San Diego Union-Tribune

AG NOM VOWS ACTION ON POLICE MISCONDUCT

Bonta says all fatal police shootings should be probed

- BY DON THOMPSON Thompson writes for The Associated Press.

California’s nominee for state attorney general on Wednesday promised to hold police accountabl­e for misconduct.

Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta said his first priority would be implementi­ng a new state law requiring the state’s top law enforcemen­t officer to investigat­e every fatal police shooting of an unarmed civilian.

“That is so important right now as we have a racial justice reckoning in this nation — how we have a reckoning around how we police in this state and in this nation,” Bonta told lawmakers considerin­g his nomination to succeed Xavier Becerra, who resigned to become U.S. Health and Human Services secretary.

“We need to rebuild trust between law enforcemen­t and communitie­s,” Bonta added. “Accountabi­lity is part of that trust.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom last month nominated Bonta, 49, of the east San Francisco Bay Area city of Alameda, to be the first Filipino American to hold the top law enforcemen­t job in the nation’s most populous state, giving him outsize national influence.

Becerra had opposed investigat­ing all slayings by police, saying the attorney general’s office lacked enough staff and money. Becerra took limited roles in investigat­ing some of the

state’s most prominent killings by police in recent years.

Bonta, Becerra and Newsom are all Democrats, and Bonta is expected to face easy confirmati­on today by the Assembly and Senate, both controlled by his own party.

Bonta’s comments came one day after jurors found former Minneapoli­s police Officer Derek Chauvin guilty of murder and manslaught­er in the death of George Floyd.

Bonta has long supported policing reforms. He not only backed the shooting investigat­ion law, but also laws to end the state’s cash bail system, phase out private prisons and automatica­lly expunge marijuana conviction­s, although voters rejected the bail change last November.

The co-chairmen of the Assembly’s Special Committee on the Office of the Attorney General, also Democrats, subtly questioned Becerra’s policies and performanc­e in a fourpage letter they sent to Bonta before Wednesday’s hearing, asking him how he would run the office.

Assemblyme­n Reggie Jones-Sawyer and Mark Stone asked in their letter if he would commit to making police misconduct files public, and Bonta faced similar questionin­g by members of the Senate Rules Committee.

Becerra had balked, saying the police files should come from local law enforcemen­t agencies and not his office. But Bonta said he supported the law as a legislator and would comply.

They asked if Bonta would share the state’s gun database with firearm violence researcher­s; Becerra again had balked, citing privacy concerns.

And lawmakers in both chambers pressed Bonta on how he would eliminate a lingering backlog in the state’s unique program that seizes firearms from people who bought them legally but are no longer allowed to own them because of a criminal conviction or mental illness.

“We’ve got some challenges,” Bonta said, but “I want to do better.”

He said he wants to work with lawmakers to fill vacancies among special agents who enforce the law and upgrade technology that’s “a little clunky” and requires that informatio­n be manually entered.

He called rampant gun violence “America’s disease.” But he said under questionin­g by Republican lawmakers that he takes no issue with gun owners’ constituti­onal rights.

“I believe in commonsens­e gun safety policies,” he said. “My focus is on those who will do harm.”

The gun-seizure backlog plagued both Becerra and his predecesso­r, now Vice President Kamala Harris.

Becerra spent much of his tenure aggressive­ly fighting the Republican Trump administra­tion, but lawmakers said Bonta’s role is likely to change with a largely cooperativ­e relationsh­ip with the Democratic Biden administra­tion.

 ?? NOAH BERGER AP ?? Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta is expected to be confirmed as California’s next attorney general today.
NOAH BERGER AP Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta is expected to be confirmed as California’s next attorney general today.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States