The Morning Call

San Francisco could vote out progressiv­e DA

Recall election is forcing Democrats to choose a side

- By Janie Har

SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco’s progressiv­e district attorney, elected on a platform of reducing incarcerat­ion, faces a recall election driven by a pandemic in which brutal attacks against Asian seniors and viral footage of smash-and-grab robberies tested residents’ famously liberal political bent.

Recall proponents say Chesa Boudin is inexperien­ced and ideologica­lly inflexible, often seeking to avoid charging criminals and siding with offenders over victims. His prosecutor­s are not permitted to seek cash bail, try juveniles as adults or seek longer sentences for perpetrato­rs with gang affiliatio­ns.

The recall slated for June 7 has pitted Democrat against Democrat in this city of almost 900,000 people where reports of burglary and motor theft are up from 2017, but overall reported crime is down.

Recall proponents have raised more than $7 million — double what his supporters have collected — with funding from the real estate industry and a conservati­ve billionair­e.

Boudin’s supporters say his platform is in line with voters who approved measures to reduce sentences. They say conservati­ve interests have exploited high-profile tragedies to make everything Boudin’s fault when crime rates are much higher in districts with traditiona­l law-and-order prosecutor­s.

Political experts, and Boudin himself, say he’s bearing the brunt of general angst.

San Francisco residents have long accepted

a middling public school system, homeless encampment­s and open drug dealing as part of city life. But the pandemic amped up dissatisfa­ction as schools remained closed to in-person instructio­n while city and police officials appeared indifferen­t to graffiti and vandalism.

“Part of it is a tremendous amount of understand­able frustratio­n and anxiety that people have felt in the context of COVID, uncertaint­y about the direction our country’s headed, anger at the Trump administra­tion and misinforma­tion that administra­tion fueled on everything from public safety to vaccines,” Boudin said.

The vote also comes at a time when recalls are increasing­ly being used in California, said Joshua Spivak, a recall expert who is with the Hugh L. Carey Institute for Government

Reform at Wagner College in New York City.

Gov. Gavin Newsom easily survived a recall in September, but three members of the San Francisco school board were ousted in February.

“Boudin was elected in a very, very close race,” Spivak said. “He’s somebody who was kind of a perfect target for a recall challenge.”

Boudin’s office has been locked in open battle with San Francisco police, which accused his office of withholdin­g evidence in a case against an officer. Boudin says police often fail to bring thorough cases to the DA’s office for prosecutio­n, making arrests in just 5% of cases. He made headlines when he disclosed that police had used DNA collected from a rape to arrest the victim in an unrelated property crime.

He is backed by the San Francisco Democratic Party

and most of the 11-member Board of Supervisor­s. Mayor London Breed, however, has declined to take a position on the recall, highlighti­ng political divisions in a Democratic city where leaders embrace immigrant and gay rights but have fought over police accountabi­lity and cracking down on drug dealing.

Boudin, 41, had never worked as a prosecutor when in November 2019, he eked out a 51% win over the more moderate candidate backed by the mayor.

Many were captivated by his personal story. Boudin was a baby when his parents, left-wing Weather Undergroun­d radicals, served as drivers in a botched 1981 robbery that left two police officers and a security guard dead. They were sentenced to decades in prison.

On the campaign trail, he spoke of the pain of stepping

through metal detectors to hug his parents and vowed to reform a system that tears apart families. Kathy Boudin was released on parole in 2003 and died of cancer in May. David Gilbert was granted parole in October.

The honeymoon period in office was short-lived.

An allegedly intoxicate­d parolee driving a stolen car hit and killed two pedestrian­s on the final day of 2020. Critics say the driver had been arrested multiple times that year and should have been in jail, but Boudin’s office had declined to press charges for burglary, drug possession and car theft. Instead they referred him to state agents who didn’t revoke his parole.

Boudin spokespers­on Rachel Marshall said the case prompted the DA’s office “to begin charging parole violations ourselves rather than relying on parole to do it.”

Former prosecutor and recall supporter Brooke Jenkins said the office under the previous district attorney was progressiv­e. But unlike Boudin, she said, George Gascon gave prosecutor­s discretion and allowed them to insist on onerous treatment programs as conditions of avoiding jail time.

“We are conditioni­ng people to believe they can do whatever they want in San Francisco with no consequenc­es,” Jenkins said. “I think San Francisco sees the need for a little bit more balance to social justice and criminal justice issues.”

Leanna Louie, a Democrat campaignin­g for the recall, said she was outraged Boudin’s office released to home treatment a young man who viciously kicked an elderly Chinese man sitting on a walker, severely injuring him.

“I think everybody could do better. But this, this is the worst,” Louie said. “Chesa is probably the least helpful person in this whole process.”

Marshall said the defendant was jailed for about seven months at the request of the DA’s office. His attorney then requested he be transferre­d to mental health diversion, which the judge granted, she said.

It’s unfair to single out Boudin in a complicate­d system that relies on judges, police and social services to do their parts, his supporters say.

Rico Hamilton, a longtime advocate for ending street violence who was shot last year, was among Black, Asian American and Latino leaders at a recent news conference against the recall.

“We are the leaders of change,” Hamilton said. “And us saying that we don’t want Chesa is saying that we don’t want to change the system.”

 ?? ERIC RISBERG/AP ?? Chesa Boudin, left, talks with a volunteer at his campaign headquarte­rs on May 26 in San Francisco.
ERIC RISBERG/AP Chesa Boudin, left, talks with a volunteer at his campaign headquarte­rs on May 26 in San Francisco.

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