Los Angeles Times

Effort targets bogus 911 calls

The CAREN Act would designate discrimina­tory police calls as hate crimes.

- By Jake Sheridan

As viral videos continue to show 911 calls being leveraged to threaten people of color, a San Francisco supervisor has introduced a new proposal to criminaliz­e discrimina­tory emergency calls.

Supervisor Shamann Walton, who introduced the legislatio­n Tuesday, calls it the CAREN Act. The acronym stands for Caution Against Racially Exploitati­ve Non-Emergencie­s, but the proposal seems to carry more meaning.

The name “Karen” has been used on social media to identify antagonist­ic, entitled white women. More recently, the label has been applied to those caught on video showing a prejudicia­l bias toward people of color, particular­ly calling police while exhibiting a false sense of distress.

Such calls aren’t new, but they have received growing attention in recent weeks after video of a white woman calling police on a Black man in Central Park went viral six weeks ago. Amy Cooper called authoritie­s to report she was being threatened by “an African American man.” The man — Christian Cooper, who was in the park to watch birds — videotaped the exchange and posted it on Twitter.

In the wake of the death of George Floyd, a Black man killed in police custody in Minneapoli­s, dozens of “Karen” videos have spread across the internet, triggering outcry and ongoing conversati­ons about race, access to public space and when it’s appropriat­e to call police.

But Walton says enough is enough.

“This is the CAREN we need,” he wrote in a tweet.

“Within the last month and a half in the Bay Area, an individual called the police on a Black man who was dancing and exercising on the street in his Alameda neighborho­od and a couple called the police on a Filipino man stenciling ‘Black Lives Matter’ in chalk in front of his own residence in San Francisco’s Pacific Heights,” Walton said in a news release.

He noted that California law made filing false police reports illegal but explained that his legislatio­n went further by designatin­g discrimina­tory 911 calls as hate crimes and providing civil remedy for people harmed by such calls.

“Under existing laws,” Walton said, “there are no consequenc­es for people who make fraudulent emergency calls based on the perception of another individual to be a threat due to their race, religion, ethnicity, religious affiliatio­n, gender, sexual orientatio­n, gender identity, or outward appearance.”

California Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta, who represents Oakland and serves as assistant majority leader, proposed similar legislatio­n at the statehouse. An amendment to his AB 1550 bill would also designate discrimina­tory calls as hate crimes and provide civil remedy for those harmed.

“We must not allow people to use our 911 and law enforcemen­t systems as weapons for hate,” Bonta said.

Walton said his ordinance and Banta’s bill were “part of a larger nationwide movement to address racial biases and implement consequenc­es for weaponizin­g emergency resources with racist intentions,” alongside similar bills in New York and Oregon.

AB 1550 is currently in the California State Senate’s Safety Committee. The CAREN Act has a 30-day hold after introducti­on but will likely then be heard by a Board of Supervisor­s committee and go into effect “30 days after the mayor signs the ordinance in San Francisco,” Walton said.

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