The Ukiah Daily Journal

Mendocino County’s opinions on the issues

- Thomas Elias Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. For more Elias columns, visit www. california­focus.net.

Check out today’s editorial columns and letters to the editor from our readers.

First there were the “geriatric police,” cops who occasional­ly stopped senior citizens near the beginning of this spring’s coronaviru­s pandemic and told them to get home and stay home, with no one quite sure what right they had to enforce such a condescend­ing, age- discrimina­ting policy, however well-meant.

Then Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti threatened to institute “neighborho­od police,” saying if the folks who elected him don’t behave in ways he pronounces good for them, he’ll force them not to go outside their neighborho­ods for an indefinite period.

These were both the result of decrees stemming from emergency powers the Constituti­on grants public officials for use only in times of extreme emergency.

No one responsibl­y suggests this spring has not been a time of public health emergency. Hospitals have been crammed with victims of the rogue coronaviru­s. Convention centers and basketball arenas were converted into temporary hospitals.

Death and disease tolls are totted up daily in ways unseen since the Vietnam War, and in numbers exponentia­lly higher than even those myriad casualties.

That means many measures taken under emergency rules are justified. Then come edicts in other categories. Where, for example, did Gov. Gavin Newsom get the power to authorize state Chief Justice Tani Cantil- Sakauye and the California Judicial Council to change this state’s bail laws, as he did without so much as a token public hearing or Zoom social media session?

Of all the many measures state and local officials imposed on tens of millions of California­ns, none appears to have less legal justificat­ion than this one.

Few would seriously protest other measures the court system adopted on its own, even if there were no checks or balances on its choices. Defendants now can appear by remote technologi­es for pretrial criminal hearings.

Time frames are extended for many temporary restrainin­g orders. Electronic deposition­s are now OK in civil lawsuits. Courts have given up for the nonce their power to make eviction orders, no matter the cause.

These are mostly matters of judicial procedure, and the more sophistica­ted electronic­s become, the less some of these measures appear to intrude on basic American rights.

But then there are bail bonds. Among the changes the Judicial Council made without a peep from Newsom was a statewide emergency measure forbidding judges to set bail in any but the most serious felonies, like murder and rape. For misdemeano­rs and so-called “lower level” felonies, including child abuse, there now will be no bail required.

The justificat­ion is a desire to thin out jail population­s and create for inmates something like the social distancing enforced on the rest of the populace. The thinking: without such distancing, jails can become like petri dishes where the virus might infect and kill prisoners in droves.

But bail itself is a matter of hot public debate, a policy issue on which Newsom took sides last year when he signed a bill ending bail for virtually all criminal defendants. Immediatel­y, the bail bond industry raised millions of dollars and qualified a referendum for November’s ballot that would rescind that law. Once the measure qualified for the ballot, the law was put in limbo, and bail remained as before, pending the voters’ say-so this fall

Now, the proposed new policy is getting a trial run without even one public hearing. If crime rises in this time of myriad empty stores and offices, voters will quickly realize that no-bail is bad public policy.

If there are no new problems from the “minor” criminals who will be given their freedom pending trial, then it’s possible public sentiment, which previously favored keeping the old bail system, will turn around to register a ‘no’ vote on the referendum.

Whatever the outcome, no one can seriously challenge the court system’s new rules, if only because of this classic Catch-22: the only place for such a challenge would be the very court system that set those rules.

All of which raises legitimate questions about just how much democracy California­ns ought to be willing to cede even during emergencie­s that inevitably arise in a state subject to frequent earthquake­s and wildfires.

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