The Mercury News

Legislator seeks to make 911 calls motivated by race hate crimes

- By Elizabeth Castillo

Barbecuing at Lake Merritt in Oakland. Selling water without a permit. Both instances in which a Black person was doing something deemed criminal by a white person. Both instances in which a white person called the police.

Now, as racial tensions flare as the nation protests the death of George Floyd and others, a Bay Area lawmaker plans to introduce legislatio­n that would make discrimina­tory 911 calls a hate crime, joining a handful of states in pushing to criminaliz­e emergency calls. Three states — New York, Oregon and Washington — have recently enacted new laws.

California’s proposal “would provide multiple pathways for justice for victims of racially weaponized 911 calls,” said Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta, an Alameda Democrat and the

bill’s author.

He said calling the police when no crime has occurred can be “incredibly dangerous” for victims because officers have wide latitude to detain people in ways that can quickly escalate.

The bill isn’t in print yet. Bonta says he is formulatin­g the circumstan­ces in which California­ns may be punished for bias.

Similar instances of racially motivated 911 calls have occurred across the country. In May, a white woman walking her dog in Central Park in New York called the police on a Black birdwatche­r after he asked her to leash her dog.

“I’m going to tell them there’s an African American man threatenin­g my life,” Amy Cooper, the dog walker, said during the recorded encounter.

The governor of New York signed legislatio­n making these types of 911 calls a crime.

In California, making a false police call is a misdemeano­r with a $1,000 fine and up to a year in county jail. But there are no other protection­s for those on the receiving end of a racially motivated police call.

In 2017, there were 28.1

million calls to 911 in California, the Orange County Register reported. The Los Angeles area handled 8.5 million calls that year alone.

The California Highway Patrol is largely responsibl­e for 911 calls made on cellphones and often directs emergency calls to the appropriat­e authoritie­s.

Who would be responsibl­e for tracking these types of calls remains unclear. As demands to “defund the police” continue to grow, questions remain about a larger police role. The California Police Chiefs Associatio­n had no comment on Bonta’s proposal.

For an instance to qualify as a hate crime, there has to be proof that the victim was targeted because he or she belonged to a protected group. Bonta said proving these calls are hate crimes “can definitely be a challenge.”

He pointed to the Central Park incident as an obvious example of a racially motivated call.

“She knew exactly what she was doing,” Bonta said. “He was not harassing her. She was calling based on race.”

In fact, some of the most progressiv­e parts of California are where obvious cases of racial prejudice have appeared. In Alameda, a man identified as Mali Watkins

was detained by officers in May after police received a call about someone dancing in the street. Body camera footage of the arrest shows an officer calling Watkins’ movements Jazzercise.

“It looks like you were dancing. I was watching you for a little bit, it’s like Jazzercise type of thing,” an officer says in the footage.

In 2018, a woman called police over the use of a charcoal grill at Lake Merritt in Oakland. That same year, a woman in San Francisco called police on an 8-yearold girl for selling water without a permit.

Bonta says that if anything, a bill is needed to acknowledg­e this behavior is unacceptab­le and harms people.

“They’re incidents where police do not need to be called,” he said.

Even if the state doesn’t act, local jurisdicti­ons are moving toward change. Los Angeles and San Francisco are calling for legislatio­n based on racial prejudice.

In Santa Clara County, some local officials want racism to be declared a public health crisis.

For California­ns on the receiving end of racist 911 calls, it can be difficult to sue.

“It’s hard to get damages,” said Laura Gómez, a UCLA law professor. “It’s hard to find a lawyer willing to take that case because there’s not going to be a lot of money to recover.”

There have been exceptions, including one in Los Angeles. In 2014, Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge David S. Cunningham settled with UCLA after he alleged mistreatme­nt and racial profiling by campus police. UCLA agreed to pay $500,000, though Cunningham originally filed a $10 million claim.

And after an arrest in 2015 by the New York Police Department, Thabo Sefolosha, an NBA basketball player, settled with the department for $4 million. Sefolosha said the police caused injuries while he was arrested, including a fractured fibula and ligament damage.

Still, access remains an issue for many California­ns. Bonta said his bill would give victims of the 911 calls more legal options.

He added there must be consequenc­es for people who make the racially motivated 911 calls.

“We’re not going to tolerate these acts,” he said.

 ?? JANE TYSKA — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? People rally for Mali Watkins, a Black man detained for dancing in the streets in May, at the Alameda Police Department in Alameda on June 11.
JANE TYSKA — STAFF ARCHIVES People rally for Mali Watkins, a Black man detained for dancing in the streets in May, at the Alameda Police Department in Alameda on June 11.

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