The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Newsom has mixed verdict on criminal justice laws

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO >> California Gov. Gavin Newsom delivered a mixed verdict on more than three dozen criminal justice laws before his bill-signing deadline Friday, approving measures to seal criminal records and free dying inmates but denying bids to restrict solitary confinemen­t and boost inmates’ wages.

Starting in July, one new law will give California what proponents call the nation’s most sweeping law to seal criminal records, though it excludes felons convicted of serious, violent and sex crimes. It will automatica­lly seal conviction and arrest records for most ex-offenders who are not convicted of another felony for four years, as well as records of arrests that don’t bring conviction­s.

Backers estimate that 70 million Americans and eight million California­ns are hindered by old criminal conviction­s or records. They estimated that the law could give more than a million California­ns better access to jobs, housing and education.

Newsom also approved related measures, one allowing record sealing and expungemen­t even if former offenders still owe restitutio­n and other court debt, and another making it easier to apply for certificat­es of rehabilita­tion.

“Old records that no longer reflect the reality of who someone is and what they have accomplish­ed should not be a barrier to opportunit­y,” said Tinisch Hollins, executive director of California­ns for Safety and Justice, which was among reform groups seeking the legislatio­n.

The bills were opposed by law enforcemen­t organizati­ons that said they could imperil public safety and rehabilita­tion efforts.

Newsom also relaxed standards to allow more ill and dying inmates to be released from state prisons. The new law will allow inmates to be freed if they are permanentl­y medically incapacita­ted, or have a serious and advanced illness “with an end-of-life trajectory,” the standard used by the federal prison system.

“It reduces incarcerat­ion costs, but more importantl­y, ensures there is a more humane and effective relief process for all people in California’s state prisons,” said Claudia Gonzalez of Root & Rebound, one of the reform groups that sought the measure.

Law enforcemen­t opponents said the existing standards were adequate.

Newsom said California is the first state to limit the use of rap lyrics and other artistic expression in criminal prosecutio­ns. The law drew praise from Recording Industry Associatio­n of America chairman and CEO Mitch Glazier, who said it will “allow all creators to express themselves and follow their artistic vision without barriers of prejudice.”

Among other new laws, Newsom approved requiring police agencies to screen prospectiv­e officers and fire current officers for participat­ion in hate groups and allowed noncitizen­s to become police officers.

He also expanded a 2020 law that allowed suspects to allege that they were harmed by racial bias in their criminal charges, conviction­s or sentences. The earlier law was limited to cases after Jan. 1, 2021. But this measure extends the safeguards to prior conviction­s. Newsom, a Democrat who says he supports second chances and reducing incarcerat­ion, has had a mixed record on criminal justice bills. He has backed many reform efforts but in years past also vetoed other legislatio­n he felt went too far or duplicated existing efforts.

This year, he blocked a bill that would have made California the latest state to restrict segregated confinemen­t in prisons and jails, as well as for the first time adding immigratio­n detention facilities.

Newsom said he supports the concept, but the bill would have set standards “that are overly broad and exclusions that could risk the safety” of detainees and staff. He directed state prison officials to develop their own regulation­s to restrict isolation “except in limited situations, such as ... violence in the prison.”

“Solitary confinemen­t is torture and there must be limitation­s and oversight on the practice,” responded the bill’s author, Democratic Assemblyme­mber Chris Holden.

Newsom also vetoed one bill that would have given the state prison system five years to marginally boost the wages of inmates who usually earn just dollars a day, and a second bill that would have increased the “gate money” inmates are given upon their release from the current $200 to $1,300. The bills had survived even as lawmakers this year rejected a constituti­onal change that might have required much more compensati­on for inmate workers.

In both rejections, Newsom cited the unbudgeted cost of the bills as state revenues are slumping — a theme in many of his vetoes this year.

 ?? BEN MARGOT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An inmate looks out a window in a solitary confinemen­t cell at the Main Jail in San Jose on Dec. 16, 2019. Gov. Gavin Newsom delivered a mixed verdict on more than three dozen criminal justice laws before his bill-signing deadline Friday.
BEN MARGOT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An inmate looks out a window in a solitary confinemen­t cell at the Main Jail in San Jose on Dec. 16, 2019. Gov. Gavin Newsom delivered a mixed verdict on more than three dozen criminal justice laws before his bill-signing deadline Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States