Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Ban on chokeholds among California criminal justice reforms

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO >> Spurred by the slayings of George Floyd and other Black people in police custody across the country, California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday banned certain chokeholds as he approved several new laws designed to increase oversight of the criminal justice system.

But amid national calls to defund the police, he vetoed a priority bill of reform groups that would have provided state funding for community organizati­ons to take over some police duties in an effort to deescalate confrontat­ions.

Newsom supported the concept of the bill, which passed with near- unanimous bipartisan support, but objected to how it would have been administer­ed.

The veto “is in sharp contrast to his promises to address systemic racism and violence in policing,” said Cat Brooks, co-founder of Anti Police-Terror Project. “Shame on you.”

While she noted that Newsom promised to keep working on the issue with lawmakers next year, “how many lives will we lose between now and then?”

The California bill banning neck holds does not apply to the sort of suffocatio­n that killed Floyd in May in Minneapoli­s and led to months of protests. Floyd died when a police officer put his knee on Floyd’s neck while he was on the ground.

Still, A s s embly ma n Mike Gipson said his bill was spurred by Floyd and “many others (who) have cried out, ‘I can’t breathe,’ and law enforcemen­t must now use alternativ­e methods to restrain a suspect instead of these life-threatenin­g holds.”

California’s ban applies to arm-based grips including chokeholds that apply pressure to a person’s windpipe, and to carotid holds, which slow the flow of blood to the brain. The ban on chokeholds and other neck restraints followed an order by Newsom in June discouragi­ng use of the holds.

Under another new law, one that has been years in the making, the state attorney general will be required to investigat­e fatal police shootings of unarmed civilians.

Newsom acted over the objection of the county sheriffs’ associatio­n when he approved a law making it clear that county supervisor­s can create oversight boards and inspectors general with subpoena powers over independen­tly elected sheriffs.

Attorney General Xavier Becerra opposed versions of the bill giving his office responsibi­lity for investigat­ing fatal shootings by police and blocked similar proposals in previous years, on the grounds that his office lacks the funds or personnel needed to take over from hundreds of local law enforcemen­t agencies. Some critics, meanwhile, said the attorney general’s office is too tied to law enforcemen­t to be completely objective.

Assemblyma­n Kevin McCarty said his bill recognizes the “inherent conflict of interest with police essentiall­y policing themselves.”

Under another new law, suspects may be entitled to new trials or sentences if they can demonstrat­e that any part of their case, from arrest to sentencing, was tainted by racial bias. Among other things, defendants can try to show with statistics that there are systemic racial disparitie­s in bringing certain charges or that minorities are more likely to be convicted or receive longer sentences.

“This bill gives me hope that one day we will have a justice system that deserves to have justice in its title,” said Zachary Norris, executive director of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights.

The California District Attorneys Associatio­n objected that the law will prompt mistrials or other steps “without any showing that ... the bias has any impact whatsoever on the outcome of the trial, or that the defendant was deprived of a fair trial.”

Newsom also approved a bill allowing judges, starting in 2022, to assess whether lawyers illegally exclude jurors based on their race.

While the governor and advocates hailed the new laws, many more controvers­ial measures died among law enforcemen­t opposition in the closing hours of the legislativ­e session last month. They included proposals to end the careers of officers who commit serious misconduct, release more police misconduct records, require officers to intervene if they see excessive use of force, and limit their use of rubber bullets and tear gas against peaceful protesters.

“I hope people recognize we’re moving in the right direction, and again I just recognize we have a lot more work to do in this space and we are not walking away from that responsibi­lity,” Newsom said, promising renewed efforts next year.

Newsom also signed a bill he sought that will phase out the state’s remaining juvenile prisons, which currently hold about 750 youths, a move that state Sen. Nancy Skinner called “monumental for juvenile justice in California.”

Counties will stop sending juveniles to state lockups after July 1. The state will instead create an Office of Youth and Community Restoratio­n and send grants to counties to provide custody and supervisio­n.

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