The Bakersfield Californian

California’s Democratic lawmakers seek ways to combat retail theft while keeping progressiv­e policy

- BY TRÂN NGUYEN

SACRAMENTO — Facing mounting pressure to crack down on a retail theft crisis, California lawmakers are split on how best to tackle the problem that some say has caused major store closures and products like deodorants to be locked behind plexiglass.

Top Democratic leaders have already ruled out reforming progressiv­e policies like Propositio­n 47, a ballot measure approved by 60% of state voters in 2014 that reduced certain theft and drug possession offenses from felonies to misdemeano­rs to address overcrowdi­ng jails. But a growing number of law enforcemen­t officials, along with Republican and moderate Democratic lawmakers, said California needs to consider all options, including rolling back the measure.

While shopliftin­g has been a growing problem, large-scale thefts, in which groups of individual­s brazenly rush into stores and take goods in plain sight, have become a crisis in California and elsewhere in recent years. California Retailers Associatio­n said it’s challengin­g to quantify the issue in California because many stores don’t share their data.

Urban areas and big cities like Bay Area and Los Angeles saw a steady increase in shopliftin­g between 2021 and 2022, according to a study of the latest crime data by The Public Policy Institute of California. Across the state, shopliftin­g rates rose during the same time period but were still lower than the pre-pandemic levels in 2019, while commercial burglaries and robberies have become more prevalent in urban counties, the study says.

Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, a champion of Propositio­n 47 who has repeatedly argued California already has tools to sufficient­ly go after criminals, rejected calls to reform the measure in January. He instead urged lawmakers to bolster existing laws and go after motor vehicle thefts and resellers of stolen merchandis­e. California also is spending $267 million to help dozens of local law enforcemen­t agencies increase patrols, buy surveillan­ce equipment and conduct other activities to crack down on retail theft.

“Not to say everything about Prop. 47 is hunky-dory and perfect,” Newsom said in January. “We want to help fix some of the ambiguitie­s there, but we could do it without reforming or going back to the voters.”

California voters approved Propositio­n 47 in 2014 to help California comply with a 2011 California Supreme Court order, which upheld that California’s overcrowde­d prisons violated incarcerat­ed individual­s’ Eighth Amendment rights against cruel and unusual punishment. The propositio­n modified, but did not eliminate, sentencing for many drug and nonviolent property crimes, including thefts under $950.

Funding saved from having fewer people in jails and prisons, which totals to $113 million this fiscal year, have gone to local programs to fight recidivism with some successes, state officials and advocates said.

But the propositio­n has made it harder to prosecute shoplifter­s and enabled brazen crime rings, law enforcemen­t officials said. An effort to reform the measure failed in 2020.

Following Newsom’s directions, Democratic leaders in both chambers at the Capitol also have shut down calls to repeal the measure. Last month, the state’s new Senate President Pro Tempore Mike McGuire, with bipartisan support, introduced a package of legislatio­n that would target auto thefts and large-scale resell schemes and expand diversion programs such as drug courts and treatment services. Online marketplac­es also would be required to crack down on users reselling stolen goods on their platforms under the proposal.

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