Lake County Record-Bee

Will reducing criminal penalties reduce crime?

- DAN WALTERS

California is conducting an immense sociologic­al experiment, testing whether reducing prison time for criminal acts will, in the long run, mean less crime.

Over the last decade, politician­s and voters have lowered penalties for dozens of serious and minor crimes, reduced state prison population­s by about 40% and adopted multiple programs to treat underlying conditions, such as drug use and lack of education, to deter offenders from committing new crimes.

It’s been a dramatic turnaround from previous decades, when the public demanded ever-tougher sentences and the state couldn’t build prisons fast enough to handle a tidal wave of new inmates, resulting in overcrowdi­ng so severe that federal judges intervened.

The change coincided with California’s equally dramatic political reorientat­ion.

From the late 1970s to the early 1990s, a fear of crime, particular­ly violent crime, dominated the state’s political atmosphere, symbolized by the “three strikes and you’re out” law aimed at putting repeat felons behind bars for life.

Republican­s adroitly capitalize­d to win elections by accusing Democratic rivals of being soft on crime. In 1986, voters overwhelmi­ngly voted out three liberal state Supreme Court justices because of their capital punishment rulings.

Republican overreach, particular­ly a ballot measure targeting undocument­ed immigrants, and complex economic and sociologic­al factors, such as the collapse of Southern California’s aerospace industry, began changing the state’s political climate in the late 1990s.

Within a decade, Democrats had achieved dominance at all levels and soon embraced what they called “criminal justice reform.”

Jerry Brown, who experience­d the political impact of crime as governor in the late 1970s and 1980s and signed some of the lock-‘em-up bills, returned to the governorsh­ip in 2011. He was bent on reversing course, but cautiously didn’t make that intent public until he had won a fourth and final term in 2014.

Brown sponsored a 2016 ballot measure, Propositio­n 57, that swept away much of what he and other governors had wrought decades earlier, with political cover from federal judges who had ordered reductions in prison population­s due to overcrowdi­ng.

Brown’s successor, Gavin Newsom, is continuing the experiment. Even though the death penalty is still law, Newsom has declared an execution moratorium. He also accelerate­d reductions in prison population­s because of severe COVID-19 outbreaks and promised to close prisons.

Newsom’s proposed 202122 budget projects that the prison population, once as high as 170,000, will drop to 97,950 this year and continue declining thereafter.

Meanwhile, voters in San Francisco and Los Angeles have elected new district attorneys on platforms to minimize incarcerat­ion and maximize diversions into non-penal rehabilita­tion.

They are seeing some pushback. George Gascón, who had been San Francisco’s district attorney before shifting to Los Angeles, is even being sued by his own deputies, contending he is violating the law by ordering them to seek minimal sentences for crimes.

The bottom line question, of course, is whether the attitudina­l change will, as advocates contend, reduce the system’s disproport­ionate impact on Black and Latino communitie­s while also reducing the overall threat of crime.

Interestin­gly, and perhaps significan­tly, violent crime has been spiking upwards during the nearly yearlong COVID-19 pandemic. This month, Los Angeles Police Chief Michel Moore cited a sharp surge in homicides in his city to more than 300 in 2020 and 24 in the first two weeks of 2021.

In mid-January, the Los Angeles Times’ running tally of homicides counted 656 in Los Angeles County during the previous 12 months.

“It’s our shared responsibi­lity to stop this senseless violence,” Moore said in his tweet.

If, however, it continues, will crime once again become a burning political issue?

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