.

Reforms that reduce the incarcerat­ion of people who pose no threat to public safety are showing success.

Carole Urie Laguna Beach The writer is founder and chief executive of the Returning Home Foundation.

With homicides higher than they’ve been in years, the last thing Los Angeles County needs is Gascón as its new district attorney. If there’s only one person in the county who has to be tough on crime, it’s the DA.

Unfortunat­ely, Gascón wants to eliminate cash bail and seek light sentences. Gascón’s true line of work should’ve been either as a member of the parole board or as a humanitari­an.

Instead of backing his prosecutor­s in cases, Gascón will be siding with the defense attorneys.

Charles Reilly Manhattan Beach

As many have said in the past, change is difficult. Concern about the changes proposed by Gascón led me to vote for his opponent.

That said, I am willing to give him a chance with his reforms.

I ask this though: Let’s put a time bracket on these changes, say a year, then compare data on various crimes before and after. If the changes improve matters, great, keep them. If crime worsens, maybe what we had was better. Darrin Lambrigger

El Segundo

I could have sworn that we just had a statewide election with a propositio­n to eliminate cash bail. And, that propositio­n was voted down by a majority of California­ns.

Gascón knows better and is going to implement this change immediatel­y. He sounds like President Trump during his first days in office. Robert DiPaolo

Los Angeles

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