Marysville Appeal-Democrat

California Supreme Court upbraids Jerry Brown on ballot measure

- By Dan Walters Calmatters Columnist

A political saga that began more than four decades ago came full circle last week when the state Supreme Court, including four Jerry Brown appointees, indirectly upbraided the former governor.

Unanimousl­y, the court declared that Propositio­n 57, a major criminal justice overhaul sponsored by Brown and overwhelmi­ngly passed by voters in 2016, did what its critics said it would do, not what Brown told voters.

Brown portrayed the measure, which lightened sentences for some felons, as a common sense reform to give nonviolent felons a better chance at rehabilita­tion by allowing them to earn earlier releases on parole. He wanted to undo, he said, a torrent of lock-‘em-up sentencing laws that began during his first governorsh­ip four decades earlier, when crime rates were peaking and voters were demanding harsher punishment.

However, Propositio­n 57 did not specify which felonies would be deemed nonviolent, but indirectly relied on a Penal Code list of 23 violent crimes. The list excluded quite a few felonies, such as sex crimes, that most of us would deem to be violent – and, in fact, are counted as violent offenses by the state Department of Justice.

Critics of Brown’s measure – the state’s prosecutor­s, particular­ly – pointed out the anomaly, and complained that if passed, it could shorten the terms of some vicious predators.

Brown responded by promising that by regulation, state prison officials would

prohibit sex criminals from being paroled under Propositio­n 57 and voters apparently believed him.

As promised, regulation­s promulgate­d by the Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion excluded many sex offenders from Propositio­n 57’s softer parole provisions. But attorneys for those offenders quickly disputed the rules’ legality and they scored victories in trial and appellate courts.

The lawsuits contended that the agency could not, by regulation, modify the wording of a voterappro­ved ballot measure and eventually the issue wound up in the state Supreme Court, which set aside the regulation­s.

“The initiative’s language

provides no indication that the voters intended to allow the (Correction­s) department to create a wholesale exclusion from parole considerat­ion based on an inmate’s sex offense conviction­s when the inmate was convicted of a nonviolent felony,” wrote Chief Justice Tani CantilSaka­uye in the unanimous decision.

Cantil-sakauye subtly but unmistakab­ly criticized Brown for sloppy drafting of the ballot measure.

“Had the drafters of Propositio­n 57, and by extension the voters, intended to exclude inmates from nonviolent offender parole considerat­ion based on prior or current sex offense conviction­s, it would have been a simple matter to say so explicitly,” she said.

The state’s lawyers

attempted to defend the disputed rules by citing Brown’s sponsorshi­p, but that also drew the court’s scorn. “Our analysis of the voters’ intent does not change merely because the proponents of the initiative here included the governor,” Cantil-sakauye wrote.

The ruling upholds the critics of Propositio­n 57, who warned in 2016 that it was hastily and sloppily drafted and could allow sex predators to win paroles and once again prowl for victims.

Ironically and perhaps tragically, it was issued just weeks after voters rejected a measure, Propositio­n 20, that would have corrected the gaps in Propositio­n 57.

Thus, there is an indelible stain on what Brown had said was one of his proudest achievemen­ts.

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