Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Brazen shopliftin­g spurs state law for organized thefts

- By Stefanie Dazio and Don Thompson

LONG BEACH >> With violent smash-and-grab shopliftin­g costing California businesses millions of dollars annually, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law Wednesday aimed at curbing organized retail theft.

The law reestablis­hes the crime of organized retail theft, which lawmakers first created in 2018 but allowed to lapse as of July 1. Prosecutor­s can again seek to charge the crime as either a misdemeano­r or a felony. It applies to those who work with others to steal merchandis­e either from brick-and-mortar stores or online, with the intent to sell or return the merchandis­e.

The legislatio­n also applies to someone who works with others to receive stolen merchandis­e, those who steal for others as part of an organized theft ring or people who do the recruiting or organizing for the theft ring.

The rings have become bolder in recent years, officials said, and videos of their smash-and-grabs have gone viral.

“The overall problem is a challenge — the brazenness of some of these crimes,” San Francisco Police Chief Bill Scott said. “When they see these things go viral, the perception of lawlessnes­s,

the perception that anything goes — that has to be overcome, too.”

Nationally, organized retail theft costs businesses tens of billions of dollars annually. Newsom signed the law at a store in Long Beach, surrounded by several mayors and law enforcemen­t officials.

However, police agencies

in California will have to contend with local prosecutor­s, who decide whether to charge an offender with a misdemeano­r or felony, if at all. Progressiv­e district attorneys such as those in San Francisco and Los Angeles have pledged to avoid stiff penalties, sentencing enhancemen­ts and incarcerat­ion for certain crimes.

Neither immediatel­y commented on the law Wednesday.

Newsom said organized retail theft is more than just simple, low-level shopliftin­g and that the California Highway Patrol has not seen a lack of support from liberal prosecutor­s.

“I’m not willing to throw up my hands and suggest that somehow we’re going to see a huge impediment to our collective effort to address these organized efforts,” the governor said.

State lawmakers first acted after retailers and law enforcemen­t complained that punishment­s for such property crimes had been reduced under a voter-approved ballot initiative in 2014 called Propositio­n 47.

The union that represents San Francisco rankand-file police officers said “strong response to California’s theft epidemic requires strong sentencing.” The union is vocally opposed to the San Francisco DA’s approach to charging — or not charging — offenders for various crimes.

“The easiest way to reduce crime is to fix Propositio­n 47 and reimpose strong sentencing for the pervasive retail theft that is literally closing stores across our state,” said Tracy McCray vice president of the San Francisco Police Officers Associatio­n. “Exacerbati­ng the situation is San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin’s insistence on dropping or downgradin­g charges of those caught red-handed that allows those very same crooks to further victimize our communitie­s over and over again.”

The new law’s author, Democratic Assemblyma­n Reggie Jones-Sawyer, said in a legislativ­e analysis that the goal was “to ensure we targeted sophistica­ted crime rings that took advantage of loopholes in state law as opposed to theft for personal use simply because someone was hungry.”

The law also reinstates a California Highway Patrol task force that analyzes organized retail theft and vehicle burglary and helps law enforcemen­t agencies in counties it identifies as having high property crime rates.

Over the past three years, the task force’s 668 investigat­ions included 252 arrests and the recovery of more than $16.3 billion in stolen merchandis­e.

Rachel Michelin, president of the California Retailers Associatio­n, said her organizati­on sponsored the legislatio­n in the hope that it could stem the tide of rising theft. In recent years, she said, frustrated retailers have seen increasing violence in the thefts.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has not changed theft patterns, Michelin said, but businesses are desperate to limit losses that were compounded by COVID-19 shutdowns.

Jessica Millan Patterson, the California GOP chairwoman, called Newsom’s bill signing a photo op and said the governor is only getting serious on rising violent crime as he faces a recall election.

 ?? RON HOLMAN — THE TIMES-DELTA ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks at Traver Joint Elementary School in Traver on Tuesday.
RON HOLMAN — THE TIMES-DELTA Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks at Traver Joint Elementary School in Traver on Tuesday.

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