San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

SCHUBERT FOR CALIFORNIA ATTORNEY GENERAL

- John Drumel

When Gov. Gavin Newsom appointed Alameda Assembymem­ber Rob Bonta as California attorney general last year after Xavier Becerra left to join the Biden administra­tion, there was a lot of praise and little surprise about the decision. Brainy and energetic, the Yale law school graduate had the credential­s and had long been seen as a rising political force. He was also a member in strong standing of his party’s dominant progressiv­e wing and hailed as an aggressive advocate of criminal justice reforms. That he would be the first Filipino American to be attorney general in California was also a major milestone. Five of the 10 U.S. metro areas with the most Filipinos are in California, including San Diego.

But there are growing reasons to wonder whether he really wants to be the constructi­ve, candid attorney general California needs. His refusal to really address deep concerns about Propositio­n 47, adopted by state voters in 2014, and Propositio­n 57, enacted in 2016, is on display in a wafer-thin response in The San Diego Union-tribune Editorial Board’s Q&A. It’s also evident in his refusal to be interviewe­d by news outlets from Politico to ABC 10 in Sacramento for stories about his campaign.

Propositio­n 47 more than doubled the monetary threshold for when people could be charged for felony theft, raising it to $950. Police chiefs, district attorneys and many crime victims say it has led to a culture of impunity in which brazen thefts are committed over and over by people who realize they face little consequenc­e. But the problems with this poorly crafted sentencing reform are even worse than some critics assert: In states across the nation, lessening the legal consequenc­es for drug offenders have undermined incentives for these offenders to participat­e in drug-court enrollment — perhaps by as much as 50 percent in California.

Propositio­n 57 was every bit as flawed. Billed as a smart way to keep nonviolent offenders out of state prison, it amended the state Constituti­on to define rape of an unconsciou­s person, malicious wounding of a child, some types of domestic violence, assault with a deadly weapon on a police officer and many other similar crimes as “nonviolent.”

Our editorial board has long supported criminal justice reform. Too many young offenders face onerous punishment­s that prevent them from salvaging their lives. But when supposed reforms come along that help lead 78 percent of state voters to express alarm about crime — as happened in February — that hurts the cause. Because 26 months of the pandemic have likely had a downward effect on some crime rates, Bonta and some defenders of 47 and 57 have at times disputed the idea that crime is really the problem that so many think. But that will be of little consolatio­n to the store owners facing bankruptcy because of mass shopliftin­g and to the victims of the stunning surge in vehicle break-ins in San Francisco — including 3,000 in November alone.

Bonta will be more inclined to keep ducking substantiv­e comment on the issue if his fall opponent is former U.S. Attorney Nathan Hochman, a capable and admired lawyer but also a Republican who once served in George W. Bush’s Justice Department and who is running in a state that rarely elects the GOP to constituti­onal offices like this. Sacramento County District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert would be a far more formidable rival. She’s a Republican-turned-independen­t, pro-choice, even-keeled disdainer of Donald Trump who was the first gay person elected to countywide office in Sacramento. In interviews, she’s wondered what’s progressiv­e about telling people “that domestic violence is a nonviolent crime.” But she’s hardly a law-and-order caricature. She faults the state for inadequate rehabilita­tion funding to help offenders rebound. In our Q&A, she praised state laws limiting officers’ use of force and promoting transparen­cy.

It is on this issue that Bonta should face far more heat. As an Assembly member, he blasted state laws and court rulings that he said had the effect of protecting rogue officers from consequenc­es for their actions — and allowed them to readily transfer to new jobs when their department­s were fed up with their continuing misconduct. In his early days as attorney general, he vowed to do a far better job on the issue than his predecesso­r, which shouldn’t have been hard. In 2019, Becerra threatened to punish a journalism program associated with UC Berkeley because it had legally obtained records of crimes committed by 3,500 past and present law enforcemen­t officers — a police state tactic and abuse of power that will haunt Becerra’s image forever.

Incredibly, however, The Mercury-news and East Bay Times editorial boards reported this month that Bonta continued his predecesso­r’s court fight to block release of some records chroniclin­g extensive police misconduct. California­ns deserve better than that from the state’s top cop. Schubert has far more promise to be an independen­t voice who doesn’t stonewall when pressed on her policies. We endorse Schubert for attorney general and look forward to a campaign between her and Bonta where he’s forced to address the issues much more.

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