The Guardian (USA)

92% black or Latino: the California laws that keep minorities in prison

- Abené Clayton in San Francisco

When Lucero Herrera stepped out of the San Francisco county jail on a cold, dreary autumn afternoon in 2008, she didn’t go back to the home in the neighborho­od where she grew up.

The 18-year-old had served a little over a year in juvenile hall and county jail after a conflict between different street gangs in her community in the Mission District, San Francisco’s historical­ly Latino neighborho­od, turned into a violent fight.

The years leading up to the fight had been turbulent. Herrera and her brother moved from El Salvador to San Francisco when they were kids. Herrera’s youth was often rough, she said. Her mother, who worked multiple jobs and as a result was rarely home, struggled with drug addiction and was abused by some of her partners.Law enforcemen­t had identified her brother as a member of a gang. And despite their reputation among law enforcemen­t, local gang members, Herrera said, were some of the people who supported her most, and encouraged her to stay in school despite the chaos around.

Following the fight, authoritie­s charged Herrera with assault with a deadly weapon and street terrorism. She was also ordered to register as a gang member upon her release, leave San Francisco and carry around a card detailing her gang membership at all times.

Herrera was paroled to a transition­al house in the city of Oakland, separated by the bay from her support system in the Mission. “I was in the unknown. I had to do what I had to do to take care of myself,” she told the Guardian about her time in Oakland.

She ended up in the undergroun­d street economy, she said, exchanging sex for money to pay for public transit, clothes and food. She struggled to stay connected with her mom, who was stillbattl­ing addiction and had become homeless. Herrera was regularly abused by her pimp, she said.

After a particular­ly bad beating left her with two black eyes and landed her in the hospital, Herrera tried to escape, she said. But her pimp and a client who had come to her aid got into a fight, and Herrera ended up arrested again. This time, she faced a sentence of almost three years because of her conviction record and alleged gang ties.

“They looked more at the gang ties than at the beating by my pimp. Even when I was trying to defend myself they were just looking at my background,” she said.

Herrera is among thousands of California residents who authoritie­s have charged with gang enhancemen­ts – additional prison time or release conditions tacked on to their sentences because of alleged gang ties. Gang enhancemen­ts are just one of dozens of types of sentencing enhancemen­ts at prosecutor­s’ disposal, others include those for weapons possession or prior conviction­s. They are particular­ly common in California, where almost 70% of the state’s prison population in 2019 had at least one enhancemen­t. As of August 2019, more than 90% of adults with a gang enhancemen­t in a state prison are either black or Latino, California department of correction­s and rehabilita­tion (CDCR) data indicates.

Many prosecutor­s argue that gang enhancemen­ts, which they say are used to reflect the severity of gang-related crimes, can deter people from participat­ing in these groups, and can give communitie­s time to heal by taking dangerous people off the streets for as long as possible.

A growing chorus of critics, however, say enhancemen­ts and lengthy prison stays are costly, ineffectiv­e tactics to deter crime, and do little to address the circumstan­ces that push people into criminalit­y. They argue prosecutor­s rely on an outdated and overly broad interpreta­tion of what constitute­s a gang member, resulting in an approach that criminaliz­es culture and relationsh­ips among people in lowincome black and Latino communitie­s.

In San Francisco, Chesa Boudin, the newly elected district attorney, has vowed to do away with gang enhancemen­ts: “We need sophistica­ted policing to go after sophistica­ted criminal networks, but we need to be really careful when we use the legal definition of gang, because I think it’s overused and abused right now,” Boudin told the Guardian. “It feels like we’re criminaliz­ing a culture – music videos and Instagram photos showing that you’re friends with someone who could be your neighbor, cousin or girlfriend’s brother, are viewed through a lens of criminalit­y.”

Lucero Herrera said the gang charges didn’t help her get her life back on track.

“It didn’t help my lifestyle. Instead, it made it difficult for me to live and navigate in the world,” said Herrera, who is now 30 and works at the Young Women’s Freedom Center in San Francisco, an organizati­on that provides support for women and girls who are affected by the criminal justice system.

The origins

Gang enhancemen­ts first appeared during the tough on crime era of the 1980s and 90s, when Americans were fearful of young, mostly black and Latino people deemed “superpreda­tors” and were concerned that the street-level violence that came out of the crack-cocaine trade would reach suburban and affluent communitie­s. These days, terms like “superpreda­tor” are widely considered racist and outdated. Yet some of the law enforcemen­t tools that came from this era, including gang enhancemen­ts, are still widely used within the criminal justice system.

There are various versions of gang enhancemen­ts at both the federal and state level. In California, 11,484 inmates in the state’s adult prison system, or about 6%, had a gang enhancemen­t in August 2019, according to data from the California department of correction­s and rehabilita­tion. Of them, 10,535 – 92% – are either black or Latino. And while California’s prison population has declined since the US supreme court ordered the state to reduce its prison population in 2011 from 163,000 to around 125,000, the number of prisoners with a gang enhancemen­t in the system rose almost 40% in the same period.

The racial discrepanc­ies, experts and advocates say, are partly due to the way California identifies gangs and gang members.

Gang enhancemen­ts first appeared in the 1988 Street Terrorism Enforcemen­t and Prevention (Step) Act, when the crack-cocaine trade and undergroun­d drug market fueled streetleve­l violence over turf among gangs throughout California. The violence took the form of drive-by shootings, and deadly fights between feuding groups.

“It was on and poppin’,” said Douglass Fort, a Bay Area gang expert who testifies in criminal cases. “It was young men with a bunch of money and egos, with 13-year-olds making 5-10k a month.” Communitie­s were killing each other with guns and crack, Fort said of the climate during the early 80s. “Legislator­s thought these communitie­s were crazy and when it came to writing legislatio­n, it was lockup instead of rehab.”

Prosecutor­s still follow the Step Act definition of a “gang” – an “organizati­on, associatio­n, or group of three or more persons” who commit crimes as a collective. They can charge any defendant whose alleged crime is deemed to bolster the reputation of or bring money into the group with a gang enhancemen­t, which can add between one to 10 years on to a sentence.

But the dynamics of gangs and gang violence have changed significan­tly over the years. Today, there are large ethnically based gangs, such as the Aryan Brotherhoo­d, the Nuestra Familia, and their subsets, the Norteños and Sureños, active in the Bay Area’s streets, prisons and jails, law enforcemen­t officials and gang experts say. These groups are still involved in the undergroun­d drug trade. But now, the once thriving undergroun­d crack, cocaine and marijuana trade is being replaced by the more lucrative opioid and methamphet­amine sales.

The large, predominan­tly black gangs that are active in southern California, such as the Crips and Bloods, don’t have a significan­t presence in the Bay Area, according to law enforcemen­t. Instead, black groups in the region are often smaller, centered around specific locations, and don’t have a clear power structure or origin – which is why they are classified as nontraditi­onal gangs. Rapid gentrifica­tion in the region has changed the activities of these non-traditiona­l groups, said the Contra Costa deputy district attorney, Jason Peck, with the region’s high housing costs causing them to splinter. This phenomenon is considered to be the main driver behind the almost 200 shootings that have happened on Bay Area freeways since 2015.

The reasons Bay Area residents join traditiona­l and non-traditiona­l gangs vary based on the individual and community in which they grow up. Some are born into heavily gang-involved families and are raised to be proud of being a member. Some are from neighborho­ods where not being a part of a street gang can be more dangerous than being in one. Others, especially young people who are in smaller nontraditi­onal gangs, come together for a variety of reasons including growing up in the same community and bonding over shared trauma.

“Most gang members operate from an area of being hurt,” said David Monroe who works with at-risk youth in San Francisco and Stockton. Monroe is also a Norteño, the subset of the Nuestra Familia prison gang that is most present in northern California, and spent 19 years in prison for murdering a rival gang member when he was 15.

“It’s easy to understand how a kid who grows up in that environmen­t can go down that road,” Monroe continued. “Those gang members are like your new family, and they protect you, they look out for you, they do all the things your family should be doing.”

To establish gang ties, prosecutor­s today mainly look at social media photos and prior contact with police. In some cases rap music videos and lyrics that show proximity to people identified as gang members are also used to establish membership or affiliatio­n. Some law enforcemen­t agencies keep track of suspected gang members in the CalGang database, which underwent an overhaul after a 2016 state audit found that the database contained “questionab­le informatio­n that may violate individual­s’ privacy rights”. The auditor found that some law enforcemen­t agencies “were unable to demonstrat­e that many of the groups they entered into CalGang met the criteria necessary for identifica­tion as gangs”. The database is now managed by California’s department of justice. ‘It doesn’t address the root causes’

Prosecutor­s argue gang enhancemen­ts are still an effective way to help keep the public safe, by recognizin­g the severity of gang-related crime and the risk it poses to the community at large. Prosecutor­s consider them a way to ensure that people who commit violent crimes on behalf of a gang are incarcerat­ed for as long as possible, said Yvette McDowell, a former assistant city prosecutor in Pasadena, California.

“Prosecutor­s are trying to either help the victim be made whole, or get justice for society as a whole,” McDowell said. “They are going to use whatever tool is at their disposal to bolster their position to have things work out in their favor.”

Some cities have also placed restrainin­g orders on gangs that make various actions, such as hanging out in certain areas, illegal for some or all of its members. These court orders are known as a gang injunction­s and cities throughout California have used them since the 1990s.

“It could have been whistling when the police are coming or riding a bicycle in a particular area,” said McDowell, who helped Pasadena get an injunction against a gang in the late 90s. “There’s nothing criminal about riding a bike, but if you are identified on the injunction list, you simply being over there gave [police] probable cause to stop and search you.”

Injunction­s have been used in San Francisco since 2006. The city attorney, Dennis Herrera, says the injunction­s on gangs in four neighborho­ods have contribute­d to the city’s historical­ly low rate of gun violence, were tactfully implemente­d and only used on people with a well-documented criminal history. But community organizers say this decrease in violent crime has come at the expense of black and Latino residents whose communitie­s were targeted by police.

Groups like the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) argue the injunction­s, much like gang enhancemen­ts, do not address the issues at the root of crime and take up public resources that could be spent on efforts like violence prevention programs.

“The gang injunction­s were almost these 21st-century Black Codes,” said Jose Bernal, a San Francisco native and organizer with the San Francisco No

Injunction­s Coalition, comparing the court orders to a set of laws placed on formerly enslaved black people after slavery was abolished.

“Sending police to these neighborho­ods is a reactionar­y thing,” Bernal added. “It’s natural for most folks [to] feel safer because there’s a police officer present, but that doesn’t address the root causes.”

Lucero Herrera recalls feeling singled out by police whether she was alone or with a group of friends hanging out. She learned of her brother’s reputation when she was stopped by police around the age of 12. She recalls gang taskforce officers calling her “Lil’ Lazy”, a version of her brother’s street name. These kinds of police encounters would even happen at places like the local community center, she remembered.

“It made me feel like I wasn’t a human,” she said. “If we were just sitting on the stairs police thought we were doing something wrong instead of just enjoying our youth.”

Herrera was often angry growing up. “The police think I’m already gonna be this way, so why not?” she recalls thinking.

Herrera stabbed a man in a large street fight when she was 15. She spent a year and a half in juvenile detention, and when she was about to be released she asked to stay locked up, worried she wouldn’t be able to stay out of trouble. She was released anyway.

“I just wish that probation, and the case manager would have listened to me when I asked to be in an out-patient program.”

She lasted about six days, before the fight that landed her in county jail. She accepts accountabi­lity, she said, but says that her prison stay kept her away from her mother, who was still struggling with addiction and wasin need of Herrera’s help and support.

Herrera’s brother was arrested and charged with a gang enhancemen­t in 2008, while she was serving her sentence in San Francisco county jail. He was deported to El Salvador after serving his sentence. Her own incarcerat­ion coupled with her brother’s arrest and deportatio­n was a serious blow, she said.

“It broke my family,” Herrera said. Herrera’s brother was found murdered in El Salvador in 2018, and in August of this year, police found her mother’s decomposin­g body in Sonoma county. She had been missing since May 2018.

“That’s another reason my mom went missing. All that trauma.”

The push for reform

There is a growing movement of community organizers and attorneys who point at cases like Herrera’s to argue that the current approach is archaic.

“We’ve had enough time since the tough-on-crime era. We have data to look back on to see the results of the policies,” said Derrick Morgan, a policy associate with the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights.

“Giving people more time does not work to reduce crime, we just burdened the state’s budget with really tough policies.”

Boudin argued during his campaign for district attorney that the use of social media and rap music videos can criminaliz­e culture, because family members and neighbors can be caught up in the dragnet of gang prosecutio­n.

Defendants committing serious crimes like murder and robbery already face harsh punishment, he added, leaving enhancemen­ts to mostly serve as leverage for prosecutor­s and a way to introduce evidence that would otherwise be irrelevant.

“To use gang charges as a way to introduce evidence at trial is problemati­c, racially charged, and it makes us unsafe by underminin­g trust in the community,” Boudin said.

“If public safety requires a life sentence, that’s doable without the gang charge,” he continued. “I want to have the resources we spend actually make us safer and to make sure that we’re reducing racial disparitie­s, not increasing them.”

There is also a financial argument for reform. California spends about $80,000 a year on each inmate in the state’s prison system and this cost is substantia­lly higher for juveniles. Violence reduction groups like the Giffords Law Center point to communityb­ased mentorship, strengthen­ing police-community relations and investing in alternativ­es to incarcerat­ion for young people as often more effective in stopping crime and violence than incarcerat­ion.

And there is growing awareness of the policy’s ripple effects on defendants and their communitie­s.

“Families are being torn apart consistent­ly,’ said Amber-Rose Howard of California­ns United for a Responsibl­e Budget, a coalition of not-forprofit organizati­ons that work to reduce the state’s prison and jail population. “They are trying to support [the incarcerat­ed person] and stay connected, and figure out how to survive without the extra help in their family.

“They also destabiliz­e [incarcerat­ed people], and their ability to function in society,” she added.

Herrera recalls having to carry around the card with her status as a known gang member made her feel “like a sex offender”. Since she was registered as a gang member, police could stop and search her whenever they wanted.

“I felt very embarrasse­d,” she said. “It was uncomforta­ble when I was in a big group of people, and I had to give the police a blue card.

“People wouldn’t kick it with me, and I couldn’t be myself because I was getting stopped and fucked with.”

Gang enhancemen­ts also affect the way people navigate behind bars, and can affect everything from where someone is housed to their chances in front of the parole board.

John Vasquez, who served 25 years in prison for shooting a member of a rival gang at a party when he was 16, received 12 extra years to his 15 years to life sentence for using a gun and being a gang member. He also spent three years in a smaller, more controlled housing unit that “didn’t have bars, just walls”.

“Having that gang label on you in the prison system means more lockdown time, and when I was going to my parole board hearings, the biggest hurdle was the gang enhancemen­ts, it seemed bigger than the murder itself,” Vasquez said.

•••

Revamping the way that California hands down gang enhancemen­ts is a slow-moving process. Organizers and public defenders say that is partly because gang members are painted as menaces to society in and outside of court, making it harder to gain the public support necessary to reform gang prosecutio­n.

Since gang members are still low on the statewide criminal justice policy agenda, organizers are focusing their reform efforts on local policies in DA offices and police department­s.

“We can start at home. That’s a policy decision that any district attorney can make, they can just choose,” Bernal said of limiting and eliminatin­g gang enhancemen­ts. “The money it takes to lock someone up could be better used in the community.”

In San Francisco, the use of gang enhancemen­ts may soon come to an end after Boudin unexpected­ly beat Suzy Loftus, a progressiv­e prosecutor who was appointed the interim district attorney in October. Loftus will remain in the office until early January. During the DA race, Boudin was the only candidate to call for a complete end to gang enhancemen­ts in San Francisco. He was also vehemently opposed by local law enforcemen­t associatio­ns who said his progressiv­e policies would lead to an uptick in crime. However, if Boudin disallows prosecutor­s from using gang enhancemen­ts, there will undoubtedl­y be backlash from within and outside the office.

John Vasquez says he is dishearten­ed by both the violent actions of gang members as well as the use of gang enhancemen­ts. “I get pissed off by the gang members doing their thing, and I still get pissed off at these gang enhancemen­ts being used on youngsters and a lot of minorities.”

He also knows firsthand how, without interventi­on, the need for love and acceptance can turn into a potentiall­y dangerous allegiance. “That gang mentality is very dangerous, it was my whole identity, everything. I was willing to kill for my gang to represent it, as crazy as that sounds today,” Vasquez says.

After 25 years in prison, Vasquez works for Communitie­s United for Restorativ­e Youth Justice (Curyj) where he helps families navigate gang prosecutio­n and other parts of the court systems.

“We lose one of our community members to either gang violence or to a long prison sentence. These are both traumatic for our communitie­s.”

Families are being torn apart consistent­ly

Amber-Rose Howard

 ?? Photograph: Erin Brethauer/The Guardian ?? Lucero Herrera, a coordinato­r with the Young Women Freedom Center, helps young women and gender non-conforming people navigate the juvenile and criminal justice system.
Photograph: Erin Brethauer/The Guardian Lucero Herrera, a coordinato­r with the Young Women Freedom Center, helps young women and gender non-conforming people navigate the juvenile and criminal justice system.
 ?? Photograph: Erin Brethauer/The Guardian ?? Tenaya Jones, Ki Finao and Storm GreenLoe with the Young Women Freedom Center plan a town hall meeting on 29 October 2019 in San Francisco.
Photograph: Erin Brethauer/The Guardian Tenaya Jones, Ki Finao and Storm GreenLoe with the Young Women Freedom Center plan a town hall meeting on 29 October 2019 in San Francisco.

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