Assembly Standing Committee on Public Safety
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Good morning. Welcome to California State Assembly Public Safety Committee. We're going to begin as a Subcommitee until we get to a quorum first. Like to read. All witness testimony will be in person. There will be no phone testimony upon option for this hearing. You can find more information at www.Assembly.CA/govcommittees. We'll begin the Subcommitee. First up is. zero, I'm sorry, I have some housekeeping. Very important housekeeping off calendar. Item number two, AB455. Quirk Silva, been pulled by the author.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Item number three, AB523. Vince Fong pulled by the author. Item number four, AB667. Maienschein, pulled by the author. Item number five, AB695. Pacheco, pulled by Committee. Item number 13, AB763. Davies, pulled by the author. Item number 16, AB, eight. Mathis, pulled by the author. Item number 26, AB977. Rodriguez, pulled by the author. Item 29, AB 1047. Maienschein, pulled by the author. And we'll begin with our. I believe I don't have my notes, Mr. Sergeant. Need to know who's first up.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
First on here I have Mr. Evan Low, AB 1064, item number 30. Mr. Low.
- Evan Low
Person
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and Committee Members. I understand that this bill does enjoy a do pass recommendation on both sides of the aisle. And if you'll allow me an opportunity to present and say a little bit about this bill. This is Assembly Bill 1064, which defines bias against within hate crimes and addresses the selective discriminatory targeting of victims.
- Evan Low
Person
Specifically, this bill seeks to allow the charge of a hate crime to simply be brought before a jury, and the jury will then be able to decide with the evidence presented if the defendant is guilty of a hate crime. This has been an issue that we've seen that has been pervasive in a number of areas in the State of California. This is also an API Legislative caucus priority with respect to hate crimes and respectfully ask for your aye vote when you have established a quorum
- Evan Low
Person
With me today in support is Jay Barwski, Chief Assistant District Attorney for the County of Santa Clara, District Attorney Jeff Rosen's Office, as well as Charles Jung, Executive Director of the California Asian American Bar Association.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
You have five minutes total, whichever way you want to split it up.
- Evan Low
Person
Yeah, please go ahead.
- Jay Barwski
Person
Good morning, Chairman. It's wonderful to be in front of your Committee again. Jeff Rosen sends his regrets. It's my good fortune that I get to be here. He's in Israel this week, but he sends his regards to you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Tell him I said hi.
- Jay Barwski
Person
I will do so. It is a privilege to be here, along with Assembly Member Low in support of this small but very needed and significant piece of legislation which will allow us to continue to give meaning to the hate crime statutes which this Legislature has so continuously supported over the years. The issue, as Assembly Member Low spoke about, is when we have a perpetrator targeting victims for hate crimes exclusively because they are members of a protected race, gender, religion, ethnicity.
- Jay Barwski
Person
And I note what I know the Chairman knows is who can commit a hate crime? Anyone is capable. Who can be the victim of a hate crime? Anyone can be the victim of a hate crime. In prosecuting hate crimes, which I've done for almost 30 years now in Jeff Rosen's DA's office, we occasionally run into some obstacles with jury instructions or certain elements.
- Jay Barwski
Person
We've seen an epidemic of anti-AAPI hate crime in recent years where some of the perpetrators will only target several different members, all Asian, but they may not yell out a racial slur. They may not say any of the hateful things that we've heard from some of our other leaders saying. And without that explicit evidence, some prosecutors are hesitant to bring the hate crime forward, even though they've only targeted 10 Chinese people or 15 South Asian grandmothers wearing saris.
- Jay Barwski
Person
What this bill attempts to do is just to make clear for the judiciary that if someone selectively targets a group of people because of their membership in a protected class, that should be able to be considered a hate crime. Thank you very much for your time.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Charles Jung
Person
Thank you, Chair Jones-Sawyer and Members of the Committee. Appreciate the work that you do very much. My name is Charles Jung. I'm the Executive Director of the California Asian Pacific American Bar Association. We represent the interests of 23 sister bar organizations across the state and California's roughly 14,000 APA attorneys. Last Thursday, I had the privilege of organizing the second anniversary commemoration of the Atlanta spa shootings.
- Charles Jung
Person
And there we heard for the first time from the father of Michelle Goh, who was the young woman in New York City who was targeted, pushed off the train platform and into the path of an oncoming train. One of our speakers in our Atlanta event was Robert Peterson. Robert Peterson is the proud younger son of a Korean mother and a African American veteran, and his mother was Yu Young, one of the eight victims of the Atlanta spa shooting.
- Charles Jung
Person
What this measure does is it clarifies existing law, making the definition of hate crimes consistent with how it's interpreted in the courts as it is. And in addition, it makes clear that discriminatory selection of victims also qualifies under the statute.
- Charles Jung
Person
Many of us have heard of the Atlanta spa shootings, but one thing that's not well known is that Robert Long had to travel over 27 miles between the site of the first shooting to the second shooting, from an unincorporated area of Cherokee County in Georgia to a region in Atlanta.
- Charles Jung
Person
I remember very clearly when I turned on the news and heard a sheriff's deputy grab the mic and make excuses for Robert Long, saying that he was having a bad day and suggesting that he had a sex addiction. And because this was a sex addiction, that implicitly that this was not a hate crime. Robert Long traveled those 27 miles, and he selectively targeted three establishments that were owned and employed by Asian American workers, Asian American women.
- Charles Jung
Person
And along the way, along those 27 miles, he passed by strip clubs, other establishments that were not owned by Asian Americans. And so one last thing that I'll say is, in organizing these events in San Francisco and around the country, one thing I hear persistently is frustration from the Asian American community. Why, when Asian Americans are discriminatorily selected for crimes, why is that not also classified as a hate crime? And that's what AB 1064 addresses. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Allow us, Mr. Low. I think we have enough to establish a quorum and then we'll do the consent calendar and then I'll call for witnesses and support. That way we can get dispensed with it. So could you call the roll?
- Committee Secretary
Person
Of course. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
A quorum is present on the consent calendar. We have item number six, AB 697, Davies, Drug Court Success Incentive Pilot Program. Item number eight, AB 724, Vince Fong, firearms safety certificate instructional materials. Item number 11, AB 751, Shiavo, elder abuse. Item number 24, AB 943, Kalra, corrections population data. Item number 28, AB 997, Gipson, exoneration mental health services. Item number 31, AB 1080, Ta, criminal justice realignment. I need a motion to approve the consent calendar. Call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On the consent calendar. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The consent calendar is adopted and I'll return. For anyone in the audience in favor of AB 1064, Low, you can come to the microphone. Name and organization please.
- Greg Degiere
Person
Greg DeGiere representing the Arc and United Cerebral Palsy California Collaboration, and we support the bill.
- Eric Harris
Person
Eric Harris with Disability Rights California in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Catalina Zambrano
Person
Catalina Zambrano, Ramos, Familia, y Central in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
Kim Stone, Stone Advocacy on behalf of the California District Attorneys Association in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Simone Reyes
Person
Good morning. Simone Reyes, Central California LGBTQ Collaborative in support of.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Christophe Mayer
Person
Christophe Mayer, American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees in support. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Now, are there any witnesses in opposition? Any witnesses in opposition? You have five minutes.
- Alice Michael
Person
Thank you. Is this on?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Yes, it is. Okay, let's get closer to the mic so we can hear you.
- Alice Michael
Person
Okay. Good morning, everyone. My name is Alice Michael, and I am here on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association. I've been a public defender for 25 years. We are opposed to this bill. I want to make very clear at the outset that we are not opposed to this bill because we are opposed to legislation against hate crimes. Obviously, our members are very concerned about hate crimes. We have many members who are parts of protected classes.
- Alice Michael
Person
We are also very concerned about hate crimes against the AAPI community and the proliferation of those crimes at this time Our concern with this bill is simply that the language defining bias motivation, we believe, is incredibly over-broad. This bill, I believe, was intended to target people who commit crimes against protected classes exclusively because of their membership of that protected class, and we support that idea.
- Alice Michael
Person
However, the way that the language in this statute is worded, it would include many crimes where the motivation is not that the person is a member of a protected class. And I talked specifically about the definition contained within about bias motivation. So an example of what could be a biased motivation is picking a victim based on the perception that that victim is vulnerable because they are weak. The reality is, many victims of violence or theft crimes are picked because of vulnerability.
- Alice Michael
Person
This bill could, as written, could include any crime against a woman if it's arguable that she was targeted because she was perceived as being part of the weaker sex, including a purse snatching, or a business robbery where the person focuses on the female employee. It also could include any crime against an elderly person who is disabled because of their age, a pickpocket, a theft of their property because they're less able to be able to chase or fight back with the person committing the crime.
- Alice Michael
Person
Fraud crimes against elderly people. Another motivation that it includes as constituting a hate crime is if the motivation is thrill seeking, which could include a young person who takes a car from a member of a protected class to joyride, someone who puts graffiti on a business, regardless of the content that's owned by a member of the protected class, somebody who recklessly drives and injures somebody who's part of a protected class.
- Alice Michael
Person
These are not crimes that would be motivated exclusively because the person is part of a protected class. But under this bill, they would be able to be prosecuted as hate crimes. Another of the motivations included in the bill is a person if they're motivated by a desire for social bonding, this could end up being used against every gang member who commits a crime against a different gang where the members are of a different ethnicity.
- Alice Michael
Person
Again, we support the idea of defining hate crimes for those crimes in which the victim is chosen exclusively because they're a member of a protected class. But we believe that this bill is overly broad and would end up in a large increase in incarceration of many people. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in opposition? Seeing none. We'll bring it back to Committee Members for any questions or comments. Seeing none. I'm not trying to force anybody to see anything.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I'm reading the language here. This is about hate crimes that are motivated in whole, in part, by a bias against one or more of the following or actual perceived characteristics of the victim, which includes disability, gender, nationality, race or ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, or an association with a group. I don't see how any of the examples given by the last witness apply, given the language of the bill.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So you just look at the language of the bill, and it is about hate crimes based on one of those characteristics. So I don't find the last testimony persuasive, and we'll be voting for the bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I say move the bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
We have a motion. Is there a second? There's no more. You may close or you may use Mr. Zbur as your closing.
- Evan Low
Person
I just want to acknowledge the hard work of the Committee staff to also address the issues at hand, too, and making it the product before us. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay. Did you want them to comment? I'm sorry, we're done.
- Evan Low
Person
Yes, I respect.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On item 1064 by Assembly Member Low. The motion is do pass as amended to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measure passes. Thank you. Treetop, AB 329. Item number one, theft jurisdiction. Whenever you're ready, you can begin.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Yes, I'm ready. So thank you, Mr. Chair and Members of this Committee, AB 329 specifically authorized the Attorney General to prosecute multiple offenses of cargo theft that spend more than one county and involve the same defendant. The Bill from the jurisdiction of the Attorney General to consolidate Montagargo theft crime into a prosecution in one county. This Bill Mirror AB 1613 with worse related two retail theft that this Committee passed unanimously last year.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
AB 329 extend exact same revision to multi juridicinal cargo theft that will afford two retail theft over the past decade, the cost of cargo theft related crime has risen dramatically. It is estimate that combined losses suffered by the trucking industry, insurance companies and railroad surpassed $10 billion in the US annually. Cargo theft is distinctly different from retail theft and that is covered under a different section of the penal code. It deal with goods that are in transit to warehouse or factories.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Retail theft deal specifically with goods that are currently for sale. AB 329 would access California businesses frustrated with cargo theft impact. AB 329 would give a tool to the Attorney General to stop this often organize an sophisticated crime that is destroying our California businesses. It is my understanding that the lease opposition was for the regious version of the Bill. So I humbly ask for your aye vote. and I'd like to now present Nick Chappie with the California Truck Association.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. You have five minutes.
- Nick Chiappe
Person
Good morning. Chair Jones Sawyer and Members Nick Chappie with the California Trucking Association in support cargo theft is a serious problem that has been in the rise in recent years. As the Assembly Member mentioned, the National Insurance Crime Bureau and the California Highway Patrol estimate combined losses suffered by shippers, including the trucking industry, surpasses $10 billion in the United States annually. Just last year, the CHP uncovered a major organized cargo theft ring that was stealing electronic shipments from multiple counties throughout the state.
- Nick Chiappe
Person
The suspects were found with thousands of stolen items and were responsible for over $9 million in stolen cargo. Similarly, the Attorney General's Office last year charged several suspects with thefts from cargo trucks that had departed from multiple Microsoft shipping facilities, motor carriers, truck drivers and businesses who are victims of organized crime. Organized cargo theft will benefit from extended protections under this Bill. AB 329 will also take the necessary steps toward protecting consumers who rely on the safe and efficient transportation of goods. For these reasons, we support AB 329 and appreciate the Assembly Member for his leadership on this issue. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in support? Any other witnesses in support? Any witnesses in opposition?
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Lesli Caldwell Houston for the California Public Defenders Association I don't know if our letter got in in time. We are withdrawing our opposition.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel , on behalf of Initiate Justice and opposition.
- Thanh Tran
Person
Tom Tran, on behalf of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, and we oppose.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, on behalf of the San Francisco Public Defender's office in opposition.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. And now we'll bring it back to the Committee for any comments or questions. Mr. Lackey?
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah. I'd just like to commend Assemblymember Ta for bringing this bill to our attention. In LA County, there's been a massive amount of rail theft that's caused some of the companies to redirect their route instead of through Los Angeles.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
There was so much trash associated with this theft that it even caused some train crashes. The companies have hired private security and rerouted their trains, as I just mentioned, due to lack of enforcement by the local District Attorney.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Rail theft is altogether much different than retail theft, as was outlined by the Assemblymember. And this clearly deserves our support, and so I'll be supporting it. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Comments or statements? Seeing none, you may close.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
I really want to thanks the work of all the Committee staff, and I humbly ask for your aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Think there may be some. I don't know if there's confusion, because I'm reading the Attorney General currently has the authority to prosecute cargo theft. And I think even in my District Attorney Gascon, in response, you'd like we conduct a thorough review when appropriate.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
They do file charges on felonies and misdemeanors. So I don't know if this is a clarification with the jurisdictions, and maybe that's something we can work on so that we're not doing something that's already there. Duplicative.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I'm going to recommend a note so that we can get to a place where we can have clarity on jurisdictional. But I don't believe the Attorney General would just not do anything. I have full faith that if there is a problem, they would take care of it. Is there a motion?
- Tri Ta
Legislator
A motion.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Second.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Call for the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 329 by Assemblymember Todd. The motion is do pass.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Committee fails, but come back and let's talk about ways we can clarify this for the trucking industry and the cargo and you united part.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
He has to ask.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Okay. Yes. Consideration, please.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay, I'm going to try this. Should we take a vote, or can I say unanimous? If there's no objection, by unanimous consent, we will grant reconsideration. You have it.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Mr. Corey Jackson with three bills, AB 742. AB 855. AB 994.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Mr. Chair, Members of the Committee, thank you so much. I have three bills before you. I will start with AB 855.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Fine, Fees, Assessments, whenever you're ready.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
AB 855 would change the annual interest rate on restitution orders and the annual interest rate on certain delinquent payments, including fines, fees, and restitution, to no more than 1%. Today, when a convicted defendant who caused harm is ordered to pay restitution, they do so at a rate of 10%. As this interest accrues and fees are levied, the restitution debt owed can balloon by thousands of dollars, making it highly unlikely victims will be re-compensated for their suffered loss.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
The vast majority of people in the system are low-income and will never be able to pay off their restitution debt. But according to the UC Berkeley Law School policy advocacy clinic, 67% of survivors do not receive any restitution payment, and only 13% of restitution is ever collected, as most do not have a way to pay. Unlike other debt, restitution has no statute of limitations and is not dischargeable in bankruptcy.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
To get payments, courts often resort to involuntary collection actions, including garnishing wages and intercepting tax refunds. Because of the targeted policing and over-punishment of communities of color, black and brown, Californians are overrepresented in the legal system across the state. For example, in Los Angeles County, black individuals account for 20% of all restitution ordered, but only 8% of the county's total population. Onerous restitution fines and fees fail to be restorative and turn our system into being even more regressive and literally serving no one.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
AB 855 seeks to better recompense victims and provide the relief they deserve. If we truly want restorative justice in California, we must create and build our system to meet these goals, especially when we know they are being missed. We cannot ask our formerly incarcerated to build themselves up and thrive if we set them up to fail. We also cannot ask victims to receive justice if the system fails them as well.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
AB 855 seeks to put California further down the path of creating a public safety infrastructure truly serving its purpose and all parties involved with me today, I have State Treasurer Fiona Ma, a former distinguished member of this body who I am proud to say serves as the Bill co-sponsor and is here today to speak in support on the Bill and answer any technical questions. Also speaking in support is Andrew Winn, Executive Director of Insight Garden Programs, to provide us his testimony of paying restitution.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
So you have five minutes. But of course, as a statewide officer, you have some constitutional.
- Fiona Ma
Person
Don't worry, I'll be short of that. Thank you. Thank you, Members. When I was here in the Legislature from 2006 to 2012, I also served on the Public Safety Committee for four years. And it was one of my most fascinating committees because you don't know how you're going to vote sometimes until you hear all the testimony. My last two bills signed by Governor Brown allowed women convicted of life without parole to have a second chance at getting their cases heard. Many of them are serving 30-45 years in jail, serious health issues.
- Fiona Ma
Person
And so this has made a difference in their lives, where they are able to live the rest of their lives outside of the prison walls. But it has enabled me to learn a lot about some of the problems that are happening inside. So I am proud to co sponsor this Bill. Because the 10% is punitive, right? It starts two weeks after conviction. The interest continues to accrue whether the inmates are in prison.
- Fiona Ma
Person
They don't have a lot of opportunities to earn a lot of money, and then if they miss a payment, they are assessed a 10% penalty on top of that. So when they finally get out of prison, the amount of debt that they are owed for the victims compensation Fund is pretty much out of reach. And many of them are going to have to continue to have this debt over their heads. Like the Assembly Member said, it is not dischargeable in bankruptcy.
- Fiona Ma
Person
It stays on their record for life. And this is not giving the inmate an opportunity to right their wrongs. It's not giving victims families that payment that they deserve. And so this whole system is extremely punitive. And I think having a 1% interest rate is fair.
- Fiona Ma
Person
It gives people a skin in the game, but it doesn't overwhelm them and create additional recidivism and individuals who are trying to reenter gives them a chance to pay back, but also be able to create some sort of practical life, quality of life, after they get out of prison. So I'm very honored to be here and thank the Assembly Member for carrying this important Bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Andrew Winn
Person
Good morning. Thank you for having me. My name is Andrew Winn. Just as the Member introduced me, I'm the Executive Director of the Insight Garden Program. We provide rehabilitative programming inside prison and reentry services for the people we serve. I myself am previously incarcerated. I served prison sentence here in California. I paroled in 2009. I was given a $23,000 restitution Bill, and when I got out, it was ballooned to around 27 or $28,000. I paroled homeless in 2009.
- Andrew Winn
Person
So just to even come with that kind of debt right out the gates was really just difficult. I struggled with getting employed. I didn't have a living wage till just a few years ago, so just to kind of bring it to perspective, and in 2015, I attended UCLA, and at that time, I showed the greatest financial aid need. I was a Pell Grant recipient. I had a work study job. I was also President, graduate family housing, where I earned a stipend.
- Andrew Winn
Person
But I still was barely making it as somebody living in Los Angeles, on the west side of Los Angeles, where it's very expensive. Yeah. None of that really allowed me to just one save or even pay back. And it wasn't until 2016 my bank account was levied. I received my financial aid payment a few weeks before that, and they took all my financial aid money, and I was there trying to figure out myself. But beyond just taking my financial aid money, it really personally impacted me.
- Andrew Winn
Person
It took away just myself. It put me in a suicidal state. I'm not a person who constantly goes through a suicidal state. Matter of fact, that's the only time I've gone through one, so it cut me deep as a person with a family, I couldn't take care of them as a primary provider. I just couldn't do much right. It just took away a good piece of my identity as just a person.
- Andrew Winn
Person
I had to negotiate to try to get some of my funding back, despite it being federal money, state money, and work study money. I just had to negotiate with the state Franchise Tax Board, and in that process, they couldn't understand how the student had more expenses than they had income. And if any of you have gone to college in California, we know that's a very common occurrence.
- Andrew Winn
Person
So I had to explain how I used credit card debt to get by every month, and it caused me just tremendous stress and pain. I was unable to pay my rent to the UC regents as a result of, you know, I had to just negotiate a payment plan. Luckily, at the time of my low, where I was thinking of suicide, I did have a Professor who was there for me during that time and helped me get through it. His name is Bryonn Bain.
- Andrew Winn
Person
But even to this day, since 2016, I continue to make those monthly payments as a result of that levy. However, the amount has not gone down. I'm still making payments on it, even from in prison, when they were garnishing more than half of my eight an hour job inside. So, I mean, here I am, still with his debt, and here we are several years later, me making continuous on time payments. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in support?
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of Initiate Justice, in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Leslie Caldwell Houston, for the California Public Defenders Association, in support.
- Lizzie Buchen
Person
Lizzie Buchen, with the Prosecutors Alliance of California, in support.
- Thanh Tran
Person
Tom Tran, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, in support.
- John Vasquez
Person
John Vasquez, on behalf of Communities United for Restorative Justice, in support.
- Espan Nunez
Person
Espan Nunez, with the Anti Recidivism Coalition, a proud co-sponsor of this Bill, in support.
- James Lindburg
Person
Jim Lindbergh, Friends Committee on Legislation of California, in support.
- Hedoni Morgilad
Person
Hedoni Morgilad, on behalf of Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, in strong support.
- Annalisa Ruiz
Person
Annalisa Ruiz, with Young Women's Freedom Center, in strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Now there are any witnesses and opposition.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
Good morning.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Good morning. Welcome.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
Thank you. My name is Gretchen Lichtenberger and I'm here as Legislative Chairperson for the California Association of Judgment Professionals, and we are in opposition to this Bill. I have been enforcing court judgments for almost, almost two decades now. And I could tell you story after story after story from the victim's perspective, and one important one was in Santa Barbara, very high-profile case.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
This unscrupulous woman stole money from three nuns in Santa Barbara that were trying to find housing because they were putting out, being put out of their home, their 50 year home by the archdiocese. And she got arrested for that. And she was standing trial while she was out on bail. She made friends with a couple of the parishioners of the nuns, and then she committed financial elder abuse against them and they lost their home. She took over $40,000 from them while she was out on bail.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
She got arrested for that and she ultimately got sentenced to 11 years in jail. These victims that were parishioners of the nuns, and this was a very highly publicized story in Santa Barbara. These victims were in their late 70s. They lost their house because she was supposed to be doing a mortgage modification for them and she didn't. And they lost their house. They had nowhere to go. They were homeless because she took advantage of them. I have a client who was hit by a drunk driver.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
She's paralyzed, she's in a wheelchair. She has a huge amount of medical bills that she had because of that. And she was probably never going to get all of her money paid back to her. But the purpose of victim restitution is to fully compensate the victim for their loss of use of money. I bonds right now are paying about 8% and CDS are paying about 5% or 6%. And it was said here today that this is part of restorative justice and that the 10% is punitive.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
The reason Legislature set it at 10% is because it has two purposes. One is to fully compensate the creditor for their loss of use of their money, and two, to encourage the debtor that owes the money to pay the judgment. If this interest is set at 1%, why would they ever pay anything? And if people truly are at a place in their life where they can't afford to pay the judgment, the principal amount of the judgment, what difference does it make about the interest rate?
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
So I present to you that it doesn't make sense to reward people that have been committed of crimes. No disrespect to criminals or people that have been committed of crimes, whether or not they were in fact guilty. But think about the victims for a minute. Put yourself in the place of the victim. You have nobody unless you hire a lawyer and pay more money, you have nobody to go and get the enforcement of that order.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
That order is enforced by the District Attorney who is short staff and highly overworked and they don't have time to go and collect victim restitution orders. So it's very difficult. Victim restitution orders are probably the least collected judgments in all of California. So it's really important that you don't paint with a broad brush. You don't say all restitution orders get lowered to 1%. Because I can tell you, I've been doing this for almost two decades.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
There are plenty of white collar criminals that can afford to pay the 10%. So I look forward to working with the author and the sponsors to come up with something that can be worked for all those people that are involved on both sides. Thank you. Please don't further victimize the crime victims.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Are there any other witnesses in opposition? Seeing none will bring it back to Committee Members for any questions or comments. Mr. Lackey?
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yes. Thank you for the opposition because once again we have another example of over-obsession with the focus and imbalanced focus on offenders and once again showing an insensitivity to victims and how these criminal offenses are long-lasting. Are long, long lasting. And one of the little elements that we've provided to do some kind of, we talk about restorative justice.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
How about restorative justice to victims? That would be something that we would all agree on and we need to work more collaboratively together on. But this is not a good example of what needs to be done because victims are already behind the eight ball and I think it's getting tiresome. Thank you. Thank you. Sure.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
With the opposition. Did you guys have any kind of payment plans that come up originally the gentleman here said that finally he got to a payment plan. Is there not like a payment plan started from the beginning so they don't fall behind right away?
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
Yes, I could speak to that. And thank you for your question. It's a very important question. What usually happens in all these different laws is people want to come in and put in all these handcuffs later on. As a creditor who's been doing this for a very long time, we creditors are always open to communication. But what happens is the debtors don't want to communicate. We send letters. We don't harass people at all. We open up the line of communication. We're always open to listen.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
We're always open to be reasonable. And many, many times we settle judgments for way less than the face value just to get them off our books. So a lot of times, these debtors, if they would just take the opportunity to reach out to their creditors, it goes a long, long way. So thank you for that question. Yes.
- Andrew Winn
Person
And if I may again, Chair, sir, do you feel like you have that opportunity? Do you think there's something maybe the author of this Bill can maybe work on to make that an easier or a better option? I mean, one, when I paroled homeless, I was housing secure, and so being able to get in contact with me was very much a challenge.
- Andrew Winn
Person
And then when you leave prison, they don't provide you with any kind of information regarding any of the restitution other than what you had paid 55% to at working. So there was no communication that I received, and if I received it, it may have been at a former address, but the instability of being on parole really made it difficult for me to be able to receive that information.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay. And for the author, would you maybe think of maybe the consumer price index rate as well? Maybe not so 10, not so much one. But whatever the going rate is at the time,
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
We're talking about what us as a system and government put on top of that, which then makes it harder for them to pay the victims in the first place. So this is not us being lenient on those who harm somebody. This is us making it easier for the person who does the harm to actually give the restitution directly to the victim themselves. So I believe this is a balanced approach. I believe that this is not a theoretical Bill. This is not a gotcha Bill.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
This is a Bill that says the data shows. Right? Don't argue with me. Argue with the data. The data shows that because the 10% is so onerous, nobody gets what they are supposed to, they're supposed to receive. Right. And so this is a way to make sure that victims are actually given or receive the relief that they deserve as victims as well. So thank you very much for that question.
- Fiona Ma
Person
And then you can add the 10% penalty for non payment on top of that. So that's actually 20% on the victim's restitution Fund. So nobody wins in this situation.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
There's not a 10% on the victim's order. That's only.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay. No.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I just wanted to focus in on the 10% and whether or not there's actually. You're trying to correct the wrong of the 10% being set in the first place. Based on the Bill analysis, it's pretty clear that 10% isn't a reference point that we can actually use. And given the fact that we have the state treasurer here, I don't know if you want to comment on how that 10% was set or the irrelevance of that 10%.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Now, in light of our current savings that someone can receive on any money. And then secondarily, your point around the principal amount still going to the victim, the interest overage, who does that go to?
- Fiona Ma
Person
So just like legislation, right, we pass and we put a number in it. And so normally, we would create a certain amount of administrative fee that goes to the program, and then perhaps like an interest that would accrue to perhaps put back into a Fund for others. Right. The 10% was created through statute. That's what prior legislators voted on and prior governors. So that is what's been in the statute.
- Fiona Ma
Person
So that's what we're trying to correct here, is trying to make the victims whole, but not put such a tremendous amount of burden on the person that was incarcerated so that they can get their life back, they can get a job, they can continue to pay. I mean, that's like taking a loan, right, credit card loan, and you have to pay 18%, right. A lot of people can't pay that back, and then they just get into trouble and bankruptcies as well.
- Fiona Ma
Person
And even during COVID the Federal Government suspended student loan payments for two years. These payments were never suspended for any of them. So it's been accruing for everybody who has to pay that 10% with no delay in the payment, even through Covid. So there's just a lot of inequities in this 10% in the amount that incarcerated folks are being treated. But again, like the Assembly Members said, the victims are still going to be paid in whole.
- Fiona Ma
Person
In theory, we're not reducing the victims compensation Fund or that the money that goes to victims, it's just the punitive 10%, plus an additional penalty of 10%, potentially that's going to be added on top of it.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I second moving the Bill. This is a really thoughtful and great Bill, and I want to thank your witnesses for coming and testifying before the Committee and for sharing such a powerful, honest, lived experience. We should not continue to punish and criminalize poverty. Victims are going to be made whole on their full restitution. That's due, particularly if people who are formerly incarcerated are able to make their payments right.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Mr. Bryan.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
The second we put you in a State of losing your housing stability, losing your education stability, nobody is made whole, including society as a whole, because we have to deal with those simultaneous crises that we've caused. If you're looking for co-authors, I'm happy to join you. This is a great idea.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. You may close.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Not only are we trying to make sure that the victims are made whole, we're also trying to correct the problems that many times our institutions do to incarcerated people. We ask them to go out and be productive members of society, to pick themselves up by their bootstraps. But unfortunately, we create additional penalties that don't give them the opportunity to buy boots in the first place.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
And so we have got to do better to making sure that people who are formally incarcerated have a path to upward mobility. And with that, I ask for an aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And I've had similar bills like this before, so I thank you for bringing this. Not to give the state treasurer a heart attack. One of the things I've always thought about is, as we all have credit, whether it's your home, whether it's your credit cards, if we reversed it, that we paid the principal first and the interest last, what effect that would have. And as far as victims are concerned, now we're paying the victims first.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Exactly.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
We're actually getting to the victims. And I thought about putting that in your Bill, and I was dragged from that because my first one was, let's eliminate the interest altogether. But then that became problematic, too. So I'm glad you brought this to us. I think this is a good compromise because I probably would have gone a lot further. And so request that the Committee do an aye vote, but also think about reversing it. It'd be the first of the kind. Yes.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 855 Assemblymember Jackson. The motion is do passed to the Revenue and Taxation Committee [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measure passes.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Thank you. And which item you want to do next?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I'm still here, Mr. Chair. Next up is AB 994. AB 994, item number. 20.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay, law enforcement social media item 27. Whenever you're ready. Do you have a witness? Are you by yourself?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I'm by myself today. At this time, I want to start by thanking the hard work of the chair and this Committee protecting the privacy rights of every California central to AB 994, and I'm happy to accept the Committee Amendments.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I also want to thank the Legislative LGBTQ caucus for their leadership and prioritizing this important Bill as well as well with our Chair and co-Chair or Vice Chair of the LGBTQ Caucus as co-sponsors, Senator Eggman and Assemblymember Ward, AB 994 will protect our privacy while maintaining public safety.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
This Bill will require our sheriffs and police departments to not post any booking photos or mugshots of individuals when arrested on suspicion of committing any crime unless the individual is deemed an imminent risk to others or the public. FA judge orders the release of the individual's image based on an articulated law enforcement interest or there is an exigent circumstance that necessitates the dissemination of the individual's image due to an urgent and legitimate law enforcement interest.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Importantly, in the event of booking event, a booking photo is used. AB 994 will now require the Police Department or sheriff's office to use the name and pronouns provided by the individual. A Police Department or sheriff's office may include other legal names or known aliases of an individual as well, if using the names or aliases will assist in locating or apprehending the individual, reducing or eliminating an imminent threat to an individual or to public safety.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Lastly, that booking photos will need to be taken down off of social media after 14 days of their first posting. AB 994 enhances privacy rights of all people while still providing judges and law enforcement tools to protect the public from imminent harm and danger when mugshots are used, California should be leading the way in protecting privacy and avoiding the archaic practice of being dead-named. Law enforcement has an extensive history of dead naming and misgendering, transgender, gender nonconforming, and intersex individuals on multiple platforms.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Not only can this act strain existing relationships with family and friends, but it can also threaten the individual's life, especially with the exponential increase in anti-LGBTQ plus and anti-trans rhetoric. Indeed, the State of Illinois recently passed a Bill preventing law enforcement agencies from publishing booking photos on their social networking websites, and this February, the Utah State Senate voted unanimously to entirely prohibit police from publicly releasing mugshots until a person has been convicted of a crime.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
AB 994 provides further confidence to all people that California cares and will protect who they are as they are. This Bill provides balance, privacy and protection for individuals and the public. Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. And any other witnesses in support. Name and organization, please.
- Lizzy Buchan
Person
Good morning. Lizzy Buchan, Prosecutors Alliance of California in support. Thanks.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of Initiate Justice.
- Melissa Romero
Person
Melissa Romero with California's Initiate Justice.
- Thanh Tran
Person
Tom Tran with the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights.
- John Vasquez
Person
John Vasquez, on behalf of Communities United for Restorative Justice in support. Thank you.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Leslie Caldwell Houston for the California Public Defenders Association in support. Thank you.
- Hedoni Morgilad
Person
Hedoni Morgilad, Policy Analyst with Legal Services for Prisoners With Children, in strong support. Thank you.
- Annalisa Ruiz
Person
Annalisa Ruiz, Policy Director with Young Women's Freedom Center in strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Joanne Scheer
Person
Joanne Scheer, Founder, Felony Murder Elimination Project in strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Now our new witnesses in opposition. Mr. Salzillo. Welcome, whenever you're ready.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair. Good morning, Mr. Chairman, members. Corey Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association and the California Law Enforcement Association of Records Supervisors, respectfully here in opposition to AB 994, the law that's being amended by this Bill was only created in 2021, did not take effect till last year.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
This Bill seeks a significant expansion of that Bill that was negotiated, frankly, and that negotiated Bill had very little or no opposition, including from law enforcement, if I recall correctly, once it was negotiated. This Bill rejects much of the limitation that was negotiated into that Bill just two years ago.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
The ability to post booking photos while being restricted left the door open for government to balance privacy considerations as well as the interest in communicating with the public about those who are accused of committing serious and violent crimes. This Bill would prevent the posting of booking photos of a person arrested for a violent crime unless very specific and limited conditions exist.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
And in attempting to appropriately identify persons as they wish to be identified in the context of this Bill, and notwithstanding the amendments, this Bill says you have to use the name given by the individual, not in the context. Our objection is not in the context of the way in which a person identifies in terms of their name versus their legal name. But there's no express contemplation of a person who gets arrested.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Booking photo is taken, the law enforcement agency intends to post it under the parameters of existing law or this Bill and saying, my name is Mickey Mouse or Joe DiMaggio or fill in the blank. It's not a question of identify differently, and I use a different name than maybe my legal name, but there's no contemplation of how a law enforcement agency would be able to address that situation. So I know that's not the author's intent.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
I suspect that can be cleaned up, but it's not in this Bill, and the amendments don't fix it because the amendments only address a situation where using a legal name. And again, that's the distinction between maybe a person who's transitioned has a legal name, hasn't changed a name, that question, not the, I tell you, a completely fake name, or if I get arrested and they're taking my photo and I say my name is mean. So that's. Anyway, so that's more of a technical issue.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
But again, because this is so new, because it was just negotiated, we think we got to a comfortable spot last time. This is a massive expansion. For those reasons, we ask for no vote. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses in opposition?
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair Members Ryan Sherman with the Riverside Sheriff Association in opposition, as well as the Placer County Deputy Sheriff's Association and the Deputy Sheriff Association of Monterey County. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Then we'll bring it back to Committee. Bryan?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
What is the efficacy of posting a booking photo for somebody who hasn't yet been formally charged, potentially, or maybe even has, but certainly hasn't been convicted of wrongdoing yet, is clearly just a suspect? And you can still post that we've caught the suspect of X, Y and Z case. What is the efficacy of posting a booking photo at all? And to the Mickey Mouse assertion, I think with the bill's provisions, it allows for you to put legal name and aliases.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I think now if I use the alias Mickey Mouse in instances where you would attribute that to gang affiliation, proven or otherwise, you would put that on the post too, as well. I've seen that in many instances. Right.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And so I'm just wondering what at all is the efficacy of posting a booking photo of somebody who has not been convicted yet, when you could just say that we've caught a suspect in x, Y and Z case, I've also seen many instances where that's been done, where we'd rather just do that than post a booking photo. And it seems kind of arbitrary when the discretion applies. Although I see a lot of Black faces posted.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
I can't speak to the distribution in which photos are posted, not, and agencies make those choices. Some agencies post a ton of them, some don't post them at all. The efficacy, I think, is a situation in which a person's been charged or has been booked and that might be a fugitive. I understand existing law in the Bill contemplates an exemption for someone who's a fugitive. But not every fugitive case falls under the Bill. It may not be an exigent circumstance. That's issue number one.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Issue number two is, at the risk of my own peril, answer the question with a question of what is the challenge and what is the propriety of saying, and not to encourage anyone to do a Bill. But I don't think anybody has restricted newspapers from posting booking photos. This is law enforcement and social media. Right? I'm not trying to give you a Bill idea.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
To that question. It's certainly not a Bill idea because the government doesn't control the newspapers. Right. Because it is not a public owned entity that also still has collaboration and cooperation with the entity that's also filing charges, booking you, collecting your restitution, all of these things.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Newspapers have a different set of frameworks than the one that we hold our public and civic institutions to. And I would argue the framework that we should hold our law enforcement institutions to. And so, Mr. Jackson, I think this is a thoughtful, smart, good Bill. I see that the fugitive list is on here.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay. Any other comments?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
If somebody is a fugitive, if we've been looking for Mickey Mouse, Mickey Mouse is a fugitive, and we find him or her or them, they can have their picture posted. And so I don't see a problem there. I think there may be some technical things you still want to address, but you're going to go through many, many committees, and I know you're willing to do that. So thank you for bringing this forward today. I'm going to be happy to support your Bill.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Mr. Chair. I don't think I completely answered the question. Just very briefly, I also want to, I think, point to not only a fugitive issue, but if someone's arrested and booked and they're not a fugitive, they're in custody. Posting that picture may encourage other victims to come forward or may shed light on other cases that might be involved. So I just wanted to add that, and I neglected to say that. Thank you.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I was actually going to make that same comment. I've done that myself, where we've actually found other victims of crimes by posting those pictures to help in another, because some of them just don't come forward, and then they see that person, or they see they're not the only one, and it does find other victims for us. So thank you for pointing that out.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay, any other comments? You may close.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I respectfully ask, and aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The Committee tried to clarify and clean up as best we could I have utmost confidence that if there's some clarity that needs to be done, that you will work with the opposition to make sure that happens.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Absolutely.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And I think you'll be amenable to whatever makes sense as long as we can get to the goal of what you're trying to do. And so I'm asking for an I vote. Is there a motion that would be good? Call to roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 994 by Assemblymember Jackson. The motion is do passed to the Privacy and Consumer Protection Committee. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
You need one more vote and then your last one.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
My last one is AB 742.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The puppy dog. Law enforcement police dog whenever you're ready.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Per the California Department of Justice, Mr. Chair, in 2021, nearly 12% of all use of force incidents that resulted in severe injury or death were caused by police canines. Nearly two thirds of all people seriously injured or killed by police canines in California were black or Latino, while 64% of those seriously injured or killed were unarmed.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Black Californians were more than twice as likely to fall victim to police canines as any other group and 2.6 times more likely than their white counterparts.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Latino Californians were more than twice as likely to fall victim to police canines as their white counterparts. The jaws of a police canine have enough force to break through sheet metal and often cause permanent nerve damage, and in some cases, permanent physical disfigurement to their victims. And in many cases, they have not yet been convicted of any crimes yet.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
AB 742 will ensure that California will no longer condone the mauling of civilians by police canines, which is a gross misuse of force that would rarely be justified in any other context. We're not just talking about those who law enforcement are trying to apprehend.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
They are also harming innocent people. Christine Naderer was bitten on the head by the Brentwood Canine police dog Marco, in her own home as she lay tucked inside a cramped crawl space in January 2019.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Adam Gabriel, a Marine Corps veteran, was bitten on the bicep by a police dog after Sonoma County sheriff's deputies wrongly detained him on suspicion of carjacking. Another man had taken the car, and the victim mistakenly identified Gabriel's car as the suspects.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Jesse Porter, an 89 year old man, was bitten on the left calf by a police dog in his own backyard, which led to his leg being amputated above the knee, and he died less than two months later in a rehabilitation center.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
The police canine mistaken him for a suspect. Richard Earl May Jr. a 64 year old man, was bitten on the legs by a police dog named Riggs while trying to rescue a friend's cat at a construction site.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
A civil jury in 2017 awarded him 1.1 million, ruling that San Mateo County sheriff's deputies used excessive force. Officer Matt Neff's police dog Bass mauled two 18 year old men during a search for armed robbery suspect in East Oakland, resulting in injuries requiring hospitalization and surgery.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Neither of the men were charged with a crime. I can keep going. Joel Alejo, a handyman, was attacked and repeatedly bitten by police dog Balco in his own backyard in June 2020.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
He was not the kidnapping suspect that Palo Alto police were looking for. They were assisting mountain view officers in searching for him, and the City of Palo Alto paid 135,000 to settle the lawsuit filed by him.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
It's important to respond to the narratives that opposition has floated around this bill, which is that a reduction in the use of police canines for arrest and apprehension will lead to an increase in deadly force use by law enforcement or pose an increased safety risk for officers.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
To this, I will say that I care deeply for the safety of our fellow Californians who become sworn officers and protect our communities. However, the research on this issue is clear.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
A study from 2022 from the Journal of Experimental Criminology found that the sudden suspension of police canine use for apprehension was not, and I repeat, was not associated with a statistical increase in officer or suspect injury or suspect's resistance during felony arrest.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
It is also important to also note that there still may be other instances where some Amendments could be warranted. However, I have not received any substantive recommendations on Amendments.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Instead, I have received more ideological responses, which does not get to the problem I'm trying to solve.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
How do we protect people from getting lifelong injuries and even death. To number one for those who were innocent in the first place, and even if they were found guilty, the penalty that the crime actually warranted does not equal to the life sentence of having a lifelong injury in the first place. There's clearly a problem.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
The police departments who send this data to the Department of Justice, this is not my data. This is not a research study. This is the data that our own law enforcement agencies send to the Department of Justice themselves.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
And so their own data says that there's a problem, and simply maintaining the status quo is just not acceptable. With that being said, joining me today in support is Sergeant Sean Allen with the Santa Clara County Sheriff's Department of Corrections and Adriana Wong with the ACLU, a co-sponsor for AB 742.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Good morning. Good morning. My name is Sean Allen, a sergeant with the Santa Clara County Sheriff's Office/ Department of Corrections and former 2022 candidate for sheriff with nearly 34 years of combined service.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
My experience with trained dogs includes owning, importing, handling and training extending back to the 1980s. Today, I will give you information based on my own experience, the 2021 California Department of Justice Use of Force report and the Marshall Project report.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
On duty, I have seen the result of nearly 200 police canine bites. In some cases, bites resembling shark bites resulting in maiming, disfigurement, scarring, torn ligaments and fractures of mostly black and brown people. Dog training is based on drive, praise and reward.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Yet a police dog does not discern information at the same level that a human does once the dog has been sent out to apprehend a police canine does not know if a person is deaf, mute, blind, special needs, autistic, suffering from dementia, PTSD or in crisis related to mental health.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
It doesn't know the difference between a child in many cases and an adult, an uninvolved resident, a suspect, and in some cases, even another police officer.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Some of these instances are supported by the data I recently spoke of. There have been instances where police canines have attacked other police officers, resulting with the officers shooting and killing the animal, clearly indicating the unpredictable behavior of a canine and the level of threat associated with a canine attack.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
We need legislation to prevent innocent people and people presumed innocent from being bitten in their genitals, breast, head, neck and face due to the lack of regulated control of weaponized police canines. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Yes, ma'am.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
Good morning. Adrienna Wong with the ACLU California proud co-sponsor of AB 742. I'll be speaking about the public records and data that demonstrate the need for this legislation. State use of force data tells us that in just the last few years, police canines have injured hundreds of Californians so badly that they face death, protracted and obvious disfigurement or loss or impairment of a body member or organ.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
And it tells us that people of color disproportionately suffer these injuries in the jaws of police dogs. Canines can kill people. The data tells us that in 2021, an unarmed man in Placer County died after a police dog lacerated his lower abdomen.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
In Hayward, as Assemblymember Jackson mentioned, a police canine killed an 89 year old man in his own backyard. The city there said the canine just did what it was trained to do, which is what the City of Brentwood said when a canine there scalped an unarmed woman.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
In the Oakland example that Assemblymember Jackson mentioned, the teenager that was mauled had his leg chewed to the bone. He was hospitalized for three weeks. He needed surgery and a skin graft. In Kern County, another woman was attacked while she was sleeping in her own home by a canine that was searching for a suspect.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
The medical report said that her ear was questionably salvageable, and she might lose her hearing. The data tells us that most of the time people are injured this badly by canines, they are unarmed and a significant percentage of them are in mental health crisis. That tells us that police canines are not deescalating because these are exactly the situations that should be deescalated rather than being responded to with violence.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
Data and public records, including body cam footage, show that police frequently use canines to attack people who are not fleeing or hidden but in plain sight, including people lying down, handcuffed or with their hands above their heads.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
From public records, we know the claim that there is already accountability is false. Agencies fail to discipline officers who deploy dogs to attack unarmed people stopped for minor offenses. They deem the vast majority of dog bites within policy, even when dogs attack the wrong people entirely or the person bit was trying to surrender.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
Public records, including body cam, also showed that dogs, extensively trained and regulated, refuse to recall or release their bite when commanded and will attack random bystanders or ordinary citizens asleep in their own homes or living their lives in their own neighborhoods. Restricting deployment of canines to when a crime is serious does nothing to prevent this.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
Experts agree that there is no way to ensure dogs will behave as commanded, limit the force they apply to what is necessary and proportional, or even bite the right people because they are animals.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
Finally, the data shows that using dogs to bite human beings is unnecessary. An academic study found that discontinuing a canine unit led to no increase in injury to officers or suspects or the amount of resistance during arrests.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
And when we looked at the data for several California agencies, we found that decreases in canine deployment from year to year corresponded with decreases in shootings. Increases in canine deployment corresponded with increases in shootings. Agencies that use canines to injure people the most also have the highest numbers of shootings, while departments that do not have canine units at all have fewer or no recent shootings.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
This confirms what we know, which is that officers have many tools for arresting people that do not involve deploying indiscriminate violence into a community or inflicting grievous lifelong injury. For all of these reasons, we respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses in support?
- Liz Beacon
Person
Liz Beacon with ACLU California Action proud co sponsors, also for Smart Justice California.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of Initiate Justice and Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Leslie Caldwell Houston for the California Public Defenders Association in support.
- Melissa Cosio
Person
Melissa Cosio with Californians for Safety and Justice in support.
- John Vasquez
Person
John Vasquez on behalf of Communities United for Restorative Justice, in support.
- Eric Harris
Person
Eric Harris, Disability Rights California, in support.
- Nicholas Sackett
Person
Nicholas Sackett, Social Compassion in Legislation and animal rights organization, in support.
- Taneicia Herring
Person
Taneicia Herring from the California Hawaii NAACP in strong support.
- Tom Unknown
Person
Tom from the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, strong support.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, San Francisco Public Defender's office in support.
- Jeronimo Aguilar
Person
Jeronimo Aguilar from Legal Services for Prisoners with Children. All of Us or None, definitely in support. Thank you.
- Annalisa Ruiz
Person
Annalisa Ruiz with Young Women's Freedom Center in support.
- Aram James
Person
Aram James, retired public defender, also with the Coalition for Justice and Accountability, who strongly supports AB 742. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you, thank you. From witnesses in opposition.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
King County Board of Supervisors and Shasta County Board of Supervisors in opposition.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
You have five minutes, or whatever way you want to parse it out.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
All right, sounds good. Thank you. Good morning, Chair, Members. My name is Alex Turcotte. I'm the chief.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Closer to the mic so we can all hear you.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
Is that better? All right. Thank you. Chair and Members. my name is Alex Turcotte. I'm the Chief of Police with the Citrus Heights Police Department. I'm here today on behalf of the California Police Chiefs Association.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
Thank you for giving me time to share our concerns regarding AB 742. First and foremost, I want to make it clear we agree that racially biased policing is unacceptable. As law enforcement management, police chiefs are responsible for training, education, and, when necessary, discipline relating to biased conduct. This is a responsibility we take incredibly serious, which is why we have partnered with the Legislature over the years to directly address biased conduct.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
Thanks to our combined efforts, we now have mandatory background checks, robust training, public disclosure of complaints, and a decertification system that includes review of all biased conduct by Statewide Civilian Board. This is not to say our work here is done, but these are examples of direct efforts we have taken to address the issues underlying this Bill. Unfortunately, AB 742 is not a solution to biased policing. AB 742 strictly bans critical functions of our canine programs.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
It's important to note our statistics show overwhelmingly that these programs reduce force, de-escalate situations, and protect lives. While we are still analyzing the data, an early review of statistics from several large agencies shows canine force is used in a fraction of 1% of all canine deployments. This means in over 99% of the tens of thousands of canine deployments per year. The intervention has led to apprehension or surrender without use of force.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
Strict Department policies, training guidelines, statewide use of force laws, and a large body of case law work together to set the standards of use of canines. Notably, state law requires proportional force, de-escalation and crisis intervention reporting requirements, and more. As such, canines are used in response to violent activity, not low-level offenses. But in the rare situation the canine is deployed, they provide benefits that cannot be replaced.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
Canines provide an early alert for officers to alert them to threats, allowing for more time and distance, both factors that are critical for de-escalation. A canine's sense of smell, hearing, and agility allow them to identify concealed threats that might not otherwise be found by officers. Canines can search areas that are difficult to access, such as large open spaces, attics, dark alleyways, crawl spaces, and other areas that provide a suspect a tactical advantage against an officer.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
The bottom line, AB 742 removes canines from a role that protects officers and the public. As such, and on behalf of the 334 police chiefs in California, we respectfully must oppose AB 742 and ask for your No vote. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Brad Meyer
Person
Good morning, chair and Members of the Committee. My name is Brad Meyer. I'm currently a captain with the Butte County Sheriff's Office and testifying on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association in opposition of AB 742. I'm currently a handler.
- Brad Meyer
Person
I'm a former handler from two different California law enforcement agencies. I have been involved with the training, deployment, and supervision of police canines my entire career. I have been a canine handler for four different police canines and oversee the canine unit as a supervisor. Police canines enhance safety to the suspect by de-escalation. Suspects often see and hear a police canine and will give up prior to use of force by the law enforcement.
- Brad Meyer
Person
More often than not, the barking alone from a police canine will get the suspect to surrender peacefully without any use of force at all. As a canine handler, I have been involved with many different critical incidences throughout my career. Many times, suspects who are violent and dangerous felons have been found by my canine enhancing the safety of the officers, the suspect, and the community.
- Brad Meyer
Person
I was involved in an incident where a subject had an outstanding felony warrant for weapons and drug charges and a long history of violent crimes. He was a very dangerous offender. The subject had fled the scene into a large farming area and was hiding from officers. We conducted a long search of the area and my canine located the suspect in an area where we were not able to search by humans. The suspect was arrested with minor injuries.
- Brad Meyer
Person
In the area where the suspect was hiding, we located many different firearms. We were unable to see the suspect during the entire search and we would not have located him without my canine. I appreciate your time and thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in opposition? Name and organization, please.
- Sarah Aquino
Person
Sarah Aquino on behalf of the city of Folsom in strong opposition.
- Shane Lavigne
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members. Shane Levine. On behalf of the California Statewide Law Enforcement Association, Association Orange County Deputy Sheriffs, California Fraternal Order of Police, Long Beach Police Officer Association, Sacramento Deputy Sheriff's Association, and also on behalf of Jennifer Fearing and California Fish and Game Warden Supervisors and Managers and the California Wildlife Officers Foundation. All in opposition. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Chris Emery
Person
Chris Emery, lieutenant with the Folsom Police Department, opposed.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Jonathan Feldman
Person
Chair and Members, Jonathan Feldman. This time on behalf of the city of Riverside who submitted a letter late but wanted to convey their concerns of the Bill. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Matthew Siverling
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members. Matthew Siverling, on behalf of the Association for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs and the California Peace Officers Association, both in opposition. Thank you.
- Randy Perry
Person
Mr. Chair and Members Randy Perry with Aaron Read and Associates, on behalf of Porak and the California Association of Highway Patrol. In opposition.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Mr. Chair and Members. Ryan Sherman with the Riverside Sheriff Association, also with police officer associations of Claremont, Corona, Pomona, Palos Verdes, Newport Beach, Upland, Santa Ana, Burbank, Marietta, Arcadia, Riverside, Fullerton, Culver City, and the Deputy Sheriff's Association, Monterey County and Placer County, all in opposition. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Julio De Leon
Person
Good morning, Chair and Committee. Julio De Leon with the Riverside Sheriff's Office, on behalf of the Sheriff's Office and Sheriff Chad Bianco, we are in opposition. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Gregory Tony
Person
Gregory Tony, as a representative of the Western States Police Canine Association and a prior handler, 22 years of law enforcement and have personally had a dog potentially save my life and the life.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Gregory Tony
Person
So opposed.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Robert Carlberg
Person
Robert Carlberg, on behalf of the Redondo Beach Police Officers Association, in opposition.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Brandon Epp
Person
Mr. Chair and Members, Brandon Epp, on behalf of Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna, in opposition. Thank you.
- Jim Stark
Person
Jim Stark, Witmer-Tyson Imports. We oppose.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Any other witnesses in opposition? We'll bring it back to Committee Members. Any comments or questions or? Mr. Lackey?
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah, thank you. Just as a reminder, I was here in 2019 when the Legislature passed a series of laws that directed law enforcement to utilize de-escalation techniques. It was clear the public wanted less lethal force. I feel like this particular Bill, AB 742, goes into a whole nother direction.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
I'll never vote for a Bill that will restrict the ability of an officer to use less lethal force and that can de-escalate a life-threatening situation. Honest to complete statistics are very, very valuable, and here's one to think about. When canines are activated, the suspect surrenders prior to a bite over 90% of the time. That is a very powerful consideration that you are trying to strip from law enforcement. It's safer for an officer and safer for the suspect.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
In spite of some of the stories that you have shared, I do believe, if anything, we should be using police dogs more. And that may sound contrary to, and it's not meant to be offensive. It's meant to be honest, because I believe that getting people to surrender and to stop the resistance is powerful because everybody wins, both the suspect and the officer, when you reduce resistance, and that is the role of canines. And so I will obviously not be supporting this Bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. I have a question for the in support with the. In your records, do you show how many people have actually gave up knowing there was a canine on scene?
- Adrienna Wong
Person
No, that data is not available to us, nor is the comparator, I guess, of how many people will give up when there's no canine on scene. The closest thing we have is the one academic study that looked at a department that discontinued its canine unit. And there they showed that there was no change in the amount of resistance to officers during an arrest as a result of discontinuing the canine unit there.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay. And you also said that this academics who's taken this survey and given you these numbers also stated that there was a high number of suspects who were unarmed.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
No, that is from the California State Use of Force data.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay. So with that data right there, with the unarmed, did you guys ever question or wonder why that was? Because there were so many unarmed suspects?
- Adrienna Wong
Person
I think that's part of the impetus for this Bill.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay. For the opposition. Captain, as a handler, would you send your dog into an armed suspect to apprehend an armed suspect?
- Brad Meyer
Person
Depends on the situation, but most of the time, no.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Yeah. So in my experience, I've known handlers who take care of their canines like as if they were their partners, and they're not going to send them into a room when there's a known armed suspect in there. So it's probably why you're getting your unarmed data is so high.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
So I've been receiving lots of phone calls about this Bill. The author obviously knows this. I've been getting text messages, emails, phone calls about this because this is really going to hit the law enforcement community. This is a tool in my eyes. And obviously, Mr. Lackey as well, that we're trying to take away from law enforcement. And this is a less lethal option. And I fear that law enforcement community is going to have to use a higher level of use of force by taking this away.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
And I fear that the unintended consequences of this Bill, unfortunately, will lead to shootings that do not need to happen. I've seen it many times where the person who was getting apprehended did stop prior to the canine being deployed because they did see the canine and they didn't want to get bit.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I'd like to know maybe the stats on how many people have been bit twice or maybe three times, because usually after one time they've been bit, they kind of know what it feels like and they would give up. And then in custodial settings, I know that a lot of 4850 claims by the deputies have gone down when they've had canines in there, because usually the individuals who were not wanting to give up did give up once a canine was on scene.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
So there are many uses to them, and there are many other factors that come into this as far as savings of money for employees, deputies, even the person that could be getting apprehended. And I see that also being a debt for the cities or the counties or even the state by not having those people available to those communities that they're sworn to keep safe. So I, unfortunately, will be a strong No on this.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other? Mr. Zbur.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I just had some questions. Are the canine units considered peace officers? So we have in the Committee analysis a host of a description of existing law that requires that a peace officer has the ability to use certain levels of force based on totality of the circumstances of what they may believe may be threats to people.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
For me, one of the things that is, I think, a difficult thing, especially given that this Bill is restricted to crowd control and apprehension, I think, isn't it, is how the Canine unit is making these very specific determinations about risk levels from the individual who's being apprehended or the crowd that's being controlled. Is the Canine unit, I've seen in some of the letters being referred to as peace officers, so are you expecting that the dog is making these determinations of who's a high risk?
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
It just sort of seems like this is a very crude way of making these kinds of determinations that I think are required under the law, where you have to make a determination at an early time. Then you set the canine out, and then there's no ability to really adjust the determination of the risk level. The canine is just sort of unleashed. And to me, that sort of feels really inhumane to individuals to treat any human being that way.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So I'm just wondering how you comply with the existing law related to use of force when you're using a canine.
- Brad Meyer
Person
Canines can't evaluate use of force. Only humans can. So that dog's not going to evaluate that use of force prior to going out there. That human is going to make that call and evaluate the totality of that circumstance prior to that deployment.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So do you consider a canine? I mean, it sounds like from the statistics, canines can inflict deadly force or pretty significant force. So how would you make a determination of that in the context of crowd control for example?
- Alex Turcotte
Person
Just to speak to your first question, the canine, while we all love animals and there is some other protections for attacking a police dog, the canine itself is a tool. It's a less-than-lethal tool. The person held accountable to weighing the factors and deploying or launching the dog would be the handler.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
The human police officer is in charge of that scene and would be held accountable for utilizing that force.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
If I could just respond quickly to your question as well. I think it's a great question. The canine handler is absolutely making the decision to deploy the animal. However, at the moment of force, it's the canine that's making the decision. And as Sergeant Allen spoke to, the canine's ability to exercise judgment there is not the same as an officer's.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
And that's why Professor Christy Lopez, who is a veteran Department of Justice attorney who looked at canine practices across the country, managed a number of consent decrees that address this issue, has concluded that the use of canines will result inherently in excessive use of force. Because a canine cannot know to modulate the force that it exerts in a moment to account for whether it's necessary, to account for whether it's proportionate in that moment, and in some instances, even if it's against the right person.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I just had one other question. Thank you. I really appreciate all of the responses. I think in your comments, you spent a lot of time focusing on some of the things that would be prevented by this Bill, which don't seem to me that the Bill prevents. The Bill looks to me like it's pretty focused on activities related to apprehension and arrest.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And so some of the things about losing the ability of canadine units to, for example, search for weapons or that kind of thing, I'm just wondering why it is that this Bill prevents those other things that you listed as being threatened by the Bill. Because it doesn't seem to me that the Bill does that.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
Thank you for the question. I understand the logic there.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
I would like to say that whenever police officers are in situations where the level of violence is significant, which would allow for the canine to be in that environment, the environment itself is inherently dangerous. So to prevent or to be absolutely sure that the canine would not bite in that kind of apprehension situation basically takes any type of defense away from the dog itself, too, and takes that.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
The efficacy of that tool reduces it significantly, largely just not make sense, than to utilize the canine in that situation. I don't know if you want to add to that at all.
- Brad Meyer
Person
Yeah. The Bill is not going to limit the searching for weapons the canines are going to use to search for people that are armed or dangerous to the officer. That's kind of what we were talking about, I think.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Yeah, I guess, but in terms of the restricting, the Bill seems like it's focused on restricting use against humans to apprehend humans, to arrest humans. It doesn't seem like it would prevent the continuation of canine units to, for example, search luggage at the airport or do searches in a supermarket for weapons or bombs that might be there. It seems like those kinds of uses would continue, would be able to continue. Am I misunderstanding that or would.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
That's correct.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Thank you very much.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Mr. Bryan.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
No, I think my colleague from Santa Monica raised kind of an interesting point. Right? And you all mentioned this as well, that many times the presence of a canine leads a suspect to surrender, to give up. But if you've already sent it after me and I drop down, I'm still getting bit because the dog can't. Or your call-off has to be to a point that I think POST sets a really minimum level for its effectiveness. You can call the dog off within a foot from somebody.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
You can call the dog off kind of immediately after letting off. How quickly can you adjust your commands to the dog given that you see somebody is known, and how often does that happen in practice?
- Brad Meyer
Person
So that happens all the time. That's one of those things that we constantly train on. It's the only tool in law enforcement that, once deployed, can be stopped prior to making contact with the suspect and called back to the handler. That control is what we hang our hats on.
- Brad Meyer
Person
We want that. So we're constantly working on that. So that line, and you talk about POST and POST, says that the dog has to be dedicated to the suspect, and then the call-off must be accomplished. But we continually train with those higher standards where we're trying to make that call-off. So it's right at the person, and the dog listens to the handler and comes back. It's the only tool, like I said earlier, the only tool that can be called back once deployed. We can't stop a bullet. You can't stop a baton strike.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I would love to see data collected on how often the call-back happens. Right. Because I think what the author is getting at is the legacy of this usage.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
That reminds me of the DOJ Ferguson report, which I was interesting that it was in the analysis, because I remember being an undergrad in college, reading the fact that 90% of the dogs in Ferguson prior to the uprising were unleashed on Black people and that every bite was a Black person. I'm thinking about the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department and the historical reference to Black and brown people as dog biscuits. Right.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And so I think that is the harmful legacy that the author is trying to get at. I think the crowd control situation is something that while our sheriff in L.A. County had a broader opposition, the Bill has no opposition to that, nor do, I think should anybody, knowing the legacy of law enforcement dogs and the civil rights movement. I think the author has raised a willingness to collaborate and work, because right now it's kind of a blanket, no apprehension.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
It makes me wonder, when is the canine unit deployed? Is it that this is a burglary? We feel like it's the canine unit. Who's making that determination? And is there a strict criteria for when the canine unit is deployed, or is it just there available in a you want to go, especially when you use such a blanket thing like a violent scenario? When is the canine unit deployed?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I know somebody makes that determination, but is there a statewide standard for when you can and cannot deploy the canine unit, or is that at the discretion of whoever is leading the canine unit at the time and the availability of it?
- Brad Meyer
Person
That's going to be the discretion. Use of Force Policy is going to dictate that, and the officer is going to make that determination on what crime that has been committed, how severe that crime is.
- Brad Meyer
Person
Does that person pose a danger to the public or the officers? Is he actively resisting? He's going to evaluate each and every call differently, and that's how that determination is going to be came to.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And I think it's some of that variation that I think the author and I don't want to speak for the author, but this Bill appears to be attempting to address as well. Right?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Especially when we have the characterization of the canine unit as a less lethal versus could do permanent harm is inherently excessive force. Right? We've got these two dichotomies here, but as a less lethal that can be deployed for anything. Right?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
In fact, we prefer to deploy less lethal, not in all instances, but relative to a situation where you would have lethal force if you're not viewing the canine as lethal force, whereas if it did fall under lethal force or excessive force guidelines, it might fall under a different deployment schedule. But it seems like there's just wide variation right now. So I think there's a lot of work to do here. I think some folks need to sit down and talk and think about it.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And I know the Vice Chair has a deep history in this as well, but I know the author's intentions are noble and I know there's a giant gap here. And through that gap, many people are suffering life-altering damage at the hands of what we're calling a less lethal. And so I'd like to see this move forward in the work to continue, and I want to thank the author for bringing it today.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Ms. Bonta is next. Ms. Ortega. I'm sorry. Ms. Ortega is next.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
I just had a quick question. You mentioned Hayward a couple of times. That's the city that I represent and was reading the article that talked about the incident there. And in that incident, the dog that caused the death of the 89-year-old who was innocent, that dog had bitten 29 other people, and three of them were innocent.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
So I guess the question is what happens in these situations where you clearly have a canine who has a history of or, I don't know what happens in the situation where it's clearly that this canine has bitten three other innocent people and then led to the murder of another. And so I'm wondering what's happening in between that time and what you're doing to prevent that from happening.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
So I'm not familiar exactly with the Hayward scenario, but I can talk to general practice. So there's generally a use of force review that happens over any significant use of force, and canines definitely would be there. The reasons surrounding the deployment, including what the want was thought to be when they got there, other factors, and tools that were available to the handler at the time. All those things are taken into consideration. I'm not sure with the statistic of the innocent person.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
I don't know if that is ultimately found innocent of a crime or the wrong person in general. But as long as the handler and the canine have been properly trained, they're following training procedures. They reasonably did what appeared necessary in the eyes of statute, policy, and another canine handler, then that would be deemed proper use of force.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
If that was deemed improper because there was lack of training, lack of following through policy, the handler let the canine go when they shouldn't have, then that would trigger accountability measures such as either suspending the dog, retraining the handlers, or discipline, depending on the severity of the issue and the severity of the violation.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. So I just want to help for all those out there as well.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I know a lot of questions from one of my colleagues was about using options for weapons, bombs, those kind of detections. Are your canines cross-trained to do that for the most part? I know most are, for the most part are protection dogs. How many of them would you say if this Bill was passed, would be able to be able to do the bomb detection, the weapon detection? Because in my neck of the woods, not all of them are cross-trained and able to do that.
- Brad Meyer
Person
It depends on the agency. Majority of dogs probably are cross-trained. They have patrol apprehension functions, and then another detection portion on top of that, either firearms, explosives, or narcotics, something like that. And then there's agencies that don't do that at all. So it's kind of across the board. Some just have apprehension dogs and some just have detection dogs. So it's kind of across.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay. So I just wanted to clarify that right there. And as far as my other colleagues with the call-offs, I've actually been an agitator with the sleeve and actually had the dog stop in front of me when called off. And that also will come back to a lot of training. And you can obviously tell which ones train with their dogs more often than those that don't. And I think that's something that will also be addressed later. And Chief, you alluded to the canine. As far as my colleague giving the example of the canine.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
How would that process go? I know you talked about policy, but would you guys immediately pull that canine off the street, or would you guys let it continue its shift if you guys found immediately that there was another bite that wasn't warranted?
- Alex Turcotte
Person
If there's a canine bite that on its face appears to be outside of policy or egregious enough or significant enough to have caused severe injury, we would pull that canine, in our department, we would pull that canine off the street, until which time we could conduct a full investigation.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Ms. Bonta, could you go ahead? You want to answer a question or do it in your close?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Well, one of my witness wanted to respond to the question as well.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Go ahead. She wants to hear.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
In terms of the call-off.
- Sean Allen
Person
So it's all over social media and other places. You see many instances where the dogs are sent out to apprehend and they're either already biting or they're not biting and they're called off and they do not respond as they're supposed to.
- Sean Allen
Person
There's a case in Kern, County, I think it's all over the media, where a deputy accidentally opened the door of a canine officer and the canine went and bit a person who was already arrested in handcuffs, face down on the cement.
- Sean Allen
Person
Throughout dog training, when you're training dogs, one of the biggest things, even the dog sports that are associated to police dog certifications such as KNPV and Schutzen and IPO and all these other disciplines, one of the biggest things you see, even with high-level training dogs, high-level trained dogs, is they negate to call-off when they're told to, or when they turn the corner and they face an agitator or a suspect, they bite anyway. So dogs aren't coming. They're pretty unpredictable.
- Sean Allen
Person
I mean, again, talking about the instances where there was a little boy bitten at a community service event, the dog just took off and bit the little boy in the face. It's all over social media. There is a guy walking down the street and an officer opens the door of his patrol car just to let the dog out, and the dog ran across the street and bit him. So in these instances, the dogs are being called off, but they're still biting.
- Sean Allen
Person
In the case in San Jose, which is a big issue, they send the dog out to find the person who's in a trash can and knock the trash can over, and the dog bites and locks onto the person's throat. And for over a minute, for over a minute, the dog refuses to let off. You can hear the officers, some of the officers saying, oh my God. And once the dog just refuses to come off and continues a bite, then they resort back to saying, stop resisting.
- Sean Allen
Person
How do you resist with a dog locked onto your neck? So the dog's out of control. You can't control the dog in many situations. And that's why we're seeing instances where police officers, when they're attacked by the same dogs we're talking about, they resort to using deadly force. We only resort to using deadly force as we're trained to prevent great bodily injury or death.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Ms. Bonta.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I think my challenge is that while POST has minimum training and performance standards for police canines, it's very clear that there is a huge variance in terms of the deployment practices and procedures for use of canines. And that is of concern to me. We want to essentially have the same kind of policy applicable so that if I'm in Oakland versus Hayward versus Fresno, as a citizen, I can understand how and when canine might be deployed.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
And then I just wanted to comment on the opposition's initial comments around bias and the use of bias, or the sense that bias has or has not been fully addressed here. Very clearly, from the data that we have here, there's a disproportionate use of an experience of people of color being the victim of the use of canines, and that's irrefutable and something that should be significantly recognized. So I'm a little suspicious of the comment that you made related to that.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I will be voting for this Bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other comments?
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So I just want to thank you for being here and I want to thank the author for bringing the Bill. I think it's a righteous Bill and it's important, but I am hoping that the author will work with the opposition to maybe focus on tightening it up a bit. I'm nervous about, and I know this isn't the author's intent at all. I'm nervous about the continuation of use of canine units for searching for bombs and weapons and those kinds of things.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And so if there could be some kind of focus on leashed versus unleashed uses of the canines, I would appreciate that. But I will be supporting the Bill today.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. You may close.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Thank you, Members. Very robust conversation. And this is what this Bill is intended to do. Whenever we see data that is disproportionate in use, whenever you see stories of innocent people being injured with lifelong injuries, whenever you see that, obviously there is not a statewide standard in terms of how we use canines.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
That means there's a problem that needs to be solved. And from out throughout this time, I've gotten more death threats, I've gotten more threats of violence based upon law enforcement POST about this Bill than I have received any legitimate substantive options for amendments. So the idea is that, and those who know me know that I'm trying to make sure that we have a balanced approach, but just trying to kill this Bill is not going to happen. But if we have some things that will make sure.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I've heard stories of a canine that actually saved a law enforcement officer because that they were being attacked by someone, but they were able to call on the dog to save them. Legitimate. Let's figure out how to fix that to make sure those things can happen. 90% of people who see the dog, I would be one of them, on the scene, they give up because they don't want to deal with the dog. Let's find how to fix that so they can be on the scene.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
But we need to protect people from being bitten in these ways. So if we want to get to the crux of making sure that we have both safety and justice, I am all for that. And I will have as many substantive meetings as possible to make sure that we get this right. Right? But we're going to leave ideology off the table because we're not going to get anywhere with that.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Let's get to making sure that both people and law enforcement, innocent and guilty, are both treated with dignity, humanity, respect, and that we can both have safety and justice at the same time. I respectfully ask for an Aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. And you and I have had several conversations about this and I've also had several conversations with Chief Luna on this and their practices.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I know you are open to some kind of statewide, I mean, there's an opportunity, as Ms. Bonta said, for maybe a statewide policy on the use of canines in law enforcement. And I think you're open to that because at the end of the day, as was said earlier, what happens in Hayward may be different than what happened in L.A. City, what happened in Tulare County. And there doesn't seem to be a statewide practice, policy, procedure for how to deal with that.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And so obviously I'll be voting yes to that. But I just also want to leave with the opposition that if you're listening, the author is willing to work through this, leaving you with the use of this tool that probably 90%, probably 99% of what you want to use this tool, you can do it. And there's search and rescue where there's no problem with that. It's what happens when you let this tool loose. It's just like having a gun.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
A gun by itself, sitting on the table doesn't do anything. It's the people that takes the gun and then something may happen that could lead to tragic events, tragic events that happen in other places. So we really need to address that to make sure that no tragedies happen because of the use of canines.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And the last thing I would just tell individuals when it comes to canines and minorities and people of color, my uncle, my grandfather in Little Rock, Arkansas, to this day have problems with police dogs because what happened to them in 1957, 58,59, 60 with police and dogs. Some of us learned what was going on. And so as you look at this esteemed body, majority of us are people of color and may not have had a good relationship with canines and law enforcement.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And so that's what you're hearing. And so please take that into consideration and read your audience, especially when you come and bring people up to speak on this. Because as I was watching, I didn't see a whole lot of people of color opposing us from law enforcement side. I saw a lot of diverse people from all over California that supported the Bill. And that should tell you where the people of California, when they look at this, what they want to do.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
But ultimately, you have an author there that's willing to come up with a statewide policy that you can live with and that we can live with. And I would encourage you, if it gets out of this Committee, to take full advantage of that and to figure out how we can make this happen, because we do need a statewide policy, in my opinion. And that's the beauty of this Committee, where we talk things out and hopefully, we come up with something that works for everybody.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
So hopefully we can get to that. With that, do we have a motion? Is there a second? Call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 742 by Assembly Member Jackson. The motion is do pass to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll call].
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measure passes. Next I have Philip Ting, but he's not here. I have Diane Dixon. I don't see her if she's here. I have Villapudua. Not here. So Lowenthal is here. You made it. No, I had to go through the list so they know I at least called all the names before we got to you.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
As you should, Mr. Chair.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
AB 725, item number nine.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. And I understand you received my brother here in Committee last week. My older brother.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The judge.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
The judge, yes, the honorable judge Lowenthal. I appreciate the care you gave him. Thank you, Mr. Chair. And Members, I am very pleased to present AB 725. This is a common sense bill. It is closing a loophole in our existing laws. It's supporting responsible gun owners in our state. It's also supporting law enforcement.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
It requires the owner of a firearm, frame or receiver to report the loss or theft of those components to a law enforcement agency so that they can be entered into the Department of Justice Automated Firearms System. While frames or receivers are considered firearms for the purpose of registration under licensing, under current law, they are not treated as such when it comes to requirements for reporting lost or stolen firearms.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
AB 725 closes this loophole by making failure to report a lost or stolen frame or receiver the same infraction as failure to report a firearm. The frame or receiver serves as the base platform for most firearms and typically houses the trigger, hammer, bolt firing pin, with some variants depending on the type of firearm that allow them to operate once assembled. So while these parts may seem innocuous on their own, they represent one of the critical components of any operational firearm.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
I should also point out that there is clear regulatory definition of frames and receivers by the ATF. Requiring anyone who owns a frame or receiver to report them to law enforcement agencies if they are lost or stolen is a common sense approach to ensuring that we are appropriately tracking these components that can be used to assemble a fully operational firearm. Finally, AB 725 is in keeping with existing gun laws.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Under current law, lost or stolen firearms must be reported to law enforcement agencies, and so long as they are reported, the owner is not in violation of the law. AB 725 simply represents an additional component of responsible gun ownership. I'm pleased to be joined by Ben Rudin on behalf of the Conference of California Bar Associations, who is here to testify in support of this bill.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Thank you. You have five minutes.
- Ben Rudin
Person
Thank you, Members of the Committee, thank you for this opportunity to testify. As you said, I'm Ben Rudin on behalf of the Conference of California Bar Associations in support of AB 725. This bill would require gun owners to report not only a lost or stolen firearm, but a lost or stolen frame, receiver, or precursor part. The frame or receiver is the part of the gun that has the firing mechanism and is considered a firearm under federal law and most of our state laws.
- Ben Rudin
Person
Reporting a lost or stolen frame or receiver or precursor part can help prevent gun trafficking. Some black market guns are built with a stolen frame, receiver or precursor part and then sold in the black market. By reporting a lost or stolen frame or receiver, gun owners can help law enforcement track them down sooner. Furthermore, it can help prevent accidental shootings.
- Ben Rudin
Person
If someone else finds a lost frame, receiver or precursor part and uses it to build a gun, the gun can lack valuable safety features and result in an accidental shooting. Finally, with rights come responsibilities. Reporting a lost or stolen frame, receiver, or precursor part should be a responsibility of gun ownership, as it's within the responsibility of ensuring firearms are always secure and accounted for. Now, while I still have time, I'm going to address an argument by the opposition.
- Ben Rudin
Person
In its letter, it said the term precursor part is so vague that it could require people to report as lost or stolen something as benign as a pin or a spring. Luckily, that interpretation doesn't fit within the statutory scheme. The definition that we use in this bill is the same definition used in many of our firearm statutes already. Examples include requiring background checks, firearm safety certificate, and waiting 10 days.
- Ben Rudin
Person
So unless the opposition is going to argue that those people might be breaking the law every time they buy a pin or a spring without a background check, a firearm safety certificate and wait 10 days, or they don't wait 10 days, that interpretation falls flat. Finally, this bill simply means that if you have to do a background check, get a firearm safety certificate and wait 10 days to buy it, then you have to report it lost or stolen, if that happens. It doesn't expand-
- Ben Rudin
Person
It doesn't expand what's considered a firearm compared to with many of our other statutes. Thank you again. And I urge an aye vote.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Thank you. We'll hear from other witnesses in support.
- Lizzie Buchen
Person
Lizzie Buchen, Prosecutors Alliance of California, in support.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
We'll move to witnesses in opposition. Seeing no witnesses in opposition, we'll bring it back to the Committee. I'll second. Any other comments? Mr. Lowenthal, you may close.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
I respectfully request your aye vote. Thank you.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 725 by Assembly Member Lowenthal, the motion is 'do pass to the Appropriations Committee.' [Roll Call].
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Thank you. That measure is on call. It needs two votes.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
We will move now to--Item Number 19: AB 862: Rebecca Bauer-Kahan.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair and Members. I'm here to present AB 862. Mr. Lackey has seen this bill many times. It is a simple bill that would require the County Sheriff's Office to submit a report to the Legislature that focuses on the Board of State and Community Correction success rates in reducing recidivism.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
A 2021 state audit report found that counties are lacking in their oversight for realignment spending and are withholding surplus funds that could be used to improve public safety. The Legislature should focus on bringing full transparency to the rehabilitative, exercise, and educational programs offered in our county jails.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
AB 862 will require a standardized look at the valuable information provided by the sheriffs about the success rate within the county jail's rehabilitative services. Through the use of recidivism reports, state legislators will be able to make legislative decisions that will help us ensure that those programs that work will happen more often and those that don't work we maybe won't fund. The bill will help maintain public safety, reduce the overall size of incarcerated populations, and reduce local corrections costs.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
With me today in support of AB 862 is Lesli Caldwell-Houston with the California Public Defenders Association, and Thanh Tran with the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Thank you. You'll have five minutes between you.
- Thanh Tran
Person
Thank you. Thank you. My name is Thanh Tran with the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, pronouns: he/him, Policy Associate, and AB 862 is about collecting data so we can best serve our communities by making sure that we are spending money on resources that actually work, right? So resources that are actually stopping this cycle of humans coming in and out of our county jails and then either dying or graduating to prison. So this is a very common sense bill.
- Thanh Tran
Person
If you pay an electrician to fix your lights, you want to know if your lights got fixed. And it's the same concept here. We invested millions of dollars into rehabilitation in county jails, and we just want to know if folks are getting rehabilitated. That's simply what this data bill is trying to do.
- Thanh Tran
Person
So I spent two and a half years incarcerated in Santa Clara County Jail, and 80 percent of that two and a half years incarcerated in Santa Clara County Jail, I spent locked down inside of a cell. Programming was not incentivized or was it a priority. We got, on average, about one to two hours a day outside of our cells.
- Thanh Tran
Person
I learned also in county that the majority of people who were incarcerated with me in that county jail were going through either a mental health crisis or substance abuse crisis. And these were the people who tended to cycle in and out of the jail regularly. So I understand that offering services in jails is extremely difficult. I understand that jails are not centers for healing or support.
- Thanh Tran
Person
However, it is vitally important that if a person gets to a point where they are committing a crime and getting incarcerated, if they get to that point where they are in the state's care, we have to ask ourselves why. We have to ask ourselves what happened to this person and not simply what's wrong with this person because every person who does not come back to county jail is a person who is not committing crimes, and that is public safety.
- Thanh Tran
Person
So lastly, I want to say, no program, no county, no country can be successful without data. If we do not know what is working or not working, we cannot fill the gaps to see what will ultimately stop people from committing crimes and crowding our jails and prisons. So as conscientious problem-solvers that we are, as responsible stewards of California's tax dollars, I implore you, please pass this bill.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Thank you. Next witness.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Good morning, Committee Members. My name is Lesli Caldwell-Houston. I have nearly 40 years of work within Indigent Defense, and I'm very pleased to be here to testify in support of AB 862 offered by Assembly Member Bauer-Kahan. We as a society are always calling for data, as it's how we know what works and what does not.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Requiring sheriffs to report the nature of their anti-recidivism programs and the program's success rate in reducing recidivism can tell us what is working and what needs to be changed or reworked. We know that recidivism can be reduced by addressing the criminogenic needs of the individuals in the criminal justice system. As public defenders, we always encouraged our clients to participate and complete, be successful in any programs that were available to them. Without data, we don't know definitively what is truly successful in the endeavors to reduce recidivism.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Local sheriffs are responsible for providing these important services. Looking at success rates will assist local authorities in determining how to best distribute our resources. Because it's the sheriffs that provide the services, we need their data. Thus, this bill's requirements are critical to the overall success in reducing our recidivism rates. Therefore, we urge your yes vote. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Any other witnesses in support? Name and organization.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of Initiate Justice.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses in support?
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, State Policy Director for the San Francisco Public Defender's Office, in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Jeronimo Aguilar
Person
Jeronimo Aguilar, Policy Analyst with Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, in strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alissa Moore, Elder Freeman Policy Fellow, Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Tatiana Lewis
Person
Tatiana Lewis, with All of Us or None, in strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Joanne Scheer
Person
Joanne Scheer with Felony Murder Elimination Project, in strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
All right, thank you. Any witnesses in opposition? Mr. Salzillo. Hello. Good morning. Good to see you again.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Good morning. Mr. Chairman and Members, Cory Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriffs' Association, in opposition to the bill. This is the third version of this bill, I think, and several others have preceded it. Sheriffs across the state provide meaningful rehabilitative program to jail inmates with the desire to enhance reentry into society. The offenders that come into our jail, we don't want them to come back.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
That's just the bottom line. Unfortunately, the bill is ambiguous. It's not that we're opposed to knowing outcomes about the programs that we offer. The bill just says recidivism rates, and it defines what recidivism is. We have no way of knowing when somebody recidivates, particularly outside of a particular county.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
So if I work at Los Angeles County Jail and I know that John Smith is in my custody and he gets a program and he recidivates and he comes back to the LA County Jail, I can measure that. I know that. But if John Smith is in my jail and goes through a program and gets out and then moves to Fresno County and recidivates and ends up in the Fresno County Jail or in state prison, I don't know that. Don't have a way of knowing that short of calling the Fresno County Sheriff and getting lucky and saying, 'hey, by any chance, has John Smith been in your jail?'
- Cory Salzillo
Person
There's no acknowledgement of--there's a lack of available ways of tracking this information, right, wrong or indifferent. That's just the reality of it. This bill has been vetoed. Governor said last year, this is overly broad, creates a large mandate, potentially costing the state millions of dollars.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
We're not in any better fiscal position this year than we were last year. On the notion of realignment and the rehabilitative programs that sheriffs are providing, we see the value in providing those programs. We know we need to do that. But we did not ask for the obligation to supervise the population that we're talking about here, the realigned population. So it's not like the state is making an investment by giving the county's money for realignment. That was part of the deal, right?
- Cory Salzillo
Person
The deal was you take all of these people and put them in your jails and you supervise them on probation. And in connection with that, we will provide you the funding because we think you can do it cheaper and better than the state. We were around for that, right? So that was the deal. So it's not like the state is saying, 'hey, here's a bunch of money, go do good stuff with it.'
- Cory Salzillo
Person
And we're saying, 'okay, we're going to spend your money, but we're not going to tell you what we do with it or how good of a job we do with it.' That's not the case. So you just need to be clear about what we're talking about, the tens of thousands of offenders who we now supervise prior or subsequent to realignment that we didn't have before. This bill, the predecessors, none of them have money attached to it.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
I know you sit on the Subcommittee that is appropriate to this, as do others, and I know that we've had that conversation before, but none of those bills have had money. This bill doesn't have money. So if it's important that we do that, I think we ought to have that discussion. But anyway, for those reasons, we'd ask for your no vote. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any others in opposition? Seeing none, we'll bring it back to Committee Members. Any questions? Comments? Mr. Lackey.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah. This is an interesting discussion and one that I've believed in for a long time that deserves recognition, and we deserve a better metric. We deserve to know what level of success because I will tell you something from a personal side. I was very, very discouraged in believing in rehabilitation. Being a law enforcement official, all you see is failure after failure after failure after failure. So I had the unique opportunity to go to the prison as elected official, and I made an arrangement to meet with LWOPs.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
That's life without the possibility of parole. And the reason for meeting with them, these were people who had indicated that they wanted to change, and within the institution, the best thing they could hope for was an honor camp. And so I was meeting with these individuals, as a White, Republican law enforcement person. So there was no holds barred. They had nothing to gain by giving me misinformation. And I met with--it was about a dozen of them.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
And in my discussion with them, I told them the reason why I was there is I wanted to believe in change of heart because it seems like the more hardened criminals rarely, if ever, really rehabilitate. And I will tell you that I was convinced that every one of those individuals that I spoke to had a change of heart, and they wept. And these were people who identified themselves as monsters and said that they deserve to be in custody.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
And why our institution doesn't use people like that to help, I don't know. I'm trying to make that actually happen because they are the best trusted advocates that our society could ever hope for. But I do believe in change, and I do believe that we need to be better at trying to encourage positive outcomes. I do believe that there are some that will not change, that have no desire to ever change, but that should not stop our effort.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
That should not keep us from trying to be compelling and to try to track, and we need a metric to know success, because all we seem to hear about are failures, and failures are something to pay attention to as well. I'm not saying that they are not. But let's also track success, right? And so we can know where we are failing in this system because I believe that there's a lot more failure than there is success.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
But that does not--I mean, I'm a super minority member. If I measured my value on success, I'm telling you, I don't know why I would be sitting here. So I'm just trying to be honest with everybody. This is a good measure. This is something, and I know there are financial challenges. When aren't there, right? To kill something because money is scarce, sometimes maybe that'll be the path.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
But I would tell you in 2018, I had a similar bill, and it went the direction that I hope this does not go. We need this kind of thing, and thank you for bringing it forward, and you clearly have my support.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Lackey.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Yes. Mr. Bryan.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I fully agree with Mr. Lackey.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Whoa.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I agree with Mr. Lackey.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I'm glad I could bring you together.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Ms. Bonta.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Well, speaking as the others referenced, as the Chair of Public Safety Subcommittee, I certainly agree with Mr. Lackey as well. We actually have found a lot of common ground in our Subcommittee, Budget Subcommittee related to this very same thing, making sure that we have additional transparency and information and data to be able to inform the decisions that we need to be able to make.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
And that, quite frankly, is investment in an opportunity to be able to know whether or not the rehabilitation programs and programs that we are focused on to reduce recidivism are effective and to what extent they are actually being utilized. There's no better use of our funds than to ensure that we actually have the ability to measure our progress and success with legislation as this does that allows us to be able to understand in totality, in the aggregate, what we are looking at.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I see Assembly Member Dixon right over your shoulder there, who had legislation that would have done the same but was much more specific to the individual, which I found some privacy issues with. This bill does not propose to do that. It really is trying to understand what is happening at each facility. And I appreciate that and the authors move to that. And if you are seeking coauthors, I would love to coauthor this bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Love that. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Any others? With that, you may close.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I am just going to let Mr. Bryan and Mr. Lackey's words be my close. Thank you. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And I want to thank you for bringing this. As the opposition pointed out--I'll call him Cory because we've been together for so long--when we foisted everybody down to the local level, the numbers was like 160,000 that were incarcerated. It's now in the 90s. We need to know for better or worse, if we're going to be honest with one another, we're going to be honest about Prop 47, 57, rehabilitation, we need to know what happened to those individuals. Did they get into rehabilitation programs?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The reason why that number is not jumping up is because they're doing well. If they're not doing well, we need to find out why so we can make corrections to that. And so I do believe we need to fund it because I don't believe an unfunded mandate coming from local government. But most important, if we find programs that are very successful, we need to continue to fund those because there's an ROI, return on investment. We're looking at about 230,000,000 if we close ten prisons right now.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Think about if we could close more--ensuring that the public is safe and that people don't recidivate and do more damage--how much more money we can save taxpayers. And I think we're on the same page with the opposition that we just need to make sure they have the resources to do it.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And what bothers me, and I've said this a million times, that we can find out that information if we cut across, and maybe this is where we can help lines to give law enforcement the tools to be able to give us that information or having another group do it. Because as far as I'm concerned, if you just check people's State Franchise Tax records, if they're working every day, hopefully they're too tired to go out and create mayhem and problems.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
If they're working every Monday through Friday, hopefully they're good citizens. And I would think the majority of them, if they have a steady job which cures poverty and other problems, that they won't have time to do that. And that's an easy--think about it--that's an easy fix. But as the opposition said, they may not have access to that or we may have some constitutional barriers to be able to provide that.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Maybe we need to also help with your bill to eliminate some of those constitutional barriers so that we can get that information readily and easily. I mean, we have the technology, we can instantaneously get that information so that there's not a whole lot of staff hours at the local level.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And so I'm putting that out there as a possible solution as hopefully this moves forward, so that we're working together to get this done and listen to what the local entities need to be able to be successful. Yes. This is a Policy Committee. The money part will--I have to deal with later when we come over there--but we'll deal with it when it gets there, if it gets out of here. There a motion? Is there a motion? Is there a second? Mr. Bryan seconded. Okay. We have a bipartisan motion and second. Call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 862 by Assembly Member Bauer-Kahan, the motion is 'do pass to the Appropriations Committee.' [Roll Call].
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measure passes.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
So we have a half hour before--is Mr. Ting here? No. Ooo. Your timing is impeccable.
- Philip Ting
Person
My ears were burning.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
So we're going to recess really close to noon and then come back again. So those of you who are waiting, we may not get to you until after 1:30 and across the way in Room 127. So depending on how long Mr. Ting is, this may be the last one. Okay. If it's short, then Mr. Patterson is after that.
- Philip Ting
Person
Mr. Chair, AB 881 is my Be the Jury bill. It builds on a pilot that I did for San Francisco to allow San Francisco the ability to privately raise funds to pay jurors to pay low income jurors or working family jurors more money, from $15 to $100. The pilot's been so successful, we'd like to expand that throughout the state. Too often our juries do not reflect the people who are in the system.
- Philip Ting
Person
We always say you are allowed to have a jury of your peers. Most often you have people who are facing criminal trial and you have a jury that doesn't really look like them or represent them. Too often we have working people who take financial hardship and because of the fact that we're only paying them $15 a day, we excuse them. But what happens is jurors are not diverse and they don't really represent the people who are facing potential court cases.
- Philip Ting
Person
So just for example, after we did the pilot and the numbers are still coming in because it's a real time pilot in San Francisco, we found that the jury pool became much more diverse. 68% of the people identified as people of color, 81% of the people said they wouldn't have been able to participate without financial assistance from the pilot. And so we were very pleased with the results and we're still getting more data.
- Philip Ting
Person
But it's clear that this is absolutely critical to make sure that we actually do fulfill our promise to allow people, a jury of their peers. With that, I have one witness.
- Michelle Lau
Person
Good morning. My name is Michelle Lau and I'm the senior manager of the San Francisco Financial Justice Project in the treasurer's office. I'm here today to speak in support of AB 881 Be the Jury California, and to share our experience implementing the San Francisco Be the Jury pilot program by increasing jury pay for criminal cases to $100 per day of jury service for low to moderate income Californians.
- Michelle Lau
Person
AB 881 would ensure that all Californians have access to a jury of their peers, which is required by our constitution and is the bedrock of our justice system. Raising jury pay has been identified as a solution to improve our justice system for many years. In a report by the Judicial Council, they found that financial circumstances were the top reason people were granted hardship excuses.
- Michelle Lau
Person
This bill builds on a successful pilot program that we implemented in San Francisco along with all of our justice partners at San Francisco District Attorney's office, the public defender's office, the Bar Association, and the Superior Court. In San Francisco it's unusual to have the DA and public defender on the same side of an issue, but this bill is one of those rare cases where everyone agrees that fairness and equity are critical to having a strong justice system and jury diversity is core to that.
- Michelle Lau
Person
Our DA and public defender both sent representatives here today because this is such an important bill for our justice system. We've also heard from DA's and public defenders across the state that this is sorely needed. In the San Francisco pilot program, we wanted to test if raising jury pay from $15 per day to $100 per day for low to moderate income jurors would make a difference in the economic and racial diversity of juries.
- Michelle Lau
Person
We have now had the program up and running for a year and the results have been very promising. As the Members cited the vast majority of participants, 81% of people said they could not have served without the $100 per day stipend. Participants reflect the racial demographics of our at large San Francisco population, and feedback from people has been overwhelmingly positive. People report having learned more about the importance of jury service and encourage the continuation of the program for other jurors.
- Michelle Lau
Person
Participants also have a household income of just under $40,000 on average, which means the program is indeed serving people who need the stipend the most. In terms of administration, it's been a smooth process. We worked closely with our court to build information about Be the Jury into their processes, ensured that we got the word out about the program and streamlined the application process so that's not burdensome for people applying or for the courts to review.
- Michelle Lau
Person
We'd be happy to share all of our materials with other county courts so that everyone in California has access to a jury of their peers. Lastly, I wanted to share a direct quote from a juror who participated in Be the Jury. Keith Wincitis said, Be the Jury made it possible for me to serve as a juror without worrying about whether I could afford meals or meet my basic needs.
- Michelle Lau
Person
He also explained how this program has demonstrated our commitment to building a more inclusive and just legal system. We're very excited about the possibility of expanding this impactful program statewide. Thank you to Assemblymember Ting for introducing this important legislation, and I respectfully ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Moving Bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Second. Are there any other witnesses in support? Name and organization.
- Liz Beam
Person
Liz Beam Prosecutors Alliance of California in support.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of initiate justice and Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area.
- Melissa Cosio
Person
Melissa Cosio with Californians for Safety & Justice in support.
- John Vasquez
Person
John Vasquez, on behalf of Communities United for Restorative Justice in support.
- Ivana Gonzales
Person
Ivana Gonzales with Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, the Coalition for Family Unity in full support.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, San Francisco Public Defender's Office co sponsor in support and on behalf of the following organizations ACLU California Action, Fair Chance Project, Safe Return Project, GLIDE, Coalition of Homelessness, HomeRise, San Francisco Financial Justice Project a co sponsor, Santa Cruz Barrios Unidos, Young Women's Freedom Center, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, Sister Warriors Freedom Coalition, Asian Americans Advancing Justice Southern California, California Public Defenders Association, Communities United for Restorative Youth Justice, Conference of California Bar Associations, Drug Policy Alliance, HomeRise, Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, Prosecutors Alliance, University of San Francisco School of Law, Racial Justice Clinic, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Good morning. Carmen-Nicole Cox on behalf of ACLU California Action in strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Jeronimo Aguilar
Person
Jeronimo Aguilar, here on behalf of Legal Services for Prisoners with Children. Thank you.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
Kim Stone, Stone Advocacy on behalf of the California District Attorneys Association, in support.
- Alice Michel
Person
Alice Michel on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association, in support.
- Analisa Ruiz
Person
Analisa Ruiz on behalf of Young Women's Freedom Center and Sister Warriors, San Jose chapter in support.
- Analisa Ruiz
Person
Tatiana Lewis on behalf of All Of Us Or None in strong support.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alissa Moore Legal Services for Prisoners with Children in full support.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox All of Us or None, Legal Services for Prisoners with Children in support.
- Raynon Ross
Person
Dr. Raynon Ross on behalf of San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins, in very strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any witnesses in opposition? Any witnesses in opposition? Seeing none, bring it back to Committee Members. Any questions, comments? Seeing none, you may close.
- Philip Ting
Person
Very much appreciate the help with the Committee. Appreciate all the sponsors. Just respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Philip Ting
Person
Thank you. Chairs recommending an aye vote. I think we have a motion and second. Call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 881 by Assemblymember Ting. The motion is due passed to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The Members on call we need. One more member. Ms. Dixon.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Good morning.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Good morning.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Thank you. Are we ready?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
It looks like a bunch of people are coming up.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
All right.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I feel like you have friends.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Come on up. Thank you. All right, I think we're all here.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Good morning. Good morning. Good morning. Mr. Chair and Members of the Committee. I'm here today to present Assembly Bill 758, a form of gun control. AB 758 creates an enhancement for the possession or use of an unserialized gun, also known as a ghost gun, at the time a felony is committed. This Bill specifically targets individuals who use unregistered guns because they are untraceable in order to commit crimes. This Bill is not unprecedented.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
It would bring ghost guns to the same level of enhancement as using an assault weapon when a felony is committed. California has some of the strictest gun laws in the nation, yet we still experience tragic mass shootings and senseless killing every year. According to the ATF, more than 30% of all guns that law enforcement recovers are considered ghost guns. Individuals who commit crimes hide behind the anonymity of using a ghost gun.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
This is a simple gun control Bill that intends to reduce the criminal use of ghost guns. My primary expert witness this morning to speak in support of the Bill is San Joaquin Deputy District Attorney Cindy De Silva.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
Good morning, and thank you, Assembly Member Dixon, and good morning, chair and Members. I'm happy to speak in support of this Bill. We do have serial number requirements on firearms for a reason.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
They're required by federal law, and they help us identify if the gun has been stolen so we can get it back to the true original owner. They also help us, if it's been used in a crime, to figure out who potentially was the perpetrator. It helps us go back in time and find out where it was purchased from, by whom, what time, when, and what town, et cetera.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
So we can put things together and try to figure out how this gun ended up in the chain of commerce, in the stream of commerce, and in the hands of the perpetrator. And crimes are solved that way. It also helps us to determine if the gun was used in a crime at all. And what this measure would do is possession of a firearm without a serial number is only a misdemeanor. That's not a very strenuous legal situation for a person to find themselves in.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
What this Bill does, it's rather creative. It only targets the higher level offender who's using it to commit a felony. So while possession of the unserialized firearm is just a misdemeanor, if they actually use it in Commission of a felony, that's when this Bill would kick in. One of the letters in opposition said that we should let financial penalties deter manufacturers of these type of weapons, rather than criminal penalties deter the perpetrators.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
But I see no evidence that that would be any more deterring for the manufacturers than the criminal penalties would be. The opposition to these types of measures oftentimes, quote studies that say that penalties and enhancements do not deter crimes, but those studies are subject to their own biases. And there are studies on the other side that say the opposite. I think we're all in favor of using a health care approach to help with gun violence, but it can be a both and.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
And I don't see any health measures right now that are protecting against the use of these unserialized firearms, which are one of the crimes confronting law enforcement today. I don't want to speak out of turn. I'm not the author of the Bill, but if we're concerned about having a public health approach, maybe we can do something like a sunset date until that health care approach kicks in, because it has not yet this Bill does something. And so with that, I'll seed the rest of my time.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you. I think that's it. I'll turn it. Any other comments?
- Kimberly Stone
Person
You know what? I don't have anything else. Kim Stone, on behalf of the District Attorneys Association and enthusiastic support, as is the animal or child or whatever that was along the line, it deterred her from further speaking. Mr. Chair?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I'm sorry. That's my grandson. Any other witnesses in support,
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Mr. Chairman Members. Cory Salzillo it. On behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association, in support, Brian Sherman with the Riverside Sheriff Association and all the other POAs I previously mentioned in support. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any witnesses in opposition? You're ready. Five minutes.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Good morning, chair and Committee Members, I'm still Lesli Caldwell Houston, representing the California Public Defender's office, and I'm here to testify on their behalf in respectful opposition to AB 758. AB 758 proposes yet another sentencing enhancement to our criminal code. While we agree that eliminating ghost guns is a worthy endeavor, this Bill and those of its ilk will not solve the problem of guns, ghost guns, or otherwise diverting our limited resources to imprisoning Californians we know is not a solution.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
It is a return to the mass incarceration that we are trying to and succeeding at getting passed. We need to pivot to a public health approach now to the pandemic of guns in our state and our country. This approach would be and has been more cost effective, humane, successful in achieving our goal of reducing guns and gun violence. Adding enhancements of years in prison to crimes is not heard by the audience you seek to reach.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
I can tell you that none of the individuals that I represented in my many, many years as a public defender thought ahead of time about how much time they would get for what they were about to do. They don't think that way. People don't think that way. They think about the needs they have due to poverty or violence in their community or health, both physical and mental. When we work together to solve those issues, we can have a more just and safe community.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
The Legislature could allow individuals to sue companies that supply or manufacture ghost guns or ghost gun equipment. Serious financial penalties are more likely to slow or stop the flow of ghost guns into our state. We know this in other areas, such as cigarettes, tobacco. Also, this Bill is not needed. There are many laws already on the books that punish the possession of use of a gun in a crime.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
These penalties range from a year up to 25 years to life, depending on the seriousness of the offense. We respectfully request your no vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in opposition?
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Thank you. That's okay. Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members Carmen Nicole Cox for ACLU Cal action. ACLU Cal action is opposed to AB 758. Respectfully and in fact, we have a history of opposing policies that seek to ratchet up criminal punishment for conduct that is already a crime. We have been in every hearing of this Committee since this session of the Legislature began singing the harms of sentence enhancements and the elimination of judicial discretion.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
AB 758 seeks to do both while we respect the goals of the author and that is to improve the lives of Californians in District 72 and beyond by addressing criminal conduct. As my colleague has said, we know this Bill will not achieve its aim. AB 758 removed the tool from the Justice Toolkit with language that explicitly tells judges they cannot dismiss firearms related enhancements even when it's in the interest of justice.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
We are opposed to AB 758 because research indicates that it is the certainty of punishment, not the severity, that best serves as a deterrent. Further, the creation of these redundant crimes contributes to a relentless trend known as over criminalization. Meanwhile, we have not made our community safer or our children healthier.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Even if we are not dissuaded by the racist outcomes known to flow from over criminalization, we should care that over criminalization is expensive, so much so that even conservatives and Republicans have embraced the necessity to balance budgets by reforming the criminal justice system. This reform started in the south, in Texas, where a traditional lock them up approach gave way to a new way of thinking about how best and how economically to protect citizens from criminals.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
I'll just note quickly that from 2001 to 2004, Texas experienced a 9% increase in its prison population by seven. It had billions in prison costs and had an incarcerated population that required the building of at least four new prisons. The article, the conservative case for Criminal Justice Reform, reports that the state never built those prisons. Instead, it passed comprehensive criminal justice reform packages that focused on reentry, treatment and diversion programs. These reforms have generated impressive results.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
And, in fact, Texas has begun closing prisons, saving billions in taxpayer dollars. Unfortunately, 758 only perpetuates overcriminalization and inordinate spending on the operations of carceral facilities. I'm just going to close by saying AB 758 does the opposite of what it is we should be trying to do. And I ask for the Committee's no vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay. Any other witnesses in opposition? Seeing none. We'll bring it back to Committee Members. Any questions?
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah. I'm supporting this particular measure, Ms. Dixon, because the Legislature should send a very universal condemnation for the use of ghost. You know, there's always this great debate that comes up in this body about the effectiveness and the efficacy of punitive circumstances. But I will tell you, as a person with a degree in special education and the study of behavior modification, there's a reason why timeout works.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
There's a reason why punitive measures, if done properly, are effective. And I think that punitive measures deserve to be taught because they're not automatically thought about. And this is what your measure just tries to address and attach behavior with ghost guns, because when you clearly have violated the public trust by using a ghost gun, it's another egregious affront against society. And that's why you deserve to be support on this measure, and you do have my support.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Anyone else?
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I'd also like to make some comments. Again, thank you also for bringing this Bill up. And it's unfortunate that we're already trying to chase down guns, let alone now ghost guns. And with the opposition comparing it to tobacco, I don't think that warrants a comparison. And that your clients, they don't think that way when they're committing the crimes. Well, the victims are not also expecting them to be thinking that way also.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
And I think if there is nothing as far as a consequence, then it's not going to prevent them from continuing to victimize people. So I will definitely be supporting this. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Anyone else?
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So I want to thank the author for thinking about issues of gun safety. I'm not going to be supporting the Bill today. I don't believe that penalty enhancements sort of at this level are effective. I agree with the folks from the ACLU on that.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And importantly, if we were going to be doing things like this in this area, I'd want to see support from the major gun safety organizations on the Bill, and I don't see that here. So I won't be supporting it today. Thank you.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Well, thank you, Committee just to reiterate a couple of the points, just to understand how we can create safe communities and criminals are using these guns. There is an act of crime being committed and they intentionally are using ghost guns so they can evade law enforcement. So that's what I'm trying to get at.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
And if with this enhancement, and I agree with the public health and rehabilitation you've heard me speak about, that there's nothing more than we want is to have people rehabilitate their lives and let help us help. And I'm all in favor of that. Of course. Actually, an enhancement gives a small enhancement of two years or three years of the Commission of the crime, more time to help rehabilitate the individual. They committed a crime with an illegal weapon.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
And that's what I'm trying to get at and control the use of illegal weapons. And further, I don't want to think any of us want to see another senseless killing in our cities when we can take this step to deter the use of ghost guns used in criminal activity. I just want to do everything I can to eliminate the use illegal use of guns. And that's the purpose of this Bill. But I'm very grateful for your thoughts and comments, and I encourage an aye vote, so thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And I believe you sincerely want to do this. Actually, this is one of the items where we're in full agreement that we need to eliminate ghost guns by any means, just about any means necessary. The challenge with this, it goes back to the three strikes. Like, the more people we lock up, the better society will be. And that did not work for a lot of people in my community and in other places.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
So while I agree that we need to do more, and it's good to see someone from across the aisle want to get rid of guns, because sometimes it's not always the same. We're usually at opposite ends. So this is refreshing in a lot of ways. And maybe we can continue to talk if this doesn't get out of this, out of this Committee, about what?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The appropriate ways or getting more money for public health related type of help to make sure we can keep those ghost guns out of people's hands. And you're right, we haven't done enough. And we probably need not only do more, but get it done quicker, which where I think you're getting to.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Well, I would appreciate the Committee's reconsideration. I'd be honored. Well, first I got ahead of myself.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Yeah, you don't know what's going to happen with the vote yet. Well, we may not have enough Members. Go call the rolls.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Bill Fails, and you're asking for reconsideration?
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
I am indeed.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay. There's no objection. Unanimous consent for reconsideration.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Thank you very much.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
As the hours is noon and we all need to get to some meetings right now, we're going to adjourn. Recess. I'm sorry? Recess. Recess. I'm not going to hit the gavel. Recess until 130 across room 127, which is across the hall from this room, and.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
We now have Mr. Patterson. All right. Joe Patterson. Mr. Joe Patterson. I do have to make that distinction. I'm sorry. Asembly Member Joe Patterson. AB 890 item number 21.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
All right, well, hey, thank you very much. I did have. Good morning, Mr. Chair Members. Switch around real quick. I'm here today to present AB 890. I want to thank the Committee and the staff for working with me on this measure. AB 890 would essentially require folks granted probation for violations of laws pertaining to fentanyl to take a class developed by the Department of Public Health. It's important to know that current law already mandates education as a condition of parole for these types of crimes.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
This one just specifies what kind of education it needs to be. It really creates no additional burdens on the individual on probation. As many of you know, tackling the fentanyl crisis has been a top priority of mine. I'm sincerely trying to approach every single avenue. Yesterday, my woman of the year, honored just yesterday, was Laura Didier, who's in the audience. She lost her son to fentanyl poisoning two years ago. Since that time, she's educated over 50,000 people about the dangers of fentanyl.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
One of those people being me. I had absolutely zero idea what fentanyl was until Zach died right in my community as a result of his poisoning. My 10 and 8 year olds already know about the dangers, but it isn't just parents and kids. To my surprise, it is also people currently involved in the criminal justice system. I don't believe in coincidences, but no lie. Laura received this letter from an individual incarcerated just a few days ago.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
And I was going to read a lot of excerpts, but I know it's been a long day. But I'll say that this letter is very heartfelt about what this individual has learned from Laura's advocacy and the tragedy of losing her son to fentanyl poisoning. And is really a touching letter. And he doesn't ask for anything. He just wanted her to know how much this education is meant to him.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Because I do believe that some can be changed and helped, and perhaps the dangers and the real world consequences might help folks change their direction, saving lives and also keeping those folks out of prison. Today I welcome Placer County District Attorney Morgan Gire and my friend and also inspiration, Boomer Bennett, one of my favorite constituents to testify here in support of AB 890.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
A total of five minutes.
- Morgan Gire
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon, Mr. Chair, fellow Committee Members. Again, my name is Morgan Gire. I'm the District Attorney of Placer county. Like so many other communities across our state, we've been hit hard with the fentanyl crisis and have seen too many lives taken too early. The devastation of fentanyl, its lethality, combined with its addictive properties, and sadly, its accessibility, has been truly damaging. To meet this challenge, we've launched an aggressive outreach and education campaign across our community.
- Morgan Gire
Person
We've partnered with public health, our treatment providers, and substance use disorder experts, as well as bereaved parents who have lost children to fentanyl poisonings. We've spoken to every high school in Placer County, two assemblies a day, over 30,000 students. We've hit thousands of parents in parent teacher nights, as well as launched a campaign at our middle schools. We've posted billboards, we've wrapped buses, we've put things in inserts.
- Morgan Gire
Person
We've done everything we can to reach as many people as we can about the dangers of fentanyl, reaching those at the epicenter of this crisis, battling addiction, those who distribute in our community, those are who we need to reach. AB 890 does exactly that. It provides critical information and resources to those who have intersected with the criminal justice system. AB 890 will educate everything from its addictive properties to the effectiveness of naloxone to, as we see in the letter, the tragedies of fentanyl.
- Morgan Gire
Person
Our goal is to educate everyone we can, and this Bill enables us to do so in a way that reaches a critical segment of our community. I thank the Committee for your time and respectfully request an aye vote on AB 890. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Yes, sir.
- Boomer Bennett
Person
Thank you guys for having me. I was incarcerated for the majority of my life. My last stint, I did 12 years in California State prison because of drug usage and gang banging and all of the violent things. While being in prison, there wasn't anything like this. There was things that they made you aware, but it lacked the educational perspective. So for me, the reason I adjusted my behavior because I seen from an educational perspective what the harm I was doing to myself and the community.
- Boomer Bennett
Person
And because of that, I was able to change my perspective. There are many other individuals who are in prison. I got many friends and family Members who are in prison right now who are lacking the educational perspective of certain things, such as drugs and fentanyl.
- Boomer Bennett
Person
Specifically speaking definitely in the African American and Latino communities that are poverty stricken and have economical factors, being able for them to understand, not only do when an individual is given fentanyl to sell the only reason it's used to being sold, because of the profit that you gain from it. So when someone older than me gives it in my hand and says, hey, go sell this, this will give you what you want in regards to money and all those kind of thing.
- Boomer Bennett
Person
But it doesn't tell you that. The negative properties of it. From my perspective as an individual who used to be a gang Member and a criminal, if I knew that fentanyl would do what it does to my sister, her son, and killed her son, if I knew that that was a possibility while I'm selling this, I would have that knowledge in my head. I would be informed educationally about the harm that it does, as well as me trying to make money off of it.
- Boomer Bennett
Person
And because of that, I think individuals, from an incarcerated perspective, from a probationary perspective, I think giving them the proper education about this matter is one of the most effective things we can do in regards to letting individuals know who think selling fentanyl or any other drug, to think that that's the only way that they have, giving them the educational factor of the damage that it causes, and then giving them the ability to think of which one to choose. Like me, myself, I chose the latter. I chose to forsake that lifestyle and get on board. And that's why I'm talking to you guys here now. So thank you, guys.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Appreciate it. Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in support?
- Laura Didier
Person
My name is Laura Didier. I'm here in support representing my son Zach, killed at 17 by fentanyl and the empower and resilience project. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you, and thank you for being here.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
Cindy De Silva, on behalf of the California District Attorneys Association in support.
- Stephanie Nguyen
Legislator
Stephanie Herrera with the BTS Commission in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Anyone in opposition? I think she can sit there as long she gets the mic.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Good afternoon. My name is Lesli Caldwell Houston, and I'm here on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association in respectful opposition to parts of AB 890. My heart breaks for the families that have lost family Members because of fentanyl poisoning. My husband and I lost a very dear friend to fentanyl poisoning. He did not know what he was taking. While we completely agree that teaching individuals about fentanyl dangers, we agree with that. We do not agree with charging a fee.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
We do not agree that that's the appropriate approach. While the amendment approved removed the explicit authority to charge people a fee to take the program, the resort will be to revert to a pay to take program situation. The Bill does not require explicitly that the programs be free. This means that participant programs will impose a fee, much like other court ordered programs such as anger management courses. They may not say they're charging a fee. They'll call it a sliding scale.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
But this rarely, if ever, means no fee. A pay to participate program is problematic because clients can't pay, therefore they don't take the program. Therefore they violate probation, therefore they go back to jail. Further, there's no opt out clause allowing a court to decline to order classes if the defendant's real issue is not drugs, but rather something else, like mental health problems. Ordering a mentally ill defendant to do tangential things is a detriment. Putting too many requirements on those defendants often leads to their failure.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Their failure leads to more incarceration. In my long career, and many of you have seen decade after decade of this drug, this drug heroin, then we had methamphetamine. Now we have fentanyl. Soon we will be hearing about trank. We need to be really careful about how we put these programs together and how we get people into the programs and to successfully complete. For these reasons, we respectfully request your no vote. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in opposition?
- Glenn Backes
Person
Good afternoon. Glenn Backes for the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights. The Bill is much improved by the amendments, but until the issue of the fee is dealt with, we remain opposed unless amended. We're opposed to putting fees on defendants and their families because that's who ends up paying them for participation in probation services. We think the education is important, but until we deal with the fee, we align ourselves with the comments of CBDA. Thank you. Any other witnesses in opposition?
- Glenn Backes
Person
We'll bring it back to Committee Members for questions. Mr. Brian and Ms. Bonta, I very much want to support a Joe Patterson Bill. I see your thoughtfulness. I see the way you're growing with all of the stakeholders on these issues to try to make something happen. This particular problem with this Bill is not new to this Bill. In fact, I actually left a testifying judiciary to remove a fee required for parents to reunify with their children. If they can't pay for a program, we're barring reunification.
- Glenn Backes
Person
It's a common punishment on poverty where we impose additional conditions for you to be successful, but then prevent you from being successful because you can't afford them. If we're going to require people to take an education class on fentanyl, we should make sure that it's paid for, particularly if the inability to pay for it could result in them violating their supervision and so I very much hope that you find a way to incorporate that into the work of this Bill. But I would like to see you get out of Committee today.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I would like to see it get out of Committee today with the amendment around the fee payment, for the same reasons that the comments in opposition, or I guess, support, if amended, made. And for Mr. Bryan's proposal, would love to hear from the author why there is an insistence on requiring a fee, and that will definitely help me understand whether or not I'll be able to vote for this.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
You know, by the way, we can talk about what we do in Placer County. I think it's never really been in Placer County. We'll take care of that. But obviously, there's, I think, 57 other counties. But I am not insistent that the fee must be paid, and I think the original version of the Bill did have language to have the fee waived by a judge if needed.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
So I don't have any opposition to adding some kind of fee waiver process to this legislation, and I would definitely do that if that was the desire of the Committee.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
So you're proposing a fee waiver ability by the judge. At the discretion of the judge. The judge may be able to issue a fee waiver.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
That was the language in the Bill originally. My understanding is there are other types of fee waivers, for example, like on Duis and things like that. So if there are specific desires from the Committee in terms of extrapolating the fee waiver, I'm happy to do that. I'm not looking to not waive the fees. If the Committee wants a fee waiver, we will get a fee waiver in there 100%.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
What about the option of not having a fee at all?
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Honestly, I don't personally care. I think there are a lot of, obviously, probation programs and things like that, and there's probably systemic issue there that I think we need. Hey, I happen to sit on that Committee with you as well. That would probably look at things like that. But I do think we probably have a systemic issue in terms of how fees of probation programs in General, and I am more than willing to have that ongoing discussion.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
I don't know what the impacts would be if I just did a complete fee waiver for anybody and how that changes this particular probation versus other types of probations, does it make this one unbalanced and the other ones where they're still having to pay fees? And I think that's a broader discussion. Again, I don't really object to having a fee waiver. In it. I am concerned, however, that maybe in appropriations it gets stuck there. But I have no issue with having a fee waiver.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
I think it's important. I think if people are granted probation for possessing or selling fentanyl into communities and they can learn about it, and that saves lives, I think that governments should pay for that 100%. I think it's much cheaper to do a fee waiver, and like Boomer said, and then also this letter, to be able to learn about it and learn about the risks and the possible deaths. And if we can waive fees for that, I'm all for it, 100%.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Can we hear from the witness in opposition regarding this proposal? A fee waiver.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
My problem with a fee waiver is that there are many old school judges and even some new school that feel like you can't learn if you don't have some skin in the game and you have to pay a fee. We've worked very hard to get rid of a lot of fees and fines across the board and to come in and impose another one saying, zero, well, but the judge can waive it, that's not necessarily going to happen. I hate to have a jaundice view of what the judge will and won't do, but I do have that jaundice view, and I worry about that.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Let's just say there is a mechanism, and I think it will be very helpful, especially if you want to get it out of this Committee. There is a mechanism where if you were to agree on no fee, that could be done in appropriations. That's from a procedural, but I have a feeling you'd have to agree to that. So let Mr. Lackey speak.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah. Thank you. First of all, to Boomer. Congratulations. We're very proud of you and hope that it continues to work in your favor. I will also say that I believe that this Bill and the fee, which seems to be the focus of opposition, that you agreed to go silent on this issue. It wasn't that you said that you're insistent on a fee being existence, because essentially, it was my understanding that you had a similar provision that would identify, similar to a domestic violence circumstance where the fee may be imposed. And I have a jaundice view, too, and it's usually against victims.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
There comes a point where you have to respect judges training, expertise, and their ability to make that. But I think no matter what needs to happen, I think Zach's tragedy and the tragedy of others deserves recognition of the urgency of us doing better on this particular issue. And this is a very, very reasonable proposal. And if we have to waive fees, then let's make sure that happens, because we need to move on this, and it's clearly going to have my support. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I agree with Mr. Lackey. There's a lot of that going on right now. Did you. So I say to Mr. Patterson.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
I mean, not being a lawyer and understanding the probation system like my good friend over here, maybe he can address that some more. But I can tell you, we can get rid of the fee. It's not about the fee to me. I understand why it's important to the opponents, because obviously people would have to pay it. I don't want people paying the fee if they can't afford it. I want people to get the education.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
So whatever the mechanism is to make that happen, I'm supportive of that and also hopeful that in the Appropriations Committee, that they feel the same way.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And just so you know, you are the author of the Bill, so you have 100% control.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Well, I have control over what I do, but the Committee has control over what happens in that Committee.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Right now it feels like to get it out of this Committee. You can commit that. If it gets out of this Committee, then when you get to a probe.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Zero, 100%. I will 100% commit to that. I won't even hear the Bill if we can't come. I'll call my good friend Assembly Member Bryan over here, and he can tell me how it's done, and we'll do it. But we got to make sure Assemblymember Lackey agrees. Just to keep the synergy going on. Exactly.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Just don't mess up the karma, right?
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Mean, look, I'm not going to try to jam this Committee in appropriations. I mean, I'll never get a Bill out of this place again if I do that. So I commit to working on that.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay. Is there any more comments? Is there a second? Okay. With the provisions we have stated, chair is recommending an aye, especially when we get to appropriations. Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
We'll now do. Brian. Item number 17 AB 819.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Bryan.
- Bubba Fish
Person
So that's really why this matters, because there's still transit agencies citing with the full extent of the law. And in current California law, that law is if they evade fair three times, they can be sentenced with a misdemeanor and spend up to 90 days in jail. So not only does the punishment not fit the crime, the numbers don't add up.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Hi. Good morning. Afternoon, Mr. Chair.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Afternoon, Mr. Chair and colleagues, I'm here today to present AB 8119, a Bill that will remove the possibility of a person to receive a misdemeanor and incarceration simply for evading a fare for public transportation. Fair evasions, we know, disproportionately impact low income riders of color.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Good afternoon. Time flies. Whenever you're ready. I flew up on the plane. You could have just explained it to me yesterday. That's a good witness.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Studies in Los Angeles and in the Bay Area consistently showed that fair enforcement disproportionately targets black and brown communities, and that people of color face harsher penalties when they are stopped. Recent data in Los Angeles showed that only 8% of the population is black, but over 20% and only 19% of the metro ridership. Yet over 50% or more of all fair citations and arrests for fair evasion from 2018 to 2021 are black people today. If you evade the fair, you can be cited.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
If you evade the fair again, you can be cited again. If you evade the fair a third time, you can be cited with a $400 fine and spend up to 90 days in jail. If we put somebody in jail for 90 days, just to be clear, in Los Angeles County, we could have also just bought them a metro pass for 37 years. It's not a deterrent. It's the criminalization and the punishment of poverty.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And we can remove that threat of incarceration because if we actually ever acted on that threat, it would be significantly better for the public interest to just start buying folks metro passes, which would be my ideal goal. So what this Bill would do is remove that threat of incarceration and end the punishment of poverty for evading the fair. And your witness. And my witness is Bubba Fish. Bubba, co Director of state policy for Streets for All. Take it away, Bubba.
- Bubba Fish
Person
Thank you, Assembly Member and good afternoon, Mr. Chair and Committee Members. I am Bubba Fish. I'm the Co Director of State policy for Streets for All, a transportation Advocacy Organization, and we're proud sponsors of AB 8119 with Assembly Member Isaac Bryan and currently in California. Using transit when you can't afford fare can get you charged with a misdemeanor on par with driving under the influence or property theft, and even up to 90 days in jail.
- Bubba Fish
Person
AB 8119 will remove the possibility of criminal charges and incarceration for not paying public transportation fare. So at its core, as Assembly Member Brian just said, the criminalization of fair evasion is an equity and social justice issue. Studies in LA and across the nation in places like Washington, DC, New York City, Portland, Minneapolis and other cities have shown that fair enforcement disproportionately targets black, brown and Low income transit riders, and that people of color face much harsher penalties when they are stopped.
- Bubba Fish
Person
An analysis performed by Labor Community Strategy center shows that 50% of La Metro citations for ferry evasion are given to black transit riders, despite those black transit riders making up just 19% of overall ridership. There are agencies across the state whose enforcement policies are undefined and unclear, but several, including VTA in Santa Clara County and El Dorado Transit in El Dorado county, list their ferry evasion penalty as, quote, up to the maximum penalty allowed by law.
- Bubba Fish
Person
A transit pass costs one to $3, and the cost of incarcerating someone for 90 days could pay for 37 years, as Member Bryan just said of LA Metro monthly passes. So that's why recently, transit agencies and cities across the country, including Washington, DC, back in 2019 removed criminal penalties for ferry evasion on transit. And the Legislature first took steps in 2016 California to no longer criminalize and incarcerate minors for ferry evasion through SB 882, authored by Senator Hertzberg.
- Bubba Fish
Person
So the time is now, in our view, to expand this policy to all Californians and stop the criminalization of poverty and streets for all. Respectfully urges an aye vote on this bill. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses in support?
- Rebecca Gonzales
Person
Rebecca Gonzalez, National Association of Social Workers, California chapter, in support.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of initiate justice and Californians for Safety and Justice.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Leslie Caldwell, Houston, for the California Public Defenders Association in support.
- Joanne Shearer
Person
Joanne Shearer, on behalf of Felony Murder Elimination project, in support.
- Anna Reeves
Person
Anna Lisa Reeves, with Young Men's Freedom Center and Sister Warriors Freedom Coalition, San Jose chapter, in support.
- John Vasquez
Person
John Vasquez, on behalf of Communities for Restorative Justice in Support.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Good afternoon Glenn Bacchus for Ella Baker Center in Support.
- Jeronimo Aguilar
Person
Jeronimo Aguilar here, on behalf of Legal Services for Prisoners with Children and strong support.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah. Let me begin by congratulating the witness and admit that Bubba Fish is a lot cooler name than Tom Lackey. Thank you. Just thought I would acknowledge that. But here's the problem with this particular proposal.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Thank you. Lawrence Cox, all of us are in support. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Are there any witnesses in opposition? Any witnesses in opposition? Seeing none, bring it back to the Committee. Any questions, Mr. Lackey?
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
I believe that ridership on the metro system, wherever it is, is plummeting because there's lack of trust because of, and the loss of ridership is quite significant because of lack of trust and confidence people have because of misconduct that happens in that system. I will tell you that I just took that system last week, and it was about 11:00 and I was in fear with some of the behavior that took place right next to me. So that's not unsubstantiated.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
And I feel like, I know that your intent is clearly noble in trying to address a very significant need, but I don't think this is the right pathway. And I do acknowledge that we need to do better in the way we're handling our homeless population. I think the services that we are not offering and the support that we're not offering is the problem.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
But I don't think this pathway, because I think it enables habitual offenders, and I know that's not your intent, but I think that is the outcome, so I can't support it. I'm sorry about that. I broke our streak.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Yes, well, certainly move the Bill and appreciate that in the Bay Area, transit system is widely used. We have BART. My family has often been on BART at all hours of the evening.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
And I want to just offer an opportunity to make a distinction between the evading of the fair and jumping the booth, which, by the way, I used to probably do in New York City when I was a kid and hope the statute of limitations has run out on that and what may or may not be appropriate behavior or criminal behavior when you're in the stations and on the booth. And those two things are separate.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
A toll evader is not necessarily somebody who's then going to continue to commit other kinds of offenses. So with that, I will be voting for the bill. Would love for you to be able to speak to that issue in particular. And I'll also move the bill.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
we do not threaten you with 90 days incarceration for a parking ticket. In fact, I had very many of them at UCLA and was never threatened with being incarcerated for not being able to pay them, which I couldn't do as a student.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I'll second the Bill, but I did have a question for either the staff or the author. When folks have repeated parking violations for their automobiles, do we ever criminalize them? And with fines that are this big and potential jail time,
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Mr.Zbur
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I think, I want to thank my colleagues for the conversation. I think that's a tremendous point, Mr. Zbur. If you engage in any kind of criminal conduct on transient, it is still illegal. This doesn't stop that. This doesn't even stop you from being cited for a fair evasion, although I think we should have that very necessary conversation in the Legislature.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
That, I think, is sort of a key point on why this Bill is so important, which is that it focuses on the differences between people who have cars, who are treated in one way and people who don't have cars and rely on public transit who are treated in a different way. So I will be supporting the Bill. Thank you very much for bringing it. And I second it. Any others with that? You may close.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
All this does is say that we will not incarcerate you for 90 days and charge you in a misdemeanor because you were too poor to pay your fare, or you chose not to pay your fare because you were balancing the trade off of eating or feeding your family in addition to riding public transit, as was mentioned earlier, the idea that we would spend 90 days incarcerating somebody instead of just buying them 35 years of metro passes, which would be cheaper, it's a problem in state law, and we can fix that problem today.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. And I want to remind the Members of the Committee that we generally have law enforcement here. So before you admit to a crime that you may want to repeat,
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Law enforcement people are laughing. Okay, I hear that. The three things that why people in LA don't ride the metro, obviously because of the fear of crime. But the other two is cleanliness and reliability. And I don't know which of those two or three is the most important. But crime is not the most important. It's one of the factors. And to assume that people who don't pay the fare, are they automatically the ones that are creating the crime? We don't know that.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
We don't know that at all. So I'm glad you're bringing this forward because at the end of the day, I like your analogy that if we were to just pay for these, for people who are impoverished or in poverty, we might be able to eliminate it altogether because that's the only reason why somebody wouldn't pay it unless they're having fun just jumping, jumping over things. So with that chair is recommending an aye vote.
- Committee Secretary
Person
AB 819 by some Member. Bryan the motion is do passed to the Appropriations Committee.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
[roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[roll call]
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
[roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[roll call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Then measure passes exactly and Mr. Via Pudois. AB 701 Item number seven.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
AB 710 today, an effort to crack down on fentanyl epidemic and save lives across California. Fentanyl has been responsible for 83% of the opioids related deaths in California in recent years and has increased the opioids related deaths toll by over 40% year over year. It is 50 times stronger than heroin. But despite of all this, possession of large quantities of fentanyl with the intent to sell has been treated with more legency than other familiar controlled substance, and that is not right.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
AB 710 is a common sense measure that simply provides a level of playing field for the enforcement of a lethal substance. The Bill allows us to penalize high dealers, high level dealers. Those are people in possession of a kilogram or more in quantity. This is the same manner that we penalize dealers of heroin and similar substance. AB 710 does not target users or low level dealers.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
With me to testify today in support of this measure is Cindy De Silva with the San Joaquin County District Attorney's office and Mrs. Fleming, a mother who has experienced the tragedy of the epidemic firsthand.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
Thank you, Assembly Member.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
You both have five minutes altogether, whichever way you want to split it up.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair. About it was December 31, 2019 and I got a call late at night. It was New Year's Eve from a law enforcement officer who's a narcotics agent. I'm on the narcotics team, so it made sense that I would get the call from him, but he called to tell me that there was a young man in the hospital who had experienced a fentanyl overdose, and it did not look like he was going to make it.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
He was in the United States Navy, and because it was the holidays, he was in our county on leave, and he apparently had been a recovering heroin user and was trying to do good things with his life, but got a hold of a fentanyl pill that day on New Year's Eve and ended up in St. Joseph's Hospital. So I, along with our narcotics agent, went to the hospital to go meet this young man. He was visibly bloated.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
He had a ventilation tube down his throat, and he was hooked up to an IV full of medications. And I never did get to meet him with his eyes open, but my intention was to fight for him in court after his parents discontinued the life support, which they did a few days later. So, that was the opportunity I got to see of what an overdose looks like. I had the pleasure of speaking with Mr. Glenn Bacchus of the Ella Baker Center.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
He and I had a marvelous conversation about this bill last week. Very classy of him to discuss his concerns with me, and it's my hope that I can address some of his concerns. I'm quite certain that they'll continue to oppose the bill, but I'd like to point some things out that I know in my neck of the woods as a narcotics prosecutor. 11370.4.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
The health and safety code section we're looking at makes it an enhancement for carrying anything from a kilo, up to 80 kilos of heroin, cocaine, things like that, but does not include specifically fentanyl, And as the Assembly Member mentioned, fentanyl is 50 times stronger than heroin. A kilo, Forgetting the 80 kilos, one kilo of fentanyl pills is about 10,000 pills because of the way the users break up the pills and consume them.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
This equates to anywhere between 36,000-92,000 doses, about $10,000 wholesale, or a whopping $180,000 retail that that would cost. So we're not dealing with low level dealers or addicts. We're dealing with people that are highly connected with the cartel. Even if they're so called mules, they're highly connected. They're trusted with moving this amount of the narcotic. If we're dealing with fentanyl powder, that makes up to 1 million pills costing about $45,000 retail. And the DEA estimates about 60% of fentanyl pills carry a lethal dose.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
So for one kilo, that's potentially 6,000 deaths. I will wrap up because I want to let Ms. Fleming tell you her story. First of all, I would like to thank my Assembly Member, Carlos Villapudua, for bringing this bill to this Committee, And now I'd like to turn it over to Ms. Fleming, a friend of my office.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you, Ms Fleming. Bring the mic to us.
- Ms. Fleming
Person
Yes. Good afternoon. On the morning of Tuesday, December 14, 2021 my first love, Chad Earl Watts, was taken at the precious age of 19. Chad had a bright future. Chad was intelligent, making the principals list in high school and throughout his school years remained an honor student. He was on the wrestling team. He loved outdoors, skateboarding and riding four wheelers, playing video games and watching anime. I'm so sorry, this is my first time speaking.
- Ms. Fleming
Person
Chad had a gift for repairing things and aspired to become a police officer. Whatever Chad put his mind to, he would accomplish with greatness. He was so charming and to know him was to love him. Chad was an amazing big brother to his siblings. He was so loving and protective. Chad did not see color in a person, only the character. He had friends of all nationalities. Chad suffered from anxiety, and he was just one visit away from prescribed medications.
- Ms. Fleming
Person
But he self medicated and encountered a fentanyl lace pill, which took his life. Fentanyl has no bias on race, gender, or creed, and therefore, anyone that makes a conscious decision to distribute lace fentanyls must be held accountable for their actions. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses in support?
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Corey Salzillo, on behalf of the California. State Sheriff's Association, in support. Thank you.
- Raynon Ross
Person
Dr. Raynon Ross, Sr., on behalf of San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins, we are in very strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in support? Nowhere here. From witnesses in opposition. If you don't mind. If you just need. I don't know how many come up. Just need one more seat.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Good afternoon. Glenn Backes on behalf of Ella Baker Center for Human Rights in Opposition, we ask when discussing human lives and public dollars that we should all follow the science. The enhancements in state law for heroin, cocaine and methamphetamine did not reduce their availability. Sending a person for an additional three years to 25 years will waste a tremendous amount of money but will not reduce the availability of fentanyl. Those public dollars should be reserved for things that work, things like drug treatment, harm reduction and housing.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Extensive research has established that the United States mass incarceration binge failed to protect the public and in fact, negatively impacted community safety and public health. In 2014, the National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine published a 444 page report on the available research on long sentences, including long sentences for selling drugs.
- Glenn Backes
Person
And their recommendations, I quote, are their recommendations to policymakers was "alternative responses that rely less on incarceration and more on health measures may both reduce the social and economic costs of imprisonment and improve public health." Careful study has shown that criminalizing people who sell drugs and use drugs amplifies the risk of fatal overdose and diseases, drives people away from needed treatment, health and harm reduction services, and exacerbates racial disparities in incarceration and is injurious to the families and communities that are over policed. For these reasons, we respectfully ask for no vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Good afternoon. Chair Jones-Sawyer and Committee, Lesli Caldwell on behalf of Lesli Caldwell Houston, on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association, in respectful opposition to AB 701. AB 701 feels like the same war on drugs mentality and would cause more harm than it would prevent. We already know that relying on ever increasing penalties does not work. We know this bill would not reduce the distribution of fentanyl, nor would it prevent overdoses.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
It would not reduce the supply, nor would it reduce the demand for this drug. Worse, it would discourage the effective method of dealing with the opioid crisis. The primary risk of overdose on fentanyl results from its unknowing ingestion. The process of adding fentanyl to other drugs or making it look like other drugs is done early in the production process. Therefore, we know that lower level sellers don't often or don't even know that they're distributing fentanyl as it takes place high in the distribution chain.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
California voters have signaled again and again that their preference is for a health approach to drug offenses and their desire to unwind the war on drugs efforts such as this bill need to stop. We need to pivot to a new and better approach than the war on drugs ideas. I respectfully request your no vote.
- James Lindburg
Person
Jim Lindbergh, on behalf of the Friends Committee on Legislation of California. In respectful opposition.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses? In opposition name and organization.
- Annalisa Ruiz
Person
Annalisa Ruiz with Young Women's Freedom Center. In also respectful opposition.
- Jeronimo Aguilar
Person
Jeronimo Aguilar, on behalf of Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, in respectful opposition.
- Joanne Scheer
Person
Joanne Scheer, with Felony Murder Elimination Project. We're in opposition.
- John Vasquez
Person
John Vasquez, communities new life force or to do justice, Respectfully opposed.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox, All of Us or None. Respectful opposition.
- Lisa Moore
Person
Lisa Moore, All of Us or None, In respectful opposition.
- Henry Ortiz
Person
Henry Ortiz, All of Us or None, Respectfully opposed.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Now bring it back to Committee Members for any comments or questions. Mr. Lackey?
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah. First of all, let me just once again respectfully disagree with the characterization by the opposition. It's how we interpret science, not just the science alone. Covid-19 proved that to be very true. Poor decisions result in this kind of category, result in such severe consequences as poor witness came and shared with us the example that is unrepairable to her and to her son. Society and this Legislature needs to send a message of intolerance to this massive misconduct.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
And even the reference to these tragedies being characterized as overdoses, I think is a little misleading because I think it should be a poison. One pill should never be an overdose. That's a poison. And what we're doing here is we're trying to bring attention to those biggest abusers in our society who are actually selling this poison in massive, massive quantities. This is not low level offenders that we're trying to address here. These are the big time, the large scale abusers of the public good. Can't we send that message? I hope so. I'll be supporting you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other comments, Mr. Zbur?
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So this is a Bill that I admit I've lost a lot of sleep about because I'm not often on the other side of things with Ella Baker Center or the ACLU and some of my other friends in the criminal justice reform movement. But I do think that this Bill is different than the other bills that I've voted against. I'm not someone who believes in penalty enhancements. I really don't.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I agree with everything that you both said about that, about them not being effective for street level folks and folks that are selling drugs on the street. The difference for me in this Bill is that it's unlike the others. Where fentanyl was being attached to bills that criminalized lots of drugs and were increasing penalty enhancements is this is a penalty enhancement that's already in place for drugs that I think are less harmful than fentanyl.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And then on top of it, it's targeted to people that are really not folks that are using it on the street or selling it on the street. It's such high quantities. When you look at the fact that a kilo could result in lacing a million fentanyl pills, to me, that puts this in a very different category because it is so limited and because the harm of fentanyl is so great.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And so I look at just the kids that are out there, and these are the people that are making, in my mind, making the decisions to actually put the fentanyl out on the market and get it to dealers on the street and lace the pills with whatever they're substituting, because this stuff is cheaper or more available or whatever. So I really don't like voting for penalty enhancements.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
But in this case, I do think it's directed at the folks that I think are really doing horrible things to our kids. And I've got a group of folks in my district that the one thing I'll say in my district, the calls that I've gotten the most calls about have been calls related to issues related to fentanyl. Now saying all of that, I do believe that the appropriate approach generally should be health based.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
We should be looking at approaches where we're providing Naxalone in places where pills may be available. I think we should be requiring every club in California to have stocks of Naxalone in stock somehow. And I think there needs to be a lot more education, but this is one where I just have a hard time opposing it, given the high levels of quantities that we're talking about. So thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Anyone else? You may close.
- Carlos Villapudua
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Members. I was listening to everyone because this affects all of our communities. This is not a district Bill. This is a state Bill. This is almost a national epidemic. It is. I was in LA, and I remember turning on TV and was watching it on TV of an actor's son. I see it in the paper. I see it on the news. And you're right, this is a different war. This isn't your typical heroin cocaine.
- Carlos Villapudua
Person
This is much cheaper. It's more addictive. And you can see it out in your streets. Just drive anywhere. You can almost see it. This is so addictive that it's not meant for the user. It's not meant for the guy that's nickeling diving. It's meant for the guy. The person that is selling that kilo, that killer, he is literally killing our community. He has changed our community, not just overnight. And it's going to continue.
- Carlos Villapudua
Person
And all of you in this room have been asked, what are you doing to change this? I'm not trying to incarcerate people. I'm just trying to make sure that I didn't say the word cartel, right? But it's the folks that are in that you don't see behind the screens behind that door that is sitting there laughing at us and going, look at how much money we're making off this. And I literally hooked folks in my district, in your districts.
- Carlos Villapudua
Person
And that's all I'm trying to do, is going after that big baller that is sitting there making tens of millions of dollars. Too many families are now dealing with the unimaginable grief. They are crying out for us to do more. And I hope today that we can answer that today. And so I respectfully ask for an Aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. And I want to thank you and thank your witness for being here. I mean, it's incredibly brave to bear all in front of everybody here. And so I want to make sure that she understands we not only respect what she did coming here and how brave it was for her to be here today. I also remember the same kind of conversations with crack cocaine. Words like predators. And then we started the war on drugs because we were scared. Scared to death. I'm scared now with fentanyl, at least with crack cocaine, they had reoccurring customers. This thing I don't understand. You're selling a project that will kill your customers.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
From a business standpoint, it doesn't make any sense whatsoever. And so we do need to continue to look at ways we can do this from a public health standpoint. I think the Governor is trying to produce more Narcan out there so we can help those that make the unfortunate mistake of using that. And we need to do more. We need to do more on the education front. I don't know where we need to get to.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I'm going to lay off today because it is a hard one I firmly believe we need to get to the source and to be able to stop the source. I don't think we've gotten to how to get to the source yet and to really crack down on that. But if we look at where crack cocaine is from what it was 20-30 years ago, I think part of that is people got educated and started to learn not to use that anymore.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And I trying to get us, hopefully in a way we can get to that part where we start to stop people from using it. Especially where I think in your Bill, it has a person convicted of a violation and or conspiracy to violate with respect to a substance containing heroin, fentanyl, cocaine. So it's not just someone taken directly the narcotics. So I want to get to a point where law enforcement doesn't use this.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And I think what you're hearing as a way to go after people because of poverty, because of drug addiction, or because of other things, that this becomes something that ultimately becomes problematic for individuals. And so if it doesn't make it out of here, we need to at some point, because I'm seriously thinking of maybe even holding any other fentanyl bills until we come up with a comprehensive idea of how to handle this.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Because there's either incarcerate, incarcerate, higher penalties, penalties, then we got the public health people, but we don't have people coming together. And at some point we got to come together. And if we don't do it here, I don't know if we're going to do it anywhere. And so I'm hoping that as I start looking at the bills coming forward, that we do that, because it's just now time that we just stop being on one side or the other.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And we actually have a meeting in the minds with both sides looking at all the options to come up with a clear. So was there a motion? Second.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and Members. AB 806 would extend the list of domestic violence related crimes that can be joined and tried in one jurisdiction when the alleged crimes are committed by the same defendant and against the same victim. Current law allows for certain crimes relating to domestic violence to be combined and tried in one jurisdiction.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That builds on hold. Thanks. It's on call. It's on call now. Mr. Maienschein. AB 806, domestic violence. Okay, item number 14, whenever you're ready.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
However, the statute has not been updated since 1998 and overlooks many domestic violence crimes that commonly go along with domestic violence. Some of these crimes include criminal threats, witness dissuasion, and protective order violations. Repeated crimes of domestic violence often involve the victim of a crime rotating through the cycle of violence with their perpetrator frequently moving through different jurisdictions with their perpetrator. AB 806 would help limit the many levels of exposure and involvement with prosecution and trial. The very issue the 1998 statute was enacted to prevent this Bill would help protect repeat victims of domestic violence by including crimes not currently recognized by the statute. Here to testify in support is An Dang, Deputy District Attorney at the San Diego's County's District Attorney's office thank you.
- An Dang
Person
Good afternoon. I want to thank the chair and the Members for the opportunity to testify in support of AB 806. My name is on Dang. I'm a deputy District Attorney at the San Diego District Attorney's office. When a domestic violence abuser exerts power and control over their victim, things like distance, venue, and jurisdiction are not limitations. For the victim of domestic violence, however, jurisdictional limitations can mean retraumatization, prolonged victimization, and costly delays in both healing and holding abuser accountable.
- An Dang
Person
AB 806 allows a list of domestic violence crimes to be joined and tried in one jurisdiction when the defendant commits crimes against the same victim and the relationship between the defendant and the victim is recognized in Penal Code Section 13700.
- An Dang
Person
Current law under Penal Code section 784.7 B allows a jurisdiction to combine cases for specified offenses that occurred outside of their jurisdiction if the defendant and victim are the same, and when looking at the legislative intent behind this existing law, which this Legislature passed in 1998, it's clear that crimes of domestic violence in general are what the original author intended to protect. As this Legislature has recognized, domestic violence victims have a high propensity of being repeatedly victimized by the same offender.
- An Dang
Person
However, as written, the statute only lists one specific crime of domestic violence. That's Penal Code section 273.5 a, which requires a traumatic condition or injury, and this overlooks several crimes of domestic violence that involve no injury at all, including assaults without injury, threats of death or bodily harm, and violations of protective orders.
- An Dang
Person
Practically speaking, this means that if an abuser were to injure his victim in San Diego, county, that victim garners the wherewithal to flee to Orange County, but the abuser finds her and threatens to kill her at gunpoint if she should ever leave him again. That victim is now going to be subjected to two separate investigations, prosecutors, judges, defense attorneys, and testifying in front of her abuser in multiple jurisdictions on multiple occasions.
- An Dang
Person
AB 806 seeks to solve this issue and also conserve judicial resources, working on the minimizing the backlog of criminal cases in California. This bill does not increase punishment for defendants, nor does it create a mandate. It simply allows prosecution officers the discretion to unify prosecutions when it is both in the interests of justice to do so and that of the victim.
- An Dang
Person
By simply amending the statute to match its legislative intent, we can solve this problem and relieve victims the trauma of having to testify in multiple trials against the same offender and allow them to begin the process of healing. I respectfully urge the Members of the Committee to vote aye in support of AB 806. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses in support? Any witnesses in opposition? Seeing none, bring it back to Committee Members. Any questions or comments? Mr. Alanis.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you for your comments. And for those who don't know, I used to be a Domestic Violence and Crimes Against Children's Detective and Forensic Interviewer, and our point was to try and limit what the victim had to testify like over and over again as you were speaking to. And I thank the author for doing this.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Any other witnesses, any comments? Okay, you may close, Mr. Maienschein.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and Members. And we would respectfully request an aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Chair is recommending aye. Is there a motion? Is there a second? Madam Secretary, call the roll on AB 806 by CME Member Maienschein.
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is due. Pass. Joan Sawyer.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
You guys are using that same mechanism, basically to prevent them from having to relive that traumatic time in their life over and over again, having to retell it. So I thank you guys for doing that. I'll be supporting this Bill. Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[roll call]
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
All right, well, good afternoon. I appreciate the opportunity to present this Bill. Its number is AB 898. And I thank the Committee for working with our office, and we do accept the amendments that were offered to us. And I'm introducing AB 898, which is a bill on juvenile hall injury reporting requirements, with the sponsor of the Bill, which happens to be the state coalition of probation officers.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
As operations and responsibilities shift from DJJ, which is the division of Juvenile justice, to county operated juvenile halls and secured youth treatment facilities. Counties, most notably LA County, have struggled to keep up with standards set by the Board of State and Community corrections. In LA County, the number of assaults on juvenile hall staff in 2022 rose more than 60% compared to the previous year.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Similarly, the number of times officers encountered resistance and required to use force on youth residents spiked 50% in the first half of the year relative to the same period in 2021, and the number of times officers needed to use pepper spray during these encounters quadrupled. I introduced this legislation to put in place stronger reporting requirements for these types of incidents across the state.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
While LA County has received the vast majority of news coverage on this issue, the difficulties persist in probation departments around the entire state, especially as we move towards full transition away from DJGA operations. The bill will require all juvenile probation departments in the state to submit an annual report of all injuries to staff and residents that occurred as a result of an encounter between staff and the residents.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Additionally, it will mandate that each report of an incident includes information, including the extent of an injury, what the staffing ratio of the facility was at the time of the incident, and whether the incident occurred in a secure youth treatment facility as established by SB 92. By standardizing and expanding the report process, we will be giving BSCC a key tool that can be used to evaluate how well probation departments are able to handle this.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
That's easy for me to say, transitionary period, while also providing greater accountability for both staff and youth residents. Alberto Torico is here, and I'll let him take over the next part of this discussion.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you, Mr. Lackey. Thank you for authoring the measure. Mr. Chairman, Members of the Committee, good afternoon. Alberto Turico, on behalf of the State Coalition of Probation Organizations, just want to highlight a couple other things that have happened in the juvenile justice world in the last few years under state law. And somebody mentioned earlier the science. The probation officers don't dispute the science of brain development up to age of 25.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
What the other part of the science that is unstated is that physically, a 25 year old is a lot different than a 15 or 16 year old. They're now housed in the same facility. The other thing is that in many of the counties, a majority or more of the officers are women in the juvenile facility. So the size differential is exacerbated. Overwhelmingly, juvenile probation officers, probation officers, and more so, juvenile. Those who work with juveniles are committed to rehabilitation.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
It's getting more and more difficult to give the rehabilitation services when you are faced with assaults of staff, assaults between the juvenile offenders the job is harder. I know that the opposition is raising concerns about, I think one of the letters said that this was not a good use of public resources and we should come up with solutions. We have, in fact, proposed solutions in the past, increasing staffing, modernizing the facilities, ways to enhance rehabilitation. Those efforts have not been seen favorably here.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
We think this is the first step, gathering the information and starting to better understand what the level of assaults are, what the level of injuries are, and trying to make the facilities a safer place. Yes, I represent the Probation Officer Staff, but also a safer place for the juveniles that are in the facilities in order for them to get the rehabilitation they need and deserve. We respectfully ask for aye vote and I will thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And I also want to thank the Committee Staff for your assistance with the bill.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in support, any witnesses in opposition.
- Annalisa Ruiz
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon, Committee Members. My name is Annalisa Ruiz and I'm the policy Director at Young Women's Freedom center. For nearly 30 years, the Young Women's Freedom center has supported mentored and employed folks impacted by incarceration. As impacted individuals with not just personal experience, but professional experience support youth and facilities across the state. We oppose AB 898 first, we acknowledge and appreciate the author's effort to address safety in juvenile halls.
- Annalisa Ruiz
Person
However, not only is there already a system in place for quarterly reporting to the BSCC of assaults on staff, this bill lacks necessary measures to create the change that is needed to ensure true safety for all. AB 898 attempts to capture data on altercations between staff and youth. But what it fails to do is capture the full context needed to create solutions.
- Annalisa Ruiz
Person
By simply gathering the age of the resident, the extent of the injury, whether or not a report was filed with the DA, and whether charges are filed against the youth, and a few extra data points, it is clear this bill is one sided and only works to further criminalize and perpetuate the narrative that youth in need of the most resources are violent.
- Annalisa Ruiz
Person
What the bill doesn't request or attempt to gather is what efforts were made to deescalate, what were the conditions at the time, what programs were being provided, and more. These are all factors we know that contribute to tension among staff and youth. We can see the impact of all these factors. Most recently in media coverage in LA County, youth have reported physical and sexual assault and most recently being confined to cells for long periods of time.
- Annalisa Ruiz
Person
This not only has taken away from educational, recreational and other programming, but is scientifically proven that these conditions are detrimental to a person's mental and emotional state, especially a child or a young adult. Aside from this, we know this culture of violence and deprivation is an issue in multiple facilities across the state.
- Annalisa Ruiz
Person
We know this because we've seen multiple devastating incidents surface the internet in Los Angeles, in San Mateo County, in Santa Clara County, and more most importantly, we know this because as impacted individuals, our folks have firsthand experience that hasn't been captured in the media. We've seen firsthand the harmful dynamic between probation staff and youth. The reality of this is none of this will change until we're committed to capturing the entire picture of what is happening in juvenile facilities.
- Annalisa Ruiz
Person
The request of this bill is inadequate and simply does not do enough to inform best practices and solutions. We as a state will not see change until there's commitment to culture change, proper deescalation, training, and properly allocated resources when supporting young people I respectfully urge your no vote on AB 898.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses? In opposition?
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Leslie Caldwell Houston, for the California Public Defenders Association, in opposition.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I don't know if people are trying to get to the front. It's a little cramped in here. Name and organization.
- Jeronimo Aguilar
Person
Jeronimo Aguilar, on behalf of legal services for prisoners with children, in strong opposition. Thank you.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox. All of us are none in opposition.
- Tatiana Lewis
Person
Tatiana Lewis, as well as in strong opposition. With all of us are none.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alyssa Moore. All of us are none in opposition.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. With that, we'll bring it back to Committee. Mr. Bryan first.
- Henry Ortiz
Person
Henry Ortiz. All of us are none. opposing. Thank you.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And thank you, Mr. Chair. Prior to being a Legislator, I was a researcher, specialized in mixed methods, and at 1.0 I had a probation contract with LA County, and I went up to Camp Challenger when it was housing the children from Kilpatrick for nine months, interviewing the young people about the implementation of the LA model. It wasn't going well.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I went into the camp, I'd be there for 56 hours talking to the youth, talking with staff, collecting data, and reported that back to probation and ultimately wrote a report. I bring that up because the data we collect, how we collect, and what purpose we're collecting, it has a huge impact on its utility. You mentioned that yourself earlier. My problem with this, as it's currently structured, is there is no youth voice in it. The data is collected by probation. It's submitted by probation.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
It covers all of the things that are important to probation. I don't see, for example, if there's a youth on youth encounter, why are we not qualitatively asking or interviewing the youth why?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I can also know many instances where law enforcement agencies across the state can escalate a situation and then report out that a conflict occurred when, if you talk to the young person, they would tell you that this particular probation officer makes me eat last or always takes my bread or whatever, doesn't let me go out when everyone else goes out. Those kinds of things are not captured here because the youth are not included in any of the key data points here.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And so my bigger concern with this Bill is not just where it sits, but where it's headed. The way this data collected for probation, by probation and then reported to the BCC.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I think if we pass this out, as this is currently written, we'll be back here in less than two years with probation, citing this data to justify the use of returning pepper spray, rubber bullets, or all kinds of stuff that they'd like and I think that's not the way that we need to address the trauma for staff and young people in the facility. I do think we should collect data. I do think there is an approach here.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Chair, could I have my witness respond to that?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
But the way the bill is currently written, I don't see the youth voice. And since this is about them, for them, for their benefit, for their future, the way that that future relates to the greater public at large, I think we have to find ways to include their voice into what's reported to BSCC or alternatively, have another reporting mechanism besides the Department itself to collect this data and report it upwards. I just have some concerns.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Senator Bryan, your points are extremely well taken. We took, at the behest of the Committee consultant, several weeks ago, expanded the scope of the data collection to include the injuries for the youth. My organization represents the rank and file probation officers, so I will take exception to being characterized as probation. We are the officers. We're not the management of the facilities. So there is a major difference.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Did you want to respond? Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
The purpose of the bill is to collect information, because that information is not forthcoming today, even within individual departments. We don't know what's happening. All that being said, I think that your suggestion is extremely well taken, The author, and I have discussed here today that if your amendment is that the report includes a statement from the youth regarding the altercation where he or she explains what happened, we don't have an objection to that amendment.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I think that what would make that good for me is if that statement is also not collected by probation, that if an incident happens, that there is a party to talk to the young person to get their perspective, and to include that into whatever data is being collected.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Obviously, we can't take it today, but we're willing to take it as the Bill goes on to approach that. We don't object to that. We're happy to do that amendment and commit to that amendment today.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I would appreciate that. I don't think it makes a lot of sense for a young person who's housed in a facility overseen by civility, being asked by somebody that they could potentially have a conflict with about what happened and then that data then being used against them. I could see problems there as well, but I do think we have to incorporate their voice in a way that is as impartial as possible.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I trust the witness. A lot of respect for the witness and the process. I think something can be worked out, but I think we should work a few things out. Absolutely.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yeah, I don't see any issue with that other than potential costs, but I think we can work something out that makes sense and integrate it with existing staff that aren't probation staff, because, as you know, we have many staff inside of these facilities that aren't probation, they're Department of Children and Family Services. They could be educators. So I think that could be accommodated as well.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Ms. Bonta,
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Mr. Lackey, I fully understand the intention and the thoughtfulness that you put behind this legislation. Having now sat on the budget sub five with you, I sit next to you and experience the incredible frustration with not having the kind of transparency that we need and recognize that is really, I've been there for a short time.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
You've been there for a long time, having to not get the information that we need in order to be able to make qualified and good decisions about how our resources are used. I think with the amendments that Assembly Member Bryan is proposing, that would really provide much more of an even handed and to the opposition's testimony, much more robust and even handed purview of what is actually happening there.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I'd be in support of it and certainly trust your ability as an author to be able to make sure that that happens. And if we are able to actually get that information, I think it's going to make us all the more wiser and better off and would alleviate some of the frustration and challenges that we have in making sure that we're doing the right thing.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
You may close. I don't feel like there's much more to say, especially after Assembly Member Bonto paid the compliment. I will tell you that this is just about gathering good information so that we can make good policy afterward.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. I just want to thank you for bringing this bill and thank our colleagues also for bringing very valid points up. And it looks like we just saw something happen right here. So glad to be part of that as well. And I'll be supporting this. Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So often we are afraid to gather data because we don't trust. And this is how we build trust, is by becoming transparent and gathering good data. And so the suggestion that was brought forward is a valid one and we will definitely follow up on that, that suggestion, because we do want to be fair handed, but we also want to get good information so that we can have good policy. I think that's what follows, and I would just ask for support on this measure.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I'm sorry I cut off.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
I just want to say I missed some of the comments earlier. I'm sorry I was in higher ed, but when I read this bill I was wondering why it came to public safety, because the way I looked at it, it looks like more of a workplace safety Bill and was wondering why it was not in labor. Reason I'm supporting it is because I hear, often hear workplace injuries happening to nurses, happening to other construction workers, etc.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
And so this, to me, looked like a workplace safety issue that requires data to be able to address some of the things that are happening with the short staffing. So today I'll be supporting this bill because of that.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you. I just hope it doesn't get triple referred.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
You may, and I want to thank you. I'm just going to add a little to this, only because I've been dealing with this with LA probation, and I've been in conversations with Supervisor Mitchell and Supervisor Horvath, and I believe they're putting in motions right now for LA probation to really change the culture of La probation.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
One of the things they're looking at at BYD, division of youth diversion, that they do some of the analysis along with the CAO, county council, the Board of Supervisors, who are supposed to be the head. I think right now, the way contracts are written, the chief probation officer is the one that makes decisions and does the analysis. Well, that has not been working very well for LA.
- Chris Holden
Person
I had a bill which would have taken that given Board of Supervisors the ability to put whomever over that, especially if the culture was resistant to the new way of dealing with young people. I will be working with the Board of Supervisors to change the way we deal with probation there and the atrocities that are over there are too numerous to name. And some of the things that I've seen in videos of how young people are being treated, accusations of young women being raped.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And it's not the women guards that are doing it. The numbers are surrounding or they're here to say, well, I don't think a lot of them were fake ones. Well, just one. Just one person under their care. One woman under their care being raped is atrocious. And it's beyond. You want to see me get angry, letting that get away.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
So as you get the data, one of the things you need to understand, which has happened to my staff when they've gone out to LA County to view and to see what's going on, they were turned away from talking to the young people because they were told that by court order, they can't talk to the young people. So while you may want to do this, I don't want to find out a month from now, six months from now, probation then says, get back.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
You can't talk to these young people to find out what's actually going on from their view, because they're juveniles and underage, and we can't talk to them. And when I say we, I'm talking. My public safety staff can't talk to them, or you move them from one juvenile hall to another so people can't talk to them. I think that's what you're hearing from here. Why are we hiding that? What's going on? In a way, we're going to find out.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
You're absolutely right, Mr. Lackey, is to get that transparency. The BSCC has been trying to get information. So we need to come up with a plan that we can actually find out what's actually going on in all of the juvenile facilities. And I would say especially, we need to work with the Board of Supervisors so that they can provide what they need.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
We can't just say, build me a new facility, and everything will be okay, because those abuses can happen in a nice, clean, spanking new facility, just as they have in the dilapidated conditions they are now. So we got to get to the culture and to what's going on there. We got to get people to come to work. We got to get people to actually want to take care of these young people. And now they need more than just caretaking.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
They need mental health, trauma, informed care, education. There's a lot of other things that they need right now. I do want this to move forward. I do want this to happen. But I think it needs to be more expansive than what you have. And I think that's what the opposition is saying, because I think at the end of the day, the more information you get, the better we'll be able to make a comprehensive evaluation of what ultimately is needed.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And so I think we can make those changes. If you agree to it, we should be able to move forward with this. I think this is being recorded. Okay. Is there a motion? Is there a second?
- Committee Secretary
Person
A second call to roll on AB 898 by Sema Member Lackey. The motion is do passed to the Appropriations Committee.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
[roll call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[roll call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measure passes. Mr. McCarty, you are here. There you go. Item number 15, AB 807 McCarty, police use of force.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Whenever you're ready.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay. The last bill, right?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
No.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Well, thank you, Mr. Chair. I'm here to present a measure related to officer involved shootings and independent investigations. This is not a new topic for the Committee, and several of you on here have heard several versions of this before. This bill is based upon a simple premise that police should not police themselves. It's not that complicated with that, you get not always the good product at the end, but you get a tainting of the process if people don't trust the outcome.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
This is why this Committee and the Legislature three years ago passed my measure with bipartisan support. I will note that the then Vice Chair of the Committee spoke up on this on the floor to make sure we bring independent investigations for officer involved shootings. However, at the 11th hour, we had to attempt and focus on a compromise, which usually happens, that we only focused on officer involved shootings of an unarmed civilian. So what does that mean?
- Kevin McCarty
Person
That roughly half of the fatalities in the hands of law enforcement aren't covered by this. So think of the death of George Floyd. It wasn't an officer involved shooting. However, there was fatality, of course. Think of instances where there's debate as far as what is armed. I've heard from DAs across the state after this bill was implemented that focus on somebody had a firearm. What if they had a machete? What if they had gardening shears walking back from work?
- Kevin McCarty
Person
And so there's a lot of debate and ambiguity. So, following up on the bill from three years ago, the idea was we wanted to give the Attorney General some time to implement this out of the gate and then follow up to make sure we cover all fatalities at the hands of law enforcement. This is about bringing back public trust in the process. This is not a novel idea. At the time, there were five other states who had implemented this before California.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
I think two or three more have done so after that summer of 2020 and the idea of independent police reform. And with that, I ask this Committee to further this work, to make sure that we cover all officer involved deaths at the hands of law enforcement. And with me today are ACLU and the Public Defenders Association, and respectfully ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Five minutes.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Good afternoon. Leslie Caldwell Houston for the California Public Defenders Association in support of Assembly Bill 807. I was the chief defender of Solano County, a midsize county, for 10 years. In that time period, the Vallejo Police Department, an agency in my county, was responsible for 19 citizen deaths, most of them by gunfire. While it was claimed they were investigated by the Department along with the local District Attorney, every single death was found to be justified.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
It was later discovered that many witnesses were not interviewed and investigations were not complete. By the time unarmed Sean Monterrosa was shot to death by the Vallejo police in 2020, the public was so enraged at the situation that the District Attorney recused herself, and yet at that time, the Attorney General refused to investigate the death by police gunfire. Shortly thereafter, the law changed to allow the AG to investigate deaths at the hands of the police, but not in all instances.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
The district attorneys and police of their jurisdiction work hand in hand, necessarily raising questions, however, about the impartiality of investigations of themselves. This relationship causes many issues of bias and conflict of interest. While the vast majority of law enforcement officers conduct themselves ethically and professionally, sometimes things happen that should not. We have seen far too many unarmed or armed mentally ill or individuals, or surrendering citizens killed by officers who are sworn and trained to protect our communities.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
It's critical that we close the gap in the law and require the Attorney General to investigate all law enforcement involved civilian field deaths as we desperately need the accountability, the transparency and the oversight of our law enforcement in California and nationally. We respectfully urge your yes vote. Thank you.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Thank you. Carmen Nicole Cox. Good afternoon to each of you. On behalf of ACLU California Action, I'm speaking in strong support of AB 807 and want to thank Assemblymember McCarty for bringing this forward.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Of course, while not perfect and in need of additional resources, the DOJ's review of fatalities resulting from police conduct has been more efficient and transparent than some of the largest agencies in the state. The DOJ's mandate to conduct independent investigations of fatal officer involved shootings became effective July 1, 2021. The very next month, Guadalupe Police Department shot and killed an innocent bystander, Juan Luis Olvera-Preciado. It was a terrible, terrible tragedy. The DOJ completed that investigation in approximately 16 months.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
By comparison, in January of this year, the San Bernardino County DA's office completed its review of an officer involved shooting that occurred in December 18, 2020, a full two years later, and a December 2019 fatal shooting that wasn't complete until December 2022, 3 years later. Neither report offered recommendations for improving officer conduct, and both took longer than the AG's office has taken to complete just two investigations.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Now, while we'd like to see DOJ investigations completed sooner, surely we can't argue that these investigations are taking so long that they should remain limited. That argument proves too much. What AB 807 seeks to do is to add greater transparency and accountability, the kind that we expected to get after SB 1421 in 2019. Yet a review of, for example, the Bakersfield PD's 1421 web page says, "We apologize for the delay. We're working to organize and present this information to the public as quickly as possible."
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
The Riverside County sheriff does not even post 1421 records until and unless a request is made. So apparently no request has ever been made for incidents in which the use of force resulted in a death or in great bodily injury because there is none on their page. AB 807 should be enacted because law enforcement agencies appear to be resistant to provide the transparency needed for the community to develop trust and hold them accountable.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
To be sure, CHP does not report on its website the number of officer involved fatalities. This morning. I spent 15 minutes searching the website and the best I found was a link that was supposed to be to their RIPA data. That link required me to log in as a CHP employee to gain access.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
I am going to just skip to the end here because I know my time is up, sir, and say AB 807 helps shine a light on fatal police conduct that we cannot expect them to turn on themselves. And for that, we urge your aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any others in support? Name and organization.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel on behalf of Initiate Justice and Californians for Safety and Justice.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Rebecca Gonzales
Person
Rebecca Gonzales, National Association of Social Workers California Chapter, in support.
- James Lindburg
Person
Jim Lindburg, on behalf of the Friends Committee on Legislation of California, in support.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox, All of Us or None, support.
- Tatiana Lewis
Person
Tatiana Lewis with Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, in strong support. Thank you.
- John Vasquez
Person
John Vasquez on behalf of Community United for Restorative Justice, support.
- Joanne Scheer
Person
Joanne Scheer, Felony Murder Elimination Project, in full support.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alissa Moore, All of Us Or None, in full support.
- Henry Ortiz
Person
Henry Ortiz, All of Us Or None Sacramento Chapter, strong support.
- Mary Rossetto
Person
Mary Lou Rossetto, Moms Demand Action volunteer and former police officer, in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any witnesses in opposition?
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and Members. Cory Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association, opposed to AB 87. As the author stated, during the discussions on AB 1506, a broader mandate similar to what's contained in this bill was considered but ultimately rejected. The enacted version of that bill was limited to officer involved shootings resulting in the death of an unarmed civilian.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Since the operative date of AB 1506, DOJ has dispensed with only two of the qualifying cases that it is accepted, and there are 34 pending cases. It's worth noting that neither of these two cases that have been resolved were found to justify criminal charges against the involved officers. The question of what's a weapon or what's armed, DOJ has produced guidelines of its own as to what armed means. And it's not just firearms.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
The note about comparing the length of time that it's taken to resolve these cases versus other officer involved cases are not apples to apples, necessarily. Without knowing the details of the case and why potentially one was more complicated than another, or noting that the fact that the case may have also been simultaneously investigated by a local law enforcement agency.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Given the time it takes for DOJ to complete these cases, the other challenges associated with AB 1506 investigations, and specifically what I mean by that, is that this was not a function that DOJ really had prior to AB 1506. They had to stand up an entire unit, hire investigators that have experience in homicide investigations, just not a task that DOJ was doing prior to AB 1506. And so that process has been challenging.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
I think they've done a fairly good job in getting those cases in front of people and trying to respond timely. But the reality is they have four teams that are available to respond statewide, so it can be challenging. There is not always an immediate response. It creates challenges with protecting a crime scene or with a scene of where somebody has been shot. DOJ does not have the resources to adequately implement AB 1506.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
As it stands, this bill contains no funding to fund DOJ to take on this massive expansion of the authority. This new mandate would slow down pending investigations, which respectfully already take too long, and subjects officers to more uncertainty as it relates to their actions. For those reasons, respectfully, we're opposed to the bill. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in opposition? Seeing none, we'll bring it back to Committee. Yes, Mr. Bryan?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I think this is a good bill. I'm sorry that the compromise was made the first time I brought the family of Keenan Anderson up here to chambers to adjourn in his memory. Just earlier this year, he was tased six times by the LAPD in under 40 seconds and then went into cardiac arrest and died. That's one of those incidents that wouldn't be covered under existing law. It would be under this. And so I see why you're doing this. It makes a lot of sense to me.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I think the DOJ not having capacity could be an issue, but I don't think that's the issue for this Committee necessarily to decide. I think you're going to have to navigate that through the process. But it's a great bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Mr. Alanis.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Alright. 100% transparency. Great. I'm totally for that. But the same concerns that were brought up. Is the DOJ aware of this bill? Are they sponsoring or any part of it.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yeah, they are well aware of the bill. Been working extensively with Mr. Bonta implementing this. He took office right when this was in effect, and he was a joint author of my bill and then, ironically, became AG six months later. So he helped write it and now he's implementing it. I will take a little offense. This bill was not rejected in this version, as the witness over here is indicating.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
It was my bill, and I amended it to basically streamline the elements of it with a negotiation with the Governor, because the Governor said, hey, this is a new task in California. It soared through Legislature with the entire piece of it. But let's see how the Attorney General can do this for a couple years. And so now we are almost two years in. So if this bill went into effect, if the pass was signed by the Governor, would go into effect next January.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
So it'd be two and a half years and maybe I have another year implementation. We haven't decided on that as far as when this would kick in. But the notion was this is a new set of work for the Attorney General and his team. Let's give it a couple of years, let's see how much it costs, and we'll go from there. There have been just two, basically, conclusions from the Attorney General, and I'd like to see them come out soon.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
I'm told that a lot are coming, but I'd rather be right than fast. And he could push them out really fast and not get it right. And the notion here is we want to have more transparent and fair outcomes. It's not about locking up an officer. It's about if an officer does cross the line, that officer, he or she needs to be held accountable. Like you would agree as a law enforcement officer, you cross the line, you'd be held up accountable.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
But it's also who's making those decisions and are they fair? And too often, the coziness between local prosecutors and local police departments, everything comes in a doubt. So this gives us the opportunity to implement the current law and work with the Attorney General to basically expand the scope as we had initially drafted the bill in 2020.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
And in the bill-- And I apologize. I haven't read all the details of your bill, but I know with DOJ right now, investigating what they're doing now, I know they're relying a lot on the agencies themselves just because they're so spread across the state as was brought up. Is there something in your bill also that maybe addressed that also to allow that?
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Because unfortunately, sometimes our crime scenes are places where people need to get open to, but we need to freeze them for evidence reasons and make sure that the investigation is 100% taken care of so the timely manner that was brought up. I fear also that maybe if the DOJ doesn't have the resources to properly address the crime scene, is there maybe some kind of language in your bill on that that maybe addressed that for the time being?
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yeah. There will be a financial piece with this. We are negotiating with the AG's office, Department of Finance, talking to the Governor's people. As we move along, we realize that it will cost more to essentially double the work. So this is a pilot for two years. And so last year's budget, we did give them more resources to focus on some equipment needs, and they feel that they're now launching this and knowing what it takes.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
And so the good news is I didn't just come back a year later. I wanted to wait a couple years until see how this plays out. But right now, irony though, is some fatalities across California, there's confusion-- is somebody died, an officer involved. There's really like a checklist. Is this 1506 eligible? So you don't know right away if the person is armed or unarmed. Sometimes it takes several hours. There's a determination.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
So by having all fatalities with a law enforcement officer involved, it'll actually be easier because the Attorney General's Office will be immediately engaged in the case as opposed to having to wait for the determination if it's 1506 eligible.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Ms. Bonta?
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I just want to thank Mr. McCarty for bringing forward this bill on behalf of my community, one of the cities that I represent, and Mario Gonzalez, who died on April 19, 2021 because of a police involved. It was a police involved death. He did not have the ability or recourse, nor did his family to be able to avail themselves of the AB 1506 provisions.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
And quite frankly, there's also an issue or concern with the capacity of the cities to really be able to make the kind of investigation that justice would allow. So I really want to thank you for bringing forth this bill, for broadening it out. And I do think that there are capacity issues to consider from the perspective of cities that just, quite frankly, don't have the resources to make sure that justice is served. So thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any others? You may close.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
I appreciate the discussion and thank you for your consideration. Ask for your aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Is there a motion? Chair recommending an aye. Call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 807 by Assemblymember McCarty. The motion is due passed to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measure's on call. Needs one more. Since Mr. Santiago isn't here. Mr. Santiago says he's going to the restroom, but he'll be right back. I don't know how long that'll take. Everybody knows you went to the restroom. The world knows. People admitting the crimes. Admitting to going to the restroom. True confession today. Item number 25, AB 958.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Mr. Chair. I must confess, I had to go to the restroom on the second floor because the first floor restroom.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
TMI.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Well, you started it. Had a field trip. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Whenever you're ready.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair. First, I want to thank the Chair and the Committee staff for helping us to improve this bill and thank you for the witnesses who have waited for some period of time today. Appreciate it.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
This bill is a simple and very necessary bill that would strengthen the rights of family members and incarcerated people by restoring visiting rights and establishment, a three day minimum. You might recall that last year the Governor did include in there the additional dollars to do a third day of visiting. And the Committee entertained and helped us to pass a bill that wanted to do this same work.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And instead we were able to put some portion of that in the budget. But this year we're coming back because we want to formally codify that there's three days, as well as making sure that visiting rights, the visiting is a right to folks who are incarcerated and also communities. And we all know the reasons why. Right?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Because this is very important not only for the mental health and the rehabilitation process for those who are incarcerated, but because it also helps family members and those who are visiting.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And oftentimes when we think about this, you think about one person who is incarcerated. And while I believe that this is very important, I think it's also important to understand that there are people on the outside that are family members.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
There are people who are very connected where this also helps and link that person to some sort of dignity, that they could visit their father, they could visit a family member, they could visit a husband, they could visit an uncle.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
This would only impact state institutions and those who are serving felony charges at the county level because realignment sent some folks who otherwise would have been in state to a local county. So it's very limited in scope, very necessary, and also funded.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So we took care of that last year when people said it wasn't funded. Having said that, I want to now hand it over to two of our witnesses. I'll let them introduce themselves in the interest of time. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Joanne Shearer
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee. I'm Joanne Shearer, founder of Felony Murder Elimination Project and proud sponsor, co-sponsor of Assembly Bill 958. 16 years ago, my only child, Anthony, was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole under the felony murder special circumstances law.
- Joanne Shearer
Person
He was 20 years old and never been and never been in trouble. I was 52, his father, 67 at the time. We have spent every weekend of the last 16 years visiting our son in prison.
- Joanne Shearer
Person
We've traveled thousands of miles and spent tens of thousands of dollars to keep our family together and encourage through the devastation that is prison. Our commitment to maintaining a strong family bond has been met by callousness and disregard by CDCR.
- Joanne Shearer
Person
We have found that our precious visits can be taken away for nonsensical and petty reasons. Our visits have been terminated for infractions such as saying hello to a vending machine vendor as they passed by our table conversation welcomed at my son's previous facility.
- Joanne Shearer
Person
Our visits have been terminated for infractions such as my accepting a ride to the visiting lobby when offered one by prison staff during a rainstorm. Seven years ago, during a visit with my son, his cellmate bought and was using drugs in their cell.
- Joanne Shearer
Person
Though my son had no knowledge of his cellmate's actions, he was charged and disciplined for that behavior because of the unwritten CDCR rule that holds both cellmates guilty for anything in the cell.
- Joanne Shearer
Person
The discipline he received and we as a family, received for his cellmate's infraction was one year with no visits, followed by two years of behind glass visits. That's three years total. The horror of this separation would have decimated a child unable to hug her father for three years.
- Joanne Shearer
Person
Prison is supposed to be the punishment for a crime, not the decimation of families. CDCR should not have the right to withhold family visits, unless, of course, a visiting infraction occurred in a visiting room.
- Joanne Shearer
Person
I did not give up my right to my son when he became incarcerated. This civil right to visit must be firmly reestablished. For the sake of families, please vote yes on AB 958. Thank you very much for your time.
- John Vasquez
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members of the Committee. My name is John Vasquez. I'm the policy manager for Courage and a proud co-sponsor of AB 958. When I was 16 years old, I was transferred to adult court and sentenced to 31 years to life.
- John Vasquez
Person
A prison guard once told me, hey, youngster, do yourself a favor and hang yourself. You're never getting out of here. Many times I felt hopeless and depressed. The only thing that kept me going were visits from my family.
- John Vasquez
Person
Hugging my loved ones made all the difference, and it motivated me to work on myself. I received visits four days a week until the right to visit was repealed and visiting opportunities were cut in half. This created many hardships for me and my family because we weren't able to stay connected in a meaningful way. The repeal also led to many unnecessary barriers.
- John Vasquez
Person
For example, my mother, who was already visiting me, had to renew her application and she forgot to list an arrest from about over a decade prior, and because of that it took a whole year. She was denied her application after she's already visiting me, and it took a whole year of her writing the warden to be able to see me again. AB 958 will eliminate these types of barriers and keep families together. Even CDCR admits to the value of visitation.
- John Vasquez
Person
Quoting CDCR's 2020 budget proposal to this Legislature, and I quote, high quality visiting programs for inmates have been proven to reduce prison violence, maintain family bonds, break the intergenerational cycle of incarceration, and smooth the reentry process, thereby reducing recidivism rates.
- John Vasquez
Person
End of quote. I couldn't have said it better myself. For these reasons, I respectfully request your I vote. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in support? Name and organization.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of Initiate Justice, Transformative In-Prison Workgroup, Grip Training Institute, Californians for Safety and Justice, Anti Recidivism Coalition and in my personal capacity as somebody directly impacted by this issue.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Leslie Caldwell Houston for the California Public Defenders Association in support.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Carmen Nicole Cox, ACLU California Action in support.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Glenn Bacchus, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights in support.
- Ivana Gonzalez
Person
Ivana Gonzalez with Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, the Coalition for Family Unity and some of the organizations with the coalition are Mary Mack Transition Homes, Pillars of the Community, Place 4 Grace, Prisoner from the Inside Out, Starting Over Inc. And Sister Warriors Freedom Coalition, all in support.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox with Legal Services Prisoners with Children and also A New Way of Life, All of Us or None, Alliance of boys and Men of Color, Anti-Recidivism Coalition, California's Family Against Solitary Confinement, California Impacted Families Project, all in support.
- Tatiana Lewis
Person
Tatiana Lewis with Legal Services for Prisoners with Children as well as All of Us or None in strong support.
- Natasha Minsker
Person
Natasha Minsker Smart Justice California and the Prosecutors Alliance of California in support.
- James Lindburg
Person
Jim Lindbergh, on behalf of the Friends Committee on Legislation of California in strong support.
- Henry Ortiz
Person
Henry Ortiz with Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, All of Us or None, Sacramento Chapter and Community Healers in strong support. Thank you.
- Melissa Moore
Person
Melissa Moore All of Us or None in strong support. Also with Communities United for Restorative Youth Justice, Courage, Community Works, Drop LWOP, East Bay Family Defenders, Family United to End LWOP, Felony Murder Elimination project, Homies Unidos and of course, Legal Services for Prisoners with Children.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Mr. Chairman and Members Corey Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association, in opposition to the bill. I don't think anybody disputes the benefits of visitation. Sheriffs certainly understand the benefits of visitation for not only incarcerated persons, but those who visit them.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
But this bill goes too far in mandating visitation, the expense of several other considerations. So it's not that we don't want there to be visits, we don't think there shouldn't be visits. There's more than that to this bill.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
By limiting the ability to suspend visitation to issues related to a compelling security interest, jail authorities would be prohibited from conditioning visitation in terms of visitation on behavior and discipline considerations.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
This would also preclude the suspension of visitation of the type that was adopted by prisons in most jails, because of the pandemic. It necessitated limiting access to and movement within correctional facilities for medical safety of inmates and staff.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Future pandemics, natural disasters, even logistical realities like a broken HVAC system, the visitation room is too hot or too cold to go into. That's not a reason to suspend visitation even for a day under this bill.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
It's just so rigorous in how it reads. And the challenge is that by codifying visitation as a right, we're going to get sued every single time a visit is denied. It's just the reality of it.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
I'm being a little hyperbolic there, but we will be sued for suspended or disallowed visitation if it doesn't fall under this bill. Because this bill says it's a right to receive visitation, it will invite costly litigation. This concern was highlighted in the Governor's veto message, and we aren't sure what's different. So for those reasons, we're respectfully opposed. Thank you.
- Matthew Easley
Person
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and Committee Members. Matt Easley, representing the California Correctional Peace Officers Association. First of all, I'd like to say that CCPOA definitely recognizes the importance of visitation and the development of family bonds, and also want to clarify, too, that we are not the Department.
- Matthew Easley
Person
So with that said, we don't disagree with many of the arguments put forth by the support, and many of the examples they offered were certainly sympathetic.
- Matthew Easley
Person
And I think we would be completely okay if not even supportive of addressing some of those petty reasons for visitation restrictions. There's certainly a lot of room there. Nobody should be denied visitation because they said hello to a vendor, and we'd be happy to participate in fixing some of those problems.
- Matthew Easley
Person
With that said, this bill goes far beyond that and way beyond the examples given in the support testimony, this bill says that under no circumstances can you use someone's criminal history to restrict that visit. And that could be ongoing criminal activity of someone in the same gang as the person they're visiting, using that visit as an easy access into the prison to conduct gang business and easily exchange messages back and forth.
- Matthew Easley
Person
It's an easy avenue to introduce contraband in prisons, whether or not that's directly handled in the visitation room. Getting them the guaranteed access inside is a way to drop contraband in order for other participants in the smuggling operation to allow things to get inside. So the expansiveness of this bill is what is most problematic to us.
- Matthew Easley
Person
But again, I just want to clarify that we don't have any particular issues with addressing a lot of the examples brought forth by the really tragic examples, honestly, that our support witnesses went through.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you, sir. Are there any other witnesses in opposition?
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair, Members Ryan Sherman with Riverside Sheriff's Association and the Deputy Sheriff's Association of Monterey County and Placer County in opposition. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. We'll now bring it back to Committee Members for any comments or questions. Ms. Bonta, thank you.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Well, first, I'm happy to be a joint author on this bill and appreciate, Mr. Santiago, for bringing it forward. I wanted to clarify that on page four of the analysis, you'll see that item number 21, this permits in person visitation if impossible, due to a public health emergency, the in person visiting hours to be replaced by an equal number of video calling hours in addition to the regular video calling hours.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
So I don't think that the scenario that you presented in terms of public health emergency isn't actually contemplated in this legislation. I also just want to just reiterate again, we had the CDCR actually tell us very directly in our budget submeeting that rehabilitation includes family connection and family visitation.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
So when we are limiting an individual's freedom of movement, including the person who is visiting, we are touching on and infringing on that person's civil rights.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
So I have no qualms about making sure that this is a civil right that's protected both for the person who is inside the prison and for those who are trying to visit. And it just does what we should do, which is offers basic human dignity of the ability to stay connected with family members. So with that, I'm thankful for the bill and for your bringing this forward.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Any others? Mr. Bryan?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Yeah, no, I'm one of those Committee Members who is also a co-author and also has a loved one who they visited in prison before Christmas Eve actually. It's been many times, on many occasions where it's been healing for me. It's been healing for them, for me to be there to make special days special even inside, it's been powerful to the rehabilitation process.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
One of the concerns that, well, one I take just like great offense with the idea that we would criminalize someone's entire family and intimate partners to suggest that they would bring contraband. They would do all of those things.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
But even if you are suggesting that just by being related to somebody and coming to visit them, that you are more likely to bring them contraband, it literally says, provides that a visitor or incarcerated person may have their visits denied or restricted based only on the following conduct during a visit.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Conduct one, bringing contraband into the visiting area. That is in the bill. It's a thoughtful bill, it's a humanity bill, and happy to support it today.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other. Okay, you may close.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
Thank you. And I want to thank my colleagues for their comments. I won't repeat those comments because that's part of what I was going to answer. But maybe I want to talk about the litigation piece because we felt that the language was strong, and I always encourage folks.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
Okay, then tell me, what is a stronger language to prevent litigation? Because this is not a bill that wants to encourage litigation. But is there something there if there's a natural disaster?
- Miguel Santiago
Person
Because for those who are following this, the theory is that if we say that it's a civil right, then if we try to take this civil right away, there could be litigation. But certainly there may be a public health care crisis.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
I know it's stated in the bill, but what is the language that holds harmless then when there is a bona fide emergency, if there's an earthquake and the place breaks down and you can't have a visiting, what is that language that does that if there's a health care crisis that we hope never happens again, if there's a flood?
- Miguel Santiago
Person
I recognize, and I think the sponsors and coalition would recognize, that there are bona fide places where there may be a physical obstacle to visiting.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
But I think it's very important to understand that if you make it a civil right, then you just can't take it away anytime anybody wants. Now, it's been brought up also over the last couple of years that there's no other sort of method for discipline, but clearly there is. I'm going to save what my colleague said a second ago, or maybe repeat it, that visiting rights can be removed if there is something that has happened during that visiting period where this individual cannot be trusted, for lack of better word, during visiting.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
So if I am visiting you or you visiting me and something happens within this particular time and space, we're not arguing that, okay, you may have done something during this period of time and therefore can't visit, have visitation rights or visit, okay, that's different. But you still have other disciplinary actions that could be taken. I'm going to list a few, read them.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
You can get good time taken out. You can have administrative segregation. I'm not saying I agree with any of these things, but they are there in the books that could be used. There's denial of quarterly packages. There's write ups.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
There's a number of other sort of disciplinary actions that can be taken if a person is doing something not supposed to be doing outside of visiting rights. And the other thing, too, is that let's say that we agree that.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
I don't agree, but let's just say that we believe that most people who are visiting are handing something over a contraband. Let's just say for a second, I don't agree with it, but let's say with it, there are still, we still don't state about how to limit that sort of visitation. So if there is somebody who is prone to doing that, you could still do it through a glass. You could do it through a number of different ways. We're not touching those pieces of it.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
There's still some sort of discretionary action taken to prevent those kind of things if they do happen. All we're saying is that if you make it a civil right, you start off with the understanding that somebody has the ability to do this, has the right and it cannot be taken away just unilaterally. And I think it's incredibly important. I just can't state enough. And we want to codify that it's three days, and here's why.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
Because the money is there, too, but we need to codify it because if it's three days, that means that one of those days is going to have to land on the weekend. And this is a game changer for people who are going to visit. If you work Monday through Friday, and currently the only days are Monday through Friday to visit, you're going to have a hard time visiting a loved one or getting visits.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
And if you do it three days, which the money is already there, it's just not codified. So we want to codify it. One of those days will happen to be on the weekend, so people won't have to miss a day of work to go visit a loved.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
I could speak about this for a significant period of time because I feel so passionately about it. But when this bill was introduced to us by a former Member of this house who's now the AG, when we looked at it, we realized that there's some serious merits to having somebody be visited and having the ability to visit.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
And these are just modest steps. So I would argue there's already disciplinary actions that could be taken outside of the bill, outside of the visitation. Anyway, I can go on forever. I don't want to repeat myself. Mr. Chair, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Chair is recommended aye vote. Is there a motion?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Second.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 958 by Assemblymember Santiago. The motion is do passed to the Appropriations Committee.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measure passes.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
We're now going to go to Item 23, AB 912. Mr. Chair, you have it?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair, members. I would like to first, start by thanking my committee staff for their diligent work, and I will be accepting my committee amendments. Members, I present AB 912 Strategic Antiviolence Funding Efforts Act or SAFE Act. The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation announced a closure and deactivation of two prisons, which the LAO estimates the total of $235.3 million in annual savings.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The reduction in the prison population are not by accident, but are instead the direct result of sensible legislation and budget items achieved to improve public safety and advance justice and equity. Rather than returning to the general fund, it is imperative that these savings are kept within the legislature's crime prevention budget and reinvested into effective, strategic, proven strategies to further reduce crime and violence. As such, the SAFE Act calls for reallocating $235 million in annual savings to five programs.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
$50 million annually will go to the youth reinvestment grant program. $35 million annually will go to programs that reduce gang violence and gang involvement modeled after the ceasefire in Oakland. $50 million annually will provide operational grants to school-based health centers to provide physical and mental health services to children. $50 million annually would expand the cognitive behavioral intervention for trauma in schools to the counties with the highest violent crime rate.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And then finally, $50 million annually would create new parks and fund recreational health based opportunities during peak times of violence. The SAFE Act is a comprehensive measure that will fund effective strategies to prevent violence from occurring in the first place divert youth and people from entering the system and divert people from recidivating.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
With me to speak in support of this bill is Darya Larizadeh, pretty close, senior policy attorney, Youth Justice Initiative with the National Center for Youth Law, and Lesli Caldwell-Houston with the California Public Defenders Associate. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Darya Larizadeh
Person
Good afternoon, Chairman and Members of the Committee. My name is Darya Larizadeh and I'm a senior policy attorney at the National Center for Youth Law on our youth justice team. Thank you for the opportunity to speak on behalf of the youth reinvestment grant program.
- Darya Larizadeh
Person
In recent years, the legislature has demonstrated its understanding that a public health approach, which provides access to services outside of the juvenile justice system, is the most appropriate and cost-effective way to improve youth outcomes and public safety. As seen through the legislature's support of the 2018 and 2019 Youth Reinvestment Grant and Tribal Youth Diversion grant programs, which have yielded amazing results.
- Darya Larizadeh
Person
At this time, when low income youth of color have endured and continue to experience unprecedented levels of mental health distress due to the many challenges caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, community-based youth health and development programs are needed more than ever. The legislature's previous investment in the youth reinvestment grant programs have positively impacted the lives of over 11,500 youth. The BSCC data for the 2018 cohort shows that over 70 percent of the youth served are Black, Latine, or Native youth.
- Darya Larizadeh
Person
Of those youth who were evaluated, over half were assessed as moderate to high risk. These are populations of youth that have historically been funneled into the juvenile justice system. Instead, youth participated in comprehensive programs, including education support, mental health, substance abuse treatment, mentoring and prosocial activities in their communities. Of the youth that exited the diversion programs, 70 percent were evaluated as successfully completing their programs.
- Darya Larizadeh
Person
Similarly, when looking at recidivism, over two-thirds of the youth who completed their programs had no further contact with law enforcement throughout the grant reporting period, which is a three-year period. This is the inverse of what we see for juvenile justice system outcomes in many counties across the state. This works. Over half of the youth who have entered the diversion programs are still enrolled in programming today. They have found a sense of community, belonging and stable support.
- Darya Larizadeh
Person
A $50 million annual allocation to the youth reinvestment grant to support programs and services through community-based organizations and tribal governments as alternatives to system involvement would help to continue to reverse the harmful and costly trend of relying on the juvenile justice system to meet youth's health and development needs. As such, we believe the state investment in community-based aversion programs is both socially and fiscally responsible. I urge your aye vote. Thank you.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Good afternoon, committee members. I'm Lesli Caldwell-Houston, and I'm proud to provide support testimony for AB 912 on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association. I'm going to get into a little bit of history right now because I think it's important to keep in mind. Oh, thank you.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
In my nearly 40 years of working in indigent defense, I have seen the hard swings from extremely harsh punishments to an era where we clearly see the wrongs of the War on Drugs and the rush to send our citizens to prison for decades at a time. At the beginning of the three strikes era, I watched my young client, 22 years old, sentenced to 27 years to life in prison for stealing $8.61 in change.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
He was recently provided a lawyer to assist him in securing a resentencing due to the law changes, and that is thanks to a three year grant given to public defenders across the state. Now, unfortunately in doubt, that was just the start of a very sad and dark time in my career in our communities. Years before three strikes, I was watching my clients coming into the system more and more mentally and physically ill.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
And yet prison sentences became longer and longer and there were no health services available. The moves to draconian punishment are known to have failed us all, and particularly black and brown people, through mass incarceration. Now, thanks to the many new laws reforming criminal justice, we have significantly reduced the population in our state prisons and we are beginning to close prisons.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
These closures are saving millions, hundreds of millions of dollars, and these dollars must be redirected into the Legislature's crime prevention budget and reinvested into the strategies we know to reduce crime and violence. AB 912 recognizes the need for a new vision of youth justice, crime prevention that must focus our precious resources on mental health, education and physical needs of our young people and their families as a primary force in ensuring healthy youth, healthy communities and public safety.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
AB 912 wisely places qdministration of the Youth Justice Reinvestment Grant under an Office of Youth and Community Restoration, OICR, housed in the California Health and Human Services Agency, which is where it should be. The mission of the OCYR would be to promote a youth continuum of services that are trauma-responsive and culturally informed, using public health approaches that support positive youth development, build the capacity of community-based approaches, and reduce the justice involvement of youth.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
AB 912 provides additional grants for targeted prevention and intervention programs. Such programs are what justice advocates, researchers, families and our communities definitely need. It is one step toward what our communities truly need, and we therefore respectfully request your yes vote.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else in support? Name and organization, please.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of Initiate Justice, Transformative In-Prison Work Group and Californians for Safety and Justice.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Glenn Backes, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights in support.
- Natasha Minsker
Person
Natasha Minsker, Smart Justice California and Prosecutors Alliance of California in support.
- James Lindburg
Person
Jim Lindberg, on behalf of the Friends Committee on Legislation of California, in support.
- Robert Harris
Person
Robert Harris on behalf of St. John's Community Health, in support.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone in opposition? Going once. Okay, turn it to Committee. Any comments? Questions?
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Just want to thank the author for bringing forward this bill. I think this is on that list, that very special list that we know is incredibly important, and want to appreciate you for acknowledging and recognizing the work of Oakland Chief Cespedes in particular, as one of the examples of what you'd be able to do, what we'd be able to do with this public health approach to ensuring our youth get the support that they need. So thank you.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay, I'd like to conclude with, as you know, our discussions and talks that we've had. Me, being a prior school resource officer, believing in youth programs and getting to them younger, DARE back in the day when we used to have that as well, I thought that was a great program, too, where we got to the youth and got to mentor them and teach them the values. Also, why I got into coaching and Boy Scouts as well.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
And so I'm very strong about this bill, especially getting to the youth. And if you would mind, I'd also like to co-author it as well. And I'm pretty sure the chair is asking for an aye.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I would be honored to have you on as a co author.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. You may close.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
For me, this is the culmination of 10 years of reducing the prison population and actually the culmination of proving that if we invest on the front end, we would have even more savings and reduce crime even more. So for me, this is the legacy piece of all the 10 years of work on this. This is why we came here. This is why I came here. This is what it's all about. So thank you.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
That was moved? Okay second? Thank you. Take roll, please.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 912. Assembly Member Jones-Sawyer. The motion is do passed as amended to the Education Committee. Jones-Sawyer.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Jones-Sawyer aye. Alanis? Aye. Alanice aye. Bonta? Aye. Bonta aye. Bryan? Bryan aye. Lackey? Lackey, not voting. Ortega? Ortega aye. Santiago? Santiago aye. Zbur? Zbur aye.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Next, we will do add-ons, vote changes and lifting of calls for all measures taken up today.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And we will grant reconsideration with no objection. There's no objections. Unanimous consent.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay with that, This concludes the hearing for the Assembly Public Safety Committee. Yeah.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Good morning. Welcome to California State Assembly Public Safety Committee. We're going to begin as a subcommitee until we get to a quorum first. Like to read. All witness testimony will be in person. There will be no phone testimony upon option for this hearing. You can find more information at www.assembly.ca.gov/committees. We'll begin the subcommitee. First up is. Oh, I'm sorry, I have some housekeeping. Very important housekeeping off calendar. Item number two, AB455. Quirk-Silva, been pulled by the author.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Item number three, AB523,Vince Fong, pulled by the author. Item number four, AB667, Maienschein, pulled by the author. Item number five, AB695, Pacheco, pulled by committee. Item number 13, AB763, Davies, pulled by the author. Item number 16, AB8, Mathis, pulled by the author. Item number 26, AB977 Rodriguez, pulled by the author. Item 29, AB 1047. Maienschein, pulled by the author. And we'll begin with our.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I believe I don't have my notes, Mr. Sergeant. Need to know who's first up.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
This.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
First on here I have Mr. Evan Low, AB 1064, item number 30. Mr. Low.
- Evan Low
Person
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and committee members. I understand that this bill does enjoy a dupast recommendation on both sides of the aisle. And if you'll allow me an opportunity to present and say a little bit about this bill. This is Assembly Bill 1064, which defines bias against within hate crimes and addresses the selective discriminatory targeting of victims.
- Evan Low
Person
Specifically, this bill seeks to allow the charge of a hate crime to simply be brought before a jury, and the jury will then be able to decide with the evidence presented if the defendant is guilty of a hate crime. This has been an issue that we've seen that has been pervasive in a number of areas in the State of California. This is also an API legislative caucus priority with respect to hate crimes and respectfully ask for
- Evan Low
Person
aye vote when you have established a quorum with me today. In support is Jay Boyarsky, chief assistant district attorney for the County of Santa Clara, District Attorney Jeff Rosen's Office, as well as Charles Jung, executive director of the California Asian American Bar Association.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
You have five minutes total, whichever way you want to split it up.
- Jay Boyarsky
Person
Good morning, Chairman. It's wonderful to be in front of your Committee again. Jeff Rosen sends his regrets. It's my good fortune that I get to be here. He's in Israel this week, but he sends his regards to you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Tell him I said hi.
- Jay Boyarsky
Person
I will do so. It is a privilege to be here, along with Assemblymember Low in support of this small but very needed and significant piece of legislation which will allow us to continue to give meaning to the hate crime statutes which this Legislature has so continuously supported over the years. The issue, as Assemblymember Low spoke about, is when we have a perpetrator targeting victims for hate crimes exclusively because they are members of a protected race, gender, religion, ethnicity.
- Jay Boyarsky
Person
And I note what I know the chairman knows is who can commit a hate crime? Anyone is capable. Who can be the victim of a hate crime? Anyone can be the victim of a hate crime. In prosecuting hate crimes, which I've done for almost 30 years now in Jeff Rosen's DA's office, we occasionally run into some obstacles with jury instructions or certain elements.
- Jay Boyarsky
Person
We've seen an epidemic of anti AAPI hate crime in recent years where some of the perpetrators will only target several different members, all Asian, but they may not yell out a racial slur. They may not say any of the hateful things that we've heard from some of our other leaders saying. And without that explicit evidence, some prosecutors are hesitant to bring the hate crime forward, even though they've only targeted 10 Chinese people or 15 South Asian grandmothers wearing saris.
- Jay Boyarsky
Person
What this bill attempts to do is just to make clear for the judiciary that if someone selectively targets a group of people because of their membership in a protected class, that should be able to be considered a hate crime. Thank you very much for your time.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Charles Jung
Person
Thank you Chair Jones-Sawyer and members of the committee. Appreciate the work that you do very much. My name is Charles Jung. I'm the executive director of the California Asian Pacific American Bar Association. We represent the interests of 23 Sister bar organizations across the state and California's roughly 14,000 APA attorneys. Last Thursday, I had the privilege of organizing the second anniversary commemoration of the Atlanta spa shootings.
- Charles Jung
Person
And there we heard for the first time from the father of Michelle Goh, who was the young woman in New York City who was targeted, pushed off the train platform and into the path of an oncoming train. One of our speakers in our Atlanta event was Robert Peterson. Robert Peterson is the proud younger son of a Korean mother and a African American veteran, and his mother was Yu Young, one of the eight victims of the Atlanta spa shooting.
- Charles Jung
Person
What this measure does is it clarifies existing law making the definition of hate crimes consistent with how it's interpreted in the courts as it is. And in addition, it makes clear that discriminatory selection of victims also qualifies under the statute.
- Charles Jung
Person
Many of us have heard of the Atlanta spa shootings, but one thing that's not well known is that Robert Long had to travel over 27 miles between the site of the first shooting to the second shooting, from an unincorporated area of Cherokee County in Georgia to a region in Atlanta.
- Charles Jung
Person
I remember very clearly when I turned on the news and heard a sheriff's deputy grab the mic and make excuses for Robert Long, saying that he was having a bad day and suggesting that he had a sex addiction. And because this was a sex addiction, that implicitly that this was not a hate crime. Robert Long traveled those 27 miles, and he selectively targeted three establishments that were owned and employed by Asian American workers, Asian American women.
- Charles Jung
Person
And along the way, along those 27 miles, he passed by strip clubs, other establishments that were not owned by Asian Americans. And so one last thing that I'll say is, in organizing these events in San Francisco and around the country, one thing I hear persistently is frustration from the Asian American community. Why, when Asian Americans are discriminatorily selected for crimes, why is that not also classified as a hate crime? And that's what AB 1064 addresses. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Allow us, Mr. Low. I think we have enough to establish a quorum and then we'll do the consent calendar and then I'll call for witnesses and support. That way we can get dispensed with it. So could you call the role.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Of course. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
A quorum is present on the consent calendar. We have item number six, AB697, Davies drug court success incentive pilot program. Item number eight, AB724, Vince Bong firearms safety certificate instructional materials. Item number 11, AB, 751, Shiavo elder abuse. Item number 24, AB943, Kalra corrections population data. Item number 28, AB997, Gipson exoneration mental health services. Item number 31, AB 1080 Ta Criminal justice realignment. I need a motion to approve the consent calendar. Call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On the consent calendar. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The subcount is adopted and I'll return. For anyone in the audience in favor of AB 1064 Low, you can come to the microphone. Name and organization pleased.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Representing the arc and united Cerebral Palsy California collaboration, and we support the bill.
- Eric Harris
Person
Eric Harris with Disability Rights, California in support.
- Catalina Ramos
Person
Catalina Zimbrano Ramos, Familia by Central, in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
Kim Stone, Stone Advocacy on behalf of the California District Attorneys Association, in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Charles Jung
Person
Good Morning, Simone Reyes, Central California LGBTQ Collaborative, in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Christophe Mayor
Person
Christophe Mayer, American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Now, are there any witnesses in opposition? Any witnesses in opposition? Five minutes.
- Alice Michael
Person
Thank you. Is this on?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Yes, it is. Okay, let's get closer to the mic so we can hear you.
- Alice Michael
Person
Okay. Good morning, everyone. My name is Alice Michael, and I am here on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association. I've been a public defender for 25 years. We are opposed to this bill. I want to make very clear at the outset that we are not opposed to this bill because we are opposed to legislation against hate crimes. Obviously, our members are very concerned about hate crimes. We have many members who are parts of protected classes.
- Alice Michael
Person
We are also very concerned about hate crimes against the AAPI community and the proliferation of those crimes. At this time, our concern with this bill is simply that the language defining bias motivation, we believe, is incredibly over broad. This bill, I believe, was intended to target people who commit crimes against protected classes exclusively because of their membership of that protected class, and we support that idea.
- Alice Michael
Person
However, the way that the language in this statute is worded, it would include many crimes where the motivation is not that the person is a member of a protected class. And I talked specifically about the definition contained within about bias motivation. So an example of what could be a biased motivation is picking a victim based on the perception that that victim is vulnerable because they are weak. The reality is, many victims of violence or theft crimes are picked because of vulnerability.
- Alice Michael
Person
This bill could, as written, could include any crime against a woman if it's arguable that she was targeted because she was perceived as being part of the weaker sex, including a purse snatchering, snatching, or a business robbery where the person focuses on the female employee. It also could include any crime against an elderly person who is disabled because of their age, a pickpocketed, a theft of their property because they're less able to be able to chase or fight back with the person committing the crime.
- Alice Michael
Person
Fraud crimes against elderly people. Another motivation that it includes as constituting a hate crime is if the motivation is Thrill seeking, which could include a young person who takes a car from a Member of a protected class to joyride someone who puts graffiti on a business, regardless of the content that's owned by a member of the protected class, somebody who recklessly drives and injures somebody who's part of a protected class.
- Alice Michael
Person
These are not crimes that would be motivated exclusively because the person is part of a protected class. But under this bill, they would be able to be prosecuted as hate crimes. Another of the motivations, including in the bill, is a person. If they're motivated by a desire for social bonding, this could end up being used against every gang member who commits a crime against a different gang where the members are of a different ethnicity.
- Alice Michael
Person
Again, we support the idea of defining hate crimes for those crimes in which the victim is chosen exclusively because they're a member of a protected class. Pass. But we believe that this bill is overly broad and would end up in a large increase in incarceration of many people. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in opposition that actually address those seeing none? We'll bring it back to committee members for any questions or comments. Seeing none or seen. I'm not trying to force anybody to see anything.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I'm reading the language here. This is about hate crimes that are motivated in whole, in part, by a bias against one or more of the following or actual perceived characteristics of the victim, which includes disability, gender, nationality, race or ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, or an Association with a group. I don't see how any of the examples given by the last witness apply, given the language of the bill.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So you just look at the language of the bill, and it is about hate crimes based on one of those characteristics. So I don't find the last testimony persuasive, and we'll be voting for the bill. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I should move the bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
We have a motion. Is there a second? I'll move. There's no more. You may close or you may use Mr. Zbur as your closing.
- Evan Low
Person
I just want to acknowledge the hard work of the committee staff to also address the issues at hand, too, and making it the product before us. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay. Did you want them to comment? I'm sorry, we're done.
- Evan Low
Person
Yes, I respect.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Call to roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On item 1064 by semen merlot. The motion is do passed as amended, to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measure passes. Thank you. Tri Ta, AB 329, Item number 1: Theft Jurisdiction.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Whenever you're ready, you can begin.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Yes, I'm ready. So thank you, Mr. Chair and Members of this Committee. AB 329 specifically authorizes the Attorney General to prosecute multiple offenses of cargo theft that span more than one county and involve the same defendant. The Bill from the jurisdiction of the Attorney General to consolidate multi-county cargo theft crime into a prosecution in one county. This Bill mirrors AB 1613, which was related to retail theft that this Committee passed unanimously last year.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
AB 329 extend exact same revision to multijurisdictional cargo theft that will offer to retail theft. Over the past decade, the cost of cargo theft-related crime has risen dramatically. It is estimated that combined losses suffered by the trucking industry, insurance companies and railroad surpassed $10 billion in the US annually. Cargo theft is distinctly different from retail theft, and that is covered under a different section of the Penal Code. It deals with goods that are in transit to warehouse or factories.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Retail theft deals specifically with goods that are currently for sale. AB 329 would access California businesses frustrated with cargo theft impact. AB 329 would give a tool to the Attorney General to stop this often, organized and sophisticated crime that is destroying our California businesses. It is my understanding that the least opposition was for the previous version of the Bill. So I humbly ask for your aye vote, and I'd like to now present Nick Chiappe with the California Truck Association.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. You have five minutes.
- Nick Chiappe
Person
Good morning, Chair Jones-Sawyer and Members. Nick Chiappe with the California Trucking Association in support. Cargo theft is a serious problem that has been in the rise in recent years. As the Assemblymember mentioned, the National Insurance Crime Bureau and the California Highway Patrol estimate combined losses suffered by shippers, including the trucking industry, surpasses $10 billion in the United States annually. Just last year, the CHP uncovered a major organized cargo theft ring that was stealing electronic shipments from multiple counties throughout the state.
- Nick Chiappe
Person
The suspects were found with thousands of stolen items and were responsible for over $9 million in stolen cargo. Similarly, the Attorney General's Office last year charged several suspects with thefts from cargo trucks that had departed from multiple Microsoft shipping facilities. Motor carriers, truck drivers and businesses who are victims of organized cargo theft will benefit from extended protections under this Bill. AB 329 will also take the necessary steps toward protecting consumers who rely on the safe and efficient transportation of goods.
- Nick Chiappe
Person
For these reasons, we support AB 329 and appreciate the Assemblymember for his leadership on this issue. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in support? Any other witnesses in support? Any witnesses in opposition?
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Leslie Caldwell Houston for the California Public Defenders Association. I don't know if our letter got in in time. We are withdrawing our opposition.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of Initiate Justice, in opposition.
- Thanh Tran
Person
Thanh Tran, on behalf of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, and we oppose.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, on behalf of the San Francisco Public Defender's office in opposition.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. And now we'll bring it back to the Committee for any comments or questions. Mr. Lackey?
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah. I'd just like to commend Assembly Member Ta for bringing this Bill to our attention. In LA County, there's been a massive amount of rail theft that's caused some of the companies to redirect their route instead of through Los Angeles. There was so much trash associated with this theft that it even caused some train crashes. The companies have hired private security and rerouted their trains, as I just mentioned, due to lack of enforcement by the local District Attorney.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Rail theft is altogether much different than retail theft, as was outlined by the Assemblymember. And this clearly deserves our support, and so I'll be supporting it. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Comments or statements? Seeing none, you may close.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
I really want to thanks the work of all the Committee staff, and I humbly ask for your aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Think there may be some. I don't know if there's confusion, because I'm reading the Attorney General currently has the authority to prosecute cargo theft. And I think even in my District Attorney Gascón, in response, you'd like we conduct a thorough review when appropriate. They do file charges on felonies and misdemeanors. So I don't know if this is a clarification with the jurisdictions, and maybe that's something we can work on so that we're not doing something that's already there. Duplicative.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I'm going to recommend a note so that we can get to a place where we can have clarity on jurisdictional. But I don't believe the Attorney General would just not do anything. I have full faith that if there is a problem, they would take care of it. Is there a motion?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
A motion.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Second.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Call for the roll on AB.
- Committee Secretary
Person
AB 329 by Assmeblymember Ta . The motion is do pass. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Committee fails, but come back and let's talk about ways we can clarify this for the trucking industry and the cargo and you united part.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
He has to ask.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Okay. Yes. Consideration, please.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay, I'm going to try this. Should we take a vote, or can I say unanimous? If there's no objection, by unanimous consent, we will grant reconsideration. You have it.
- Tri Ta
Legislator
Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Mr. Jackson.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Mr. Corey Jackson with three bills, AB 742. AB 855. AB 994.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Mr. Chair, Members of the Committee, thank you so much. I have three bills before you. I will start with AB 855.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
855. Fines, fees, assessments. Whenever you're ready.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
AB 55 would change the annual interest rate on restitution orders and the annual interest rate on certain delinquent payments, including fines, fees, and restitution, to no more than 1%. Today, when a convicted defendant who caused harm is ordered to pay restitution, they do so at a rate of 10%. As this interest accrues and fees are levied, the restitution debt owed can balloon by thousands of dollars, making it highly unlikely victims will be recompensated for their suffered loss.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
The vast majority of people in the system are low-income and will never be able to pay off their restitution debt. But according to the UC Berkeley Law School Policy Advocacy Clinic, 67% of survivors do not receive any restitution payment, and only 13% of restitution is ever collected, as most do not have a way to pay. Unlike other debt, restitution has no statute of limitations and is not dischargeable in bankruptcy.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
To get payments, courts often resort to involuntary collection actions, including garnishing wages and intercepting tax refunds. Because of the targeted policing and over-punishment of communities of color, Black and brown Californians are overrepresented in the legal system across the state. For example, in Los Angeles County, Black individuals account for 20% of all restitution ordered, but only 8% of the county's total population. Onerous restitution fines and fees fail to be restorative and turn our system into being even more regressive and literally serving no one.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
AB 855 seeks to better recompense victims and provide the relief they deserve. If we truly want restorative justice in California, we must create and build our system to meet these goals, especially when we know they are being missed. We cannot ask our formerly incarcerated to build themselves up and thrive if we set them up to fail. We also cannot ask victims to receive justice if the system fails them as well.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
AB 855 seeks to put California further down the path of creating a public safety infrastructure truly serving its purpose and all parties involved with me today, I have state Treasurer Fiona Ma, a former distinguished Member of this body who I am proud to say serves as the Bill co-sponsor and is here today to speak in support on the Bill and answer any technical questions. Also speaking in support is Andrew Winn, Executive Director of Insight Garden programs, to provide us his testimony of paying restitution.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
So you have five minutes. But of course, as a statewide officer, you have some constitutional.
- Fiona Ma
Person
Don't worry, I'll be short of that. Thank you. Thank you, Members. When I was here in the Legislature from 2006 to 2012, I also served on the Public Safety Committee for four years and it was one of my most fascinating committees because you don't know how you're going to vote sometimes until you hear all the testimony. My last two bills signed by Governor Brown allowed women convicted of life without parole to have a second chance at getting their cases heard. Many of them are serving 30, 45 years in jail, serious health issues.
- Fiona Ma
Person
And so this has made a difference in their lives, where they are able to live the rest of their lives outside of the prison walls. But it has enabled me to learn a lot about some of the problems that are happening inside. So I am proud to co-sponsor this Bill. Because the 10% is punitive, right? It starts two weeks after conviction. The interest continues to accrue whether the inmates are in prison.
- Fiona Ma
Person
They don't have a lot of opportunities to earn a lot of money, and then if they miss a payment, they are assessed a 10% penalty on top of that. So when they finally get out of prison, the amount of debt that they are owed for the victim's compensation fund is pretty much out of reach. And many of them are going to have to continue to have this debt over their heads. Like the Assembly Member said, it is not dischargeable in bankruptcy.
- Fiona Ma
Person
It stays on their record for life. And this is not giving the inmate an opportunity to right their wrongs. It's not giving victims' families that payment that they deserve. And so this whole system is extremely punitive. And I think having a 1% interest rate is fair.
- Fiona Ma
Person
It gives people a skin in the game, but it doesn't overwhelm them and create additional recidivism and individuals who are trying to reenter gives them a chance to pay back, but also be able to create some sort of practical life, quality of life, after they get out of prison. So I'm very honored to be here and thank the Assembly Member for carrying this important Bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Andrew Winn
Person
Good morning. Thank you for having me. My name is Andrew Winn. Just as the Member introduced me, I'm the Executive Director of the Insight Garden Program. We provide rehabilitative programming inside prison and reentry services for the people we serve. I myself am previously incarcerated. I served prison sentence here in California. I paroled in 2009. I was given a $23,000 restitution bill, and when I got out, it ballooned to around 27 or $28,000. I paroled homeless in 2009.
- Andrew Winn
Person
So just to even come with that kind of debt right out the gates was really just difficult. I struggled with getting employed. I didn't have a living wage till just a few years ago. So just to kind of bring it to perspective, and in 2015, I attended UCLA, and at that time, I showed the greatest financial aid need. I was a Pell Grant recipient. I had a work-study job. I was also President of Graduate Family Housing, where I earned a stipend.
- Andrew Winn
Person
But I still was barely making it as somebody living in Los Angeles, on the west side of Los Angeles, where it's very expensive. Yeah. None of that really allowed me to just, one, save or even pay back. And it wasn't until 2016 my bank account was levied. I received my financial aid payment a few weeks before that, and they took all my financial aid money, and I was there trying to figure out myself. But beyond just taking my financial aid money, it really personally impacted me.
- Andrew Winn
Person
It took away just myself. It put me in a suicidal state. I'm not a person who constantly goes through a suicidal state. Matter of fact, that's the only time I've gone through one, so it cut me deep as a person with a family, I couldn't take care of them as a primary provider. I just couldn't do much right? It just took away a good piece of my identity as just a person.
- Andrew Winn
Person
I had to negotiate to try to get some of my funding back, despite it being federal money, state money, and work-study money. I just had to negotiate with the state Franchise Tax Board, and in that process, they couldn't understand how the student had more expenses than they had income. And if any of you have gone to college in California, we know that's a very common occurrence.
- Andrew Winn
Person
So I had to explain how I used credit card debt to get by every month, and it caused me just tremendous stress and pain. I was unable to pay my rent to the UC Regents as a result of this. You know, I had to just negotiate a payment plan. Luckily, at the time of my low, where I was thinking of suicide, I did have a professor who was there for me during that time and helped me get through it. His name is Bryonn Bain.
- Andrew Winn
Person
But even to this day, since 2016, I continue to make those monthly payments as a result of that levy. However, the amount has not gone down. I'm still making payments on it, even from in prison, when they were garnishing more than half of my eight cents-an-hour job inside. So, I mean, here I am, still with his debt, and here we are several years later, me making continuous on-time payments. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in support?
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of initiate justice, in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Leslie Caldwell Houston for the California Public Defenders Association in support.
- Lizzy Buchan
Person
Lizzie Buchan, with the Prosecutors Alliance of California, in support.
- Thanh Tran
Person
Tom Tran, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, in support.
- John Vasquez
Person
John Vasquez, on behalf of Communities United for Restorative Justice, in support.
- Esteban Nunez
Person
Esteban Nunez, with the Anti-Recidivism Coalition, a proud co-sponsor of this Bill, in support.
- James Lindburg
Person
Jim Lindburg, Friends Committee on Legislation of California, in support.
- Jeronimo Aguilar
Person
Jeronimo Aguilar, on behalf of Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, in strong support.
- Annalisa Ruiz
Person
Annalisa Ruiz with Young Women's Freedom Center in strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Now are there any witnesses in opposition?
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
Good morning.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Good morning. Welcome.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
Thank you. My name is Gretchen Lichtenberger, and I'm here as Legislative Chairperson for the California Association of Judgment Professionals, and we are in opposition to this bill. I have been enforcing court judgments for almost two decades now, and I could tell you story after story after story from the victim's perspective, and one important one was in Santa Barbara, very high profile case.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
This unscrupulous woman stole money from three nuns in Santa Barbara that were trying to find housing because they were putting out, being put out of their home, their 50 year home by the archdiocese. And she got arrested for that, and she was standing trial. While she was out on bail, she made friends with a couple of the parishioners of the nuns, and then she committed financial elder abuse against them, and they lost their home. She took over $40,000 from them while she was out on bail.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
She got arrested for that and she ultimately got sentenced to 11 years in jail. These victims that were parishioners of the nuns, and this was a very highly publicized story in Santa Barbara. These victims were in their late 70s. They lost their house because she was supposed to be doing a mortgage modification for them, and she didn't and they lost their house. They had nowhere to go. They were homeless because she took advantage of them. I have a client who was hit by a drunk driver.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
She's paralyzed, she's in a wheelchair. She has a huge amount of medical bills that she had because of that. And she was probably never going to get all of her money paid back to her. But the purpose of victim restitution is to fully compensate the victim for their loss of use of money. I bonds right now are paying about 8% and CDs are paying about 5% or 6%. And it was said here today that this is part of restorative justice and that the 10% is punitive.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
The reason Legislature set it at 10% is because it has two purposes. One is to fully compensate the creditor for their loss of use of their money, and two, to encourage the debtor that owes the money to pay the judgment. If this interest is set at 1%, why would they ever pay anything? And if people truly are at a place in their life where they can't afford to pay the judgment, the principal amount of the judgment, what difference does it make about the interest rate?
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
So I present to you that it doesn't make sense to reward people that have been committed of crimes. No disrespect to criminals or people that have been committed of crimes, whether or not they were in fact guilty. But think about the victims for a minute. Put yourself in the place of the victim. You have nobody unless you hire a lawyer and pay more money, you have nobody to go and get the enforcement of that order.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
That order is enforced by the District Attorney who is short staffed and highly overworked and they don't have time to go and collect victim restitution orders. So it's very difficult. Victim restitution orders are probably the least collected judgments in all of California. So it's really important that you don't paint with a broad brush. You don't say all restitution orders get lowered to 1%. Because I can tell you, I've been doing this for almost two decades.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
There are plenty of white collar criminals that can afford to pay the 10%. So I look forward to working with the author and the sponsors to come up with something that can be worked for all those people that are involved on both sides. Thank you. Please don't further victimize the crime victims.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Are there any other witnesses in opposition? Seeing none, we'll bring it back to Committee Members for any questions or comments. Mr. Lackey.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yes. Thank you for the opposition because once again we have another example of over obsession with the focus and imbalanced focus on offenders and once again showing an insensitivity to victims and how these criminal offenses are long lasting. Are long, long lasting. And one of the little elements that we've provided to do some kind of... We talk about restorative justice.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
How about restorative justice to victims? That would be something that we would all agree on, and we need to work more collaboratively together on. But this is not a good example of what needs to be done because victims are already behind the eight ball, and I think it's getting tiresome. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Sure.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
With the opposition, did you guys have any kind of payment plans that come up originally? The gentleman here said that finally he got to a payment plan. Is there not like a payment plan started from the beginning so they don't fall behind right away?
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
Yes, I could speak to that. And thank you for your question. It's a very important question. What usually happens in all these different laws is people want to come in and put in all these handcuffs later on. As a creditor who's been doing this for a very long time, we creditors are always open to communication. But what happens is the debtors don't want to communicate. We send letters. We don't harass people at all. We open up the line of communication. We're always open to listen.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
We're always open to be reasonable. And many, many, many times we settle judgments for way less than the face value just to get them off our books. So a lot of times, these debtors, if they would just take the opportunity to reach out to their creditors, it goes a long, long way. So thank you for that question. Yes.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
And if I may again, Chair, sir, do you feel like you have that opportunity? Do you think there's something maybe the author of this bill can maybe work on to make that an easier or a better option?
- Andrew Winn
Person
I mean, one, when I paroled homeless, I was housing insecure, and so being able to get in contact with me was very much a challenge. And then when you leave prison, they don't provide you with any kind of information regarding any of the restitution other than what you had paid 55% to at $0.08 an hour working. So there was no communication that I received, and if I received it, it may have been at a former address, but the instability of being on parole really made it difficult for me to be able to receive that information.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay. And for the author, would you maybe think of maybe the consumer price index rate as well? Maybe not so 10, not so much one, but whatever the going rate is at the time?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I'm more than happy to consider anything as long as it gets to what the problem we're trying to solve. And I think what it's important is to understand the problem we're trying to solve. Because with this piece of legislation, the devil's in the details, and that is this.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Number one, we are not lowering the amount of payment that they owe to the victims. That stays the same. We're talking about what us, as a system and government, put on top of that, which then makes it harder for them to pay the victims in the first place. So this is not us being lenient on those who harm somebody. This is us making it easier for the person who does the harm to actually give the restitution directly to the victim themselves.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
So I believe this is a balanced approach. I believe that this is not a theoretical bill. This is not a gotcha bill. This is a bill that says the data shows. Right? Don't argue with me. Argue with the data. The data shows that because the 10% is so onerous, nobody gets what they are supposed to, they're supposed to receive. Right. And so this is a way to make sure that victims are actually given or receive the relief that they deserve as victims as well. So thank you very much for that question.
- Fiona Ma
Person
And then you can add the 10% penalty for non-payment on top of that. So that's actually 20% on the Victims Restitution Fund. So nobody wins in this situation.
- Gretchen Lichtenberger
Person
There's not a 10% on the victim's order. That's only...
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay. Bonta.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I just wanted to focus in on the 10% and whether or not there's actually... You're trying to correct the wrong of the 10% being set in the first place. Based on the bill analysis, it's pretty clear that 10% isn't a reference point that we can actually use.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
And given the fact that we have the State Treasurer here, I don't know if you want to comment on how that 10% was set or the irrelevance of that 10% now, in light of our current savings that someone can receive on any money. And then secondarily, your point around the principal amount still going to the victim, the interest overage, who does that go to?
- Fiona Ma
Person
So just like legislation, right, we pass and we put a number in it. And so normally, we would create a certain amount of administrative fee that goes to the program, and then perhaps like an interest that would accrue to perhaps put back into a fund for others. Right. The 10% was created through statute. That's what prior legislators voted on and prior governors, so that is what's been in the statute.
- Fiona Ma
Person
So that's what we're trying to correct here, is trying to make the victims whole, but not put such a tremendous amount of burden on the person that was incarcerated so that they can get their life back. They can get a job, they can continue to pay. I mean, that's like taking a loan, right, credit card loan, and you have to pay 18%, right. A lot of people can't pay that back, and then they just get into trouble and bankruptcies as well.
- Fiona Ma
Person
And even during COVID the federal government suspended student loan payments for two years. These payments were never suspended for any of them. So it's been accruing for everybody who has to pay that 10% with no delay in the payment, even through COVID. So there's just a lot of inequities in this 10%, in the amount that incarcerated folks are being treated. But again, like the Assembly Member said, the victims are still going to be paid in whole in theory.
- Fiona Ma
Person
We're not reducing the Victims Compensation Fund or that the money that goes to victims. It's just the punitive 10%, plus an additional penalty of 10%, potentially, that's going to be added on top of it.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Move the bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Mr. Bryan.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I second moving the bill. This is a really thoughtful and great bill. And I want to thank your witnesses for coming and testifying before the Committee and for sharing such a powerful, honest, lived experience. We should not continue to punish and criminalize poverty. Victims are going to be made whole on their full restitution that's due, particularly if people who are formerly incarcerated are able to make their payments. Right?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
The second we put you in a state of losing your housing stability, losing your education stability, nobody is made whole, including society as a whole, because we have to deal with those simultaneous crises that we've caused. If you're looking for co-authors, I'm happy to join you. This is a great idea.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. You may close.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Not only are we trying to make sure that the victims are made whole, we're also trying to correct the problems that many times our institutions do to incarcerated people. We ask them to go out and be productive members of society, to pick themselves up by their bootstraps. But unfortunately, we create additional penalties that don't give them the opportunity to buy boots in the first place. And so we have got to do better to making sure that people who are formally incarcerated have a path to upward mobility. And with that, I ask for an aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And I've had similar bills like this before, so I thank you for bringing this. Not to give the State Treasurer a heart attack. One of the things I've always thought about is, as we all have credit, whether it's your home, whether it's your credit cards, if we reversed it, that we paid the principal first and the interest last, what effect that would have. And as far as victims are concerned, now we're paying the victims first.
- Fiona Ma
Person
Exactly. Exactly.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
We're actually getting to the victims. And I thought about putting that in your bill, and I was dragged from that because my first one was, let's eliminate the interest altogether. But then that became problematic too. So I'm glad you brought this to us. I think this is a good compromise because I probably would have gone a lot further. And so request that the Committee do an aye vot. But also think about reversing it. It'd be the first of the kind. Yes.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 855 by Assembly Member Jackson, the motion is do pass to the Revenue and Taxation Committee. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measure passes.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Thank you. And which item you want to do next?
- Fiona Ma
Person
Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I'm still here, Mr. Chair. Next up, is AB 994. AB 994.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Item number.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay. Law enforcement social media item 27. Whenever you're ready. Do you have a witness? Are you by yourself?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I'm by myself today with this time, I want to start by thanking the hard work of the chair and this Committee protecting the privacy rights of every California central to AB 994, and I'm happy to accept the Committee amendments.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I also want to thank the legislative LGBTQ caucus for their leadership and prioritizing this important Bill as well as well with our chair and co chair or Vice Chair of the LGBTQ caucus as co sponsors, Senator Eggman and Assemblymember Ward, AB 994 will protect our privacy while maintaining public safety.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
This Bill will require our sheriffs and police departments to not post any booking photos or mugshots of individuals when arrested on suspicion of committing any crime unless the individual is deemed an imminent risk to others or the public. FA judge orders the release of the individual's image based on an articulated law enforcement interest or there is an exigent circumstance that necessitates the dissemination of the individual's image due to an urgent and legitimate law enforcement interest.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Importantly, in the event of booking event, a booking photo is used. AB 994 will now require the Police Department or sheriff's office to use the name and pronouns provided by the individual. A police department or sheriff's office may include other legal names or known aliases of an individual as well, if using the names or aliases will assist in locating or apprehending the individual, reducing or eliminating an imminent threat to an individual or to public safety.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Lastly, that booking photos will need to be taken down off of social media after 14 days of their first posting. AB 994 enhances privacy rights of all people while still providing judges and law enforcement tools to protect the public from imminent harm and danger. When mugshots are used, California should be leading the way in protecting privacy and avoiding the archaic practice of being dead named. Law enforcement has an extensive history of dead naming and misgendering transgender, gender, nonconforming, and intersex individuals on multiple platforms.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Not only can this act strain existing relationships with family and friends, but it can also threaten the individual's life, especially with the exponential increase in anti-LGBTQ plus and anti-trans rhetoric. Indeed, the State of Illinois recently passed a Bill preventing law enforcement agencies from publishing booking photos on their social networking websites, and this February, the Utah State Senate voted unanimously to entirely prohibit police from publicly releasing mugshots until a person has been convicted of a crime.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
AB 994 provides further confidence to all people that California cares and will protect who they are, as they are. This Bill provides balance, privacy, and protection for individuals and the public. Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. And any other witnesses in support. Name and organization, please.
- Elizabeth Buchen
Person
Good morning. Lizzie Buchen, Prosecutors Alliance of California in support. Thanks.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Thank you.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of Initiate Justice.
- Melissa Cosio
Person
Melissa Cosio with Californians for Safety and Justice.
- Thanh Tran
Person
Thanh Tran with the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights.
- John Vasquez
Person
John Vasquez, on behalf of Communities United for Restorative Justice in support.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Thank you.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Lesli Caldwell-Houston for the California Public Defenders Association in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Hedoni Morgilad
Person
Hedoni Morgilad, Policy Analyst with Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, in strong support. Thank you.
- Analisa Ruiz
Person
Analisa Ruiz, Policy Director with Young Women's Freedom Center in strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Joanne Scheer
Person
Joanne Scheer, Founder, Felony Murder Elimination Project in strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Now our new witnesses in opposition. Mr. Salzillo, welcome. Whenever you're ready.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair. Good morning, Mr. Chairman. Members Cory Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association and the California Law Enforcement Association of Records Supervisors, respectfully here in opposition to AB 994, the law that's being amended by this Bill was only created in 2021, did not take effect till last year.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
This Bill seeks a significant expansion of that Bill that was negotiated, frankly, and that negotiated Bill had very little or no opposition, including from law enforcement, if I recall correctly, once it was negotiated. This Bill rejects much of the limitation that was negotiated into that Bill just two years ago.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
The ability to post booking photos while being restricted left the door open for government to balance privacy considerations as well as the interest in communicating with the public about those who are accused of committing serious and violent crimes. This Bill would prevent the posting of booking photos of a person arrested for a violent crime unless very specific and limited conditions exist.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
And in attempting to appropriately identify persons as they wish to be identified in the context of this Bill, and notwithstanding the amendments, this Bill says you have to use the name given by the individual, not in the context. Our objection is not in the context of the way in which a person identifies in terms of their name versus their legal name. But there's no express contemplation of a person who gets arrested, booking photo is taken,
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The Puppy Dog. Item number AB 742, law enforcement police dogs. Whenever you're ready.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
the law enforcement agency intends to post it under the parameters of existing law or this Bill and saying, my name is Mickey Mouse or Joe DiMaggio or fill in the blank. It's not a question of identify differently, and I use a different name than maybe my legal name, but there's no contemplation of how a law enforcement agency would be able to address that situation. So I know that's not the author's intent.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
I suspect that can be cleaned up, but it's not in this Bill, and the amendments don't fix it because the amendments only address a situation where using a legal name and again, that's the distinction between maybe a person who's transitioned has a legal name, hasn't changed a name, that question, not the, I tell you, a completely fake name, or if I get arrested and they're taking my photo and I say my name is Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer Sr, right I mean. So that's. Anyway, so that's more of a technical issue.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
But again, because this is so new, because it was just negotiated, we think we got to a comfortable spot last time. This is a massive expansion. For those reasons, we ask for a no vote. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses in opposition?
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair Members Ryan Sherman with the Riverside Sheriff's Association in opposition, as well as the Placer County Deputy Sheriff's Association and the Deputy Sheriff Association of Monterey County. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Then we'll bring it back to Committee, Mr. Bryan.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
What is the efficacy of posting a booking photo for somebody who hasn't yet been formally charged, potentially, or maybe even has, but certainly hasn't been convicted of wrongdoing yet, is clearly just a suspect? And you can still post that we've caught the suspect of X, Y, and Z case. What is the efficacy of posting a booking photo at all? And to the Mickey Mouse assertion, I think with the bill's provisions, it allows for you to put legal name and aliases.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I think now if I use the alias Mickey Mouse in instances where you would attribute that to gang affiliation, proven or otherwise, you would put that on the post too, as well. I've seen that in many instances. Right? And so I'm just wondering what at all is the efficacy of posting a booking photo of somebody who has not been convicted yet, when you could just say that we've caught a suspect in X, Y, and Z case.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I've also seen many instances where that's been done, where we'd rather just do that than post a booking photo. And it seems kind of arbitrary when the discretion applies. Although I see a lot of black faces posted.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
I can't speak to the distribution in which photos are posted, not. And agencies make those choices. Some agencies post a ton of them, some don't post them at all. The efficacy, I think, is a situation in which a person's been charged or has been booked and that might be a fugitive. I understand, existing law in the Bill contemplates an exemption for someone who's a fugitive. But not every fugitive case falls under the Bill. It may not be an exigent circumstance. That's issue number one.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Issue number two is, at the risk of my own peril, answer the question with a question of, what is the challenge and what is the propriety of saying, and not to encourage anyone to do a Bill but I don't think anybody has restricted newspapers from posting booking photos. This is law enforcement and social media. Right? I'm not trying to give you a Bill idea to that question.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
It's certainly not a Bill idea because the government doesn't control the newspapers.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Right. Because it is not a public owned entity that also still has collaboration and cooperation with the entity that's also filing charges, booking you, collecting your restitution, all of these things. Newspapers have a different set of frameworks than the one that we hold our public and civic institutions to. And I would argue the framework that we should hold our law enforcement institutions to. And so, Mr. Jackson, I think this is a thoughtful, smart, good bill. I see that the fugitive list is on here.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
If somebody is a fugitive, if we've been looking for Mickey Mouse, Mickey Mouse is a fugitive, and we find him or her or them, they can have their picture posted. And so I don't see a problem there. I think there may be some technical things you still want to address, but you're going to go through many, many committees, and I know you're willing to do that. So thank you for bringing this forward today. I'm going to be happy to support your Bill.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I don't think I completely answered the question. Just very briefly, I also want to, I think, point to not only a fugitive issue, but if someone's arrested and booked and they're not a fugitive, they're in custody. Posting that picture may encourage other victims to come forward or may shed light on other cases that might be involved. So I just wanted to add that, and I neglected to say that. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay. Any other comments?
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I was actually going to make that same comment. I've done that myself, where we've actually found other victims of crimes by posting those pictures to help in another, because some of them just don't come forward and then they see that person, or they see they're not the only one, and it does find other victims for us. So thank you for pointing that out.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay, any other comments? You may close.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I respectfully ask an aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Yeah, the Committee tried to clarify and clean up as best we could. I have utmost confidence that if there's some clarity that needs to be done, that you will work with the opposition to make sure that happens.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Absolutely.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And I think you'll be amenable to whatever makes sense as long as we can get to the goal of what you're trying to do. And so I'm asking for an aye vote. Is there a motion that would be good? Call to roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 994 by Assemblymember Jackson. The motion is do pass to the Privacy and Consumer Protection Committee. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measures on pause. You need one more vote and then your last one.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
My last one is AB 742.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Per the California Department of Justice, Mr. Chair, in 2021, nearly 12% of all use-of-force incidents that resulted in severe injury or death were caused by police canines. Nearly two-thirds of all people seriously injured or killed by police canines in California were black or Latin, or Latino, while 64% of those seriously injured or killed were unarmed. Black Californians were more than twice as likely to fall victim to police canines as any other group and 2.6 times more likely than their white counterparts.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Latino Californians were more than twice as likely to fall victim to police canines as their white counterparts. The jaws of a police canine have enough force to break through sheet metal and often cause permanent nerve damage and, in some cases, permanent physical disfigurement to their victims. And in many cases, they have not yet been convicted of any crimes yet.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
AB 742 will ensure that California will no longer condone the mauling of civilians by police canines, which is a gross misuse of force that would rarely be justified in any other context. We're not just talking about those who law enforcement are trying to apprehend. They are also harming innocent people. Christine Naderer was bitten on the head by the Brentwood canine police dog, Marco, in her own home as she lay tucked inside a cramped crawl space in January 2019.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Adam Gabriel, a Marine Corps veteran, was bitten on the bicep by a police dog after Sonoma County sheriff's deputies wrongly detained him on suspicion of carjacking. Another man had taken the car, and the victim mistakenly identified Gabriel's car as the suspects. Jesse Porter, an 89-year-old man, was bitten on the left calf by a police dog in his own backyard, which led to his leg being amputated above the knee, and he died less than two months later in a rehabilitation center.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
The police canine mistaken him for a suspect. Richard Earl May Jr., a 64-year-old man, was bitten on the legs by a police dog named Riggs while trying to rescue a friend's cat at a construction site. A civil jury in 2017 awarded him 1.1 million, ruling that San Mateo County sheriff's deputies used excessive force. Officer Matt Neff's police dog bass mauled two 18-year-old men during a search for an armed robbery suspect in East Oakland, resulting in injuries requiring hospitalization and surgery.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Neither of the men were charged with a crime. I can keep going. Joel Alejo, a handyman, was attacked and repeatedly bitten by police dog Balko in his own backyard in June 2020. He was not the kidnapping suspect that Paul Alto police were Palo Alto police were looking for. They were assisting Mountain View officers in searching for him, and the City of Palo Alto paid 135,000 to settle the lawsuit filed by him.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
It's important to respond to the narratives that opposition has floated around this bill, which is that a reduction in the use of police canines for arrest and apprehension will lead to an increase in deadly force use by law enforcement or pose an increased safety risk for officers. To this, I will say that I care deeply for the safety of our fellow Californians who become sworn officers and protect our communities. However, the research on this issue is clear.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
A study from 2022 from the Journal of Experimental Criminology found that the sudden suspension of police canine use for apprehension was not, and I repeat, was not associated with a statistical increase in officer or suspect injury or suspect's resistance during felony arrest. It is also important to also note that there still may be other instances where some amendments could be warranted. However, I have not received any substantive recommendations on amendments.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Instead, I have received more ideological responses, which does not get to the problem I'm trying to solve. How do we protect people from getting lifelong injuries and even death? And to, number one, for those who were innocent in the first place, and even if they were found guilty, the penalty that the crime actually warranted does not equal to the life sentence of having a lifelong injury in the first place. There's clearly a problem.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
The police departments who send this data to the Department of Justice. This is not my data. This is not a research study. This is the data that our own law enforcement agencies send to the Department of Justice themselves. And so their own data says that there's a problem and simply maintaining the status quo is just not acceptable.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
With that being said, joining me today in support is Sergeant Sean Allen with the Santa Clara County Sheriff's Department of Corrections and Adrienna Wong with the ACLU, a co-sponsor for AB 742.
- Sean Allen
Person
Good morning. Good morning. My name is Sean Allen, a sergeant with the Santa Clara County Sheriff's Office Department of Corrections and former 2022 candidate for sheriff with nearly 34 years of combined service. My experience with trained dogs includes owning, importing, handling, and training, extending back to the 1980s.
- Sean Allen
Person
Today, I will give you information based on my own experience, the 2021 California Department of Justice Use of Force report, and the Marshall Project report. On duty, I have seen the result of nearly 200 police canine bites. In some cases, bites resembling shark bites resulting in maiming, disfigurement, scarring, torn ligaments, and fractures of mostly black and brown people. Dog training is based on drive, praise, and reward.
- Sean Allen
Person
Yet a police dog does not discern information at the same level that a human does once the dog has been sent out to apprehend a police canine does not know if a person is deaf, mute, blind, special needs, autistic, suffering from dementia, PTSD or in crisis related to mental health. It doesn't know the difference between a child, in many cases, and an adult, an uninvolved resident, a suspect, and, in some cases, even another police officer.
- Sean Allen
Person
Some of these instances are supported by the data I recently spoke of. There have been instances where police canines have attacked other police officers, resulting with the officers shooting and killing the animal, clearly indicating the unpredictable behavior of a canine and the level of threat associated with a canine attack. We need legislation to prevent innocent people, and people presumed innocent from being bitten in their genitals, breast, head, neck, and face due to the lack of regulated, controlled control of weaponized police canines. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Yes, ma'am.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
Good morning. Adrienna Wong with the ACLU California, proud co-sponsor of AB 742. I'll be speaking about the public records and data that demonstrate the need for this legislation. State use of force data tells us that in just the last few years, police canines have injured hundreds of Californians so badly that they face death, protracted and obvious disfigurement, or loss or impairment of a body member or organ. And it tells us that people of color disproportionately suffer these injuries in the jaws of police dogs.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
Canines can kill people. The data tells us that in 2021, an unarmed man in Placer County died after a police dog lacerated his lower abdomen. In Hayward, as Assemblymember Jackson mentioned, a police canine killed an 89-year-old man in his own backyard. The city there said the canine just did what it was trained to do, which is what the City of Brentwood said when a canine there scalped an unarmed woman.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
In the Oakland example that Assemblymember Jackson mentioned, the teenager that was mauled had his leg chewed to the bone. He was hospitalized for three weeks. He needed surgery and a skin graft. In Kern County, another woman was attacked while she was sleeping in her own home by a canine that was searching for a suspect. The medical report said that her ear was questionably salvageable, and she might lose her hearing. The data tells us that most of the time, people are injured this badly by canines.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
They are unarmed, and a significant percentage of them are in a mental health crisis. That tells us that police canines are not de-escalating because these are exactly the situations that should be de-escalated rather than being responded to with violence. Data and public records, including body cam footage, show that police frequently use canines to attack people who are not fleeing or hidden but in plain sight, including people lying down, handcuffed, or with their hands above their heads.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
From public records, we know the claim that there is already accountability is false. Agencies fail to discipline officers who deploy dogs to attack unarmed people stopped for minor offenses. They deem the vast majority of dog bites within policy, even when dogs attack the wrong people entirely, or the person bit was trying to surrender.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
Public records, including body cam, also showed that dogs extensively trained and regulated refuse to recall or release their bite when commanded and will attack random bystanders or ordinary citizens asleep in their own homes or living their lives in their own neighborhoods. Restricting deployment of canines to when a crime is serious does nothing to prevent this.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
Experts agree that there is no way to ensure dogs will behave as commanded, limit the force they apply to what is necessary and proportional, or even bite the right people because they are animals. Finally, the data shows that using dogs to bite human beings is unnecessary. An academic study found that discontinuing a canine unit led to no increase in injury to officers or suspects or the amount of resistance during arrests.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
And when we looked at the data for several California agencies, we found that decreases in canine deployment from year to year corresponded with decreases in shootings. Increases in canine deployment corresponded with increases in shootings. Agencies that use canines to injure people the most also have the highest numbers of shootings, while departments that do not have canine units at all have fewer or no recent shootings.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
This confirms what we know, which is that officers have many tools for arresting people that do not involve deploying indiscriminate violence into a community or inflicting grievous lifelong injury. For all of these reasons, we respectfully ask for your aye vote; thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Any other witnesses in support?
- Liz Garcia
Person
Liz Cabrera with ACLU California Action; proud co-sponsors, also for Smart Justice California.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of Initiate Justice and Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Lesli Caldwell Houston for the California Public Defenders Association in support.
- Melissa Cosio
Person
Melissa Cosio with Californians for Safety and Justice and support.
- John Vasquez
Person
John Vasquez on behalf of Communities United for Restorative Justice, in support.
- Eric Harris
Person
Eric Harris, Disability Rights California, in support.
- Nickolaus Sackett
Person
Nickolaus Sackett, Social Compassion in Legislation, an animal rights organization, in support.
- Taneicia Herring
Person
Taneicia Herring from the California-Hawaii NAACP in strong support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Tom from the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, strong support.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, San Francisco Public Defender's Office in support.
- Jeronimo Aguilar
Person
Jeronimo Aguilar from Legal Services for Prisoners with Children: All of Us or None. Thank you.
- Analisa Ruiz
Person
Analisa Ruiz with Young Women's Freedom Center in support.
- Aram James
Person
Aram James, retired public defender, also with the Coalition for Justice and Accountability, who strongly supports AB 742. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you, thank you. Now from witnesses in opposition.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Kern County Board of Supervisors and Shasta County Board of Supervisors in opposition.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
You have five minutes, or whatever way you want to parse it out.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
All right, sounds good. Thank you. Good morning, Chair, Members. My name is Alex Turcotte. I'm the chief.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Get closer to the mic so we can all hear you.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
Is that better?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Yeah.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
All right. Thank you. Chair and Members, my name is Alex Turcotte. I'm the Chief of Police with the Citrus Heights Police Department. I'm here today on behalf of the California Police Chiefs Association.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
Thank you for giving me time to share our concerns regarding AB 742. First and foremost, I want to make it clear we agree that racially biased policing is unacceptable. As law enforcement management, police chiefs are responsible for training, education, and, when necessary, discipline relating to biased conduct. This is a responsibility we take incredibly serious, which is why we have partnered with the Legislature over the years to directly address biased conduct.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
Thanks to our combined efforts, we now have mandatory background checks, robust training, public disclosure of complaints, and a decertification system that includes review of all biased conduct by Statewide Civilian Board. This is not to say our work here is done, but these are examples of direct efforts we have taken to address the issues underlying this Bill. Unfortunately, AB 742 is not a solution to biased policing. AB 742 strictly bans critical functions of our K-9 programs.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
It's important to note our statistics show overwhelmingly that these programs reduce force, de-escalate situations, and protect lives. While we are still analyzing the data, an early review of statistics from several large agencies shows K-9 force is used in a fraction of 1% of all K-9 deployments. This means in over 99% of the tens of thousands of K-9 deployments per year. The intervention has led to apprehension or surrender without use of force.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
Strict Department policies, training guidelines, statewide use of force laws, and a large body of case law work together to set the standards of use of K-9s. Notably, state law requires proportional force, de-escalation and crisis intervention reporting requirements, and more. As such, K-9s are used in response to violent activity, not low-level offenses. But in the rare situation the K-9 is deployed, they provide benefits that cannot be replaced.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
K-9s provide an early alert for officers to alert them to threats, allowing for more time and distance, both factors that are critical for de-escalation. A K-9's sense of smell, hearing, and agility allow them to identify concealed threats that might not otherwise be found by officers. K-9s can search areas that are difficult to access, such as large open spaces, attics, dark alleyways, crawl spaces, and other areas that provide a suspect a tactical advantage against an officer.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
The bottom line, AB 742 removes K-9s from a role that protects officers and the public. As such, and on behalf of the 334 police chiefs in California, we respectfully must oppose AB 742 and ask for your No vote. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Brad Meyer
Person
Good morning, Chair and Members of the Committee. My name is Brad Meyer. I'm currently a captain with the Butte County Sheriff's Office and testifying on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association in opposition of AB 742.
- Brad Meyer
Person
I'm a former handler from two different California law enforcement agencies. I have been involved with the training, deployment, and supervision of police K-9s my entire career. I have been a K-9 handler for four different police K-9s and oversee the K-9 unit as a supervisor. Police K-9s enhance safety to the suspect by de-escalation. Suspects often see and hear a police K-9 and will give up prior to use of force by the law enforcement.
- Brad Meyer
Person
More often than not, the barking alone from a police K-9 will get the suspect to surrender peacefully without any use of force at all. As a K-9 handler, I have been involved with many different critical incidences throughout my career. Many times, suspects who are violent and dangerous felons have been found by my K-9 enhancing the safety of the officers, the suspect, and the community.
- Brad Meyer
Person
I was involved in an incident where a subject had an outstanding felony warrant for weapons and drug charges and a long history of violent crimes. He was a very dangerous offender. The subject had fled the scene into a large farming area and was hiding from officers. We conducted a long search of the area and my K-9 located the suspect in an area where we were not able to search by humans. The suspect was arrested with minor injuries.
- Brad Meyer
Person
In the area where the suspect was hiding, we located many different firearms. We were unable to see the suspect during the entire search and we would not have located him without my K-9. I appreciate your time and thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in opposition? Name and organization, please.
- Sarah Aquino
Person
Sarah Aquino on behalf of the City of Folsom in strong opposition.
- Shane Lavigne
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members. Shane Levigne on behalf of the California Statewide Law Enforcement Association, Association Orange County Deputy Sheriffs, California Fraternal Order of Police, Long Beach Police Officer Association, Sacramento Deputy Sheriff's Association, and also on behalf of Jennifer Fearing and California Fish and Game Wardens Supervisors and Managers and the California Wildlife Officers Foundation. All in opposition. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Chris Emery
Person
Chris Emery, lieutenant with the Folsom Police Department, opposed.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Jonathan Feldman
Person
Chair and Members, Jonathan Feldman, this time on behalf of the City of Riverside who submitted a letter late but wanted to convey their concerns of the Bill. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Matthew Siverling
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members Matthew Siverling, on behalf of the Association for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs and the California Peace Officers Association, both in opposition. Thank you.
- Randy Perry
Person
Mr. Chair and Members Randy Perry with Aaron Read and Associates, on behalf of Porak and the California Association of Highway Patrol, in opposition.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Mr. Chair and Members, Ryan Sherman with the Riverside Sheriffs' Association, also with police officer associations of Claremont, Corona, Pomona, Palos Verdes, Newport Beach, Upland, Santa Ana, Burbank, Marietta, Arcadia, Riverside, Fullerton, Culver City, and the Deputy Sheriff's Association, Monterey County and Placer County, all in opposition. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Julio De Leon
Person
Good morning, Chair and Committee. Julio De Leon with the Riverside Sheriff's Office, on behalf of the sheriff's office and Sheriff Chad Bianco, we are in opposition. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Gregory Tony
Person
Gregory Tony, as a representative of the Western States Police K-9 Association and a prior handler, 22 years of law enforcement and have personally had a dog potentially save my life and the life.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Gregory Tony
Person
So opposed.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Robert Carlberg
Person
Robert Carlberg, on behalf of the Redondo Beach Police Officers' Association, in opposition.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Brandon Epp
Person
Mr. Chair and Members Brandon Epp, on behalf of Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna, in opposition. Thank you.
- Jim Stark
Person
Jim Stark, Witmer-Tyson Imports. We oppose.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Any other witnesses in opposition? We'll bring it back to Committee Members. Any comments or questions or... Mr. Lackey.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah, thank you. Just as a reminder, I was here in 2019 when the Legislature passed a series of laws that directed law enforcement to utilize de-escalation techniques. It was clear the public wanted less lethal force. I feel like this particular Bill, AB 742, goes into a whole nother direction.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
I'll never vote for a bill that will restrict the ability of an officer to use less lethal force and that can de-escalate a life-threatening situation. Honest to complete statistics are very, very valuable, and here's one to think about. When K-9s are activated, the suspect surrenders prior to a bite over 90% of the time. That is a very powerful consideration that you are trying to strip from law enforcement. It's safer for an officer and safer for the suspect.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
In spite of some of the stories that you have shared, I do believe, if anything, we should be using police dogs more. And that may sound contrary to, and it's not meant to be offensive. It's meant to be honest, because I believe that getting people to surrender and to stop the resistance is powerful because everybody wins, both the suspect and the officer, when you reduce resistance, and that is the role of K-9s. And so I will obviously not be supporting this Bill.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Thank you. Assemblyman Alanis.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. I have a question for the in support with the... in your records, do you show how many people have actually gave up knowing there was a K-9 on scene?
- Adrienna Wong
Person
No, that data is not available to us, nor is the comparator, I guess, of how many people will give up when there's no K-9 on scene. The closest thing we have is the one academic study that looked at a Department that discontinued its K-9 unit. And there they showed that there was no change in the amount of resistance to officers during an arrest as a result of discontinuing the K-9 unit there.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay. And you also said that this academics who's taking this survey and giving you these numbers also stated that there was a high number of suspects who were unarmed.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
No, that is from the California State Use of Force Data.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay. So with that data right there, with the unarmed, did you guys ever question or wonder why that was? Because there were so many unarmed suspects?
- Adrienna Wong
Person
I think that's part of the impetus for this Bill.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay. For the opposition. Captain, as a handler, would you send your dog into an armed suspect to apprehend an armed suspect?
- Brad Meyer
Person
Depends on the situation, but most of the time, no.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Yeah. So in my experience, I've known handlers who take care of their K-9s like as if they were their partners, and they're not going to send them into a room when there's a known armed suspect in there. So it's probably why you're getting your unarmed data is so high.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
So I've been receiving lots of phone calls about this Bill. The author obviously knows this. I've been getting text messages, emails, phone calls about this because this is really going to hit the law enforcement community. This is a tool in my eyes. And obviously, Mr. Lackey as well, that we're trying to take away from law enforcement. And this is a less lethal option. And I fear that law enforcement community is going to have to use a higher level of use of force by taking this away.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
And I fear that the unintended consequences of this Bill, unfortunately, will lead to shootings that do not need to happen. I've seen it many times where the person who was getting apprehended did stop prior to the K-9 being deployed because they did see the K-9 and they didn't want to get bit.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I'd like to know maybe the stats on how many people have been bit twice or maybe three times, because usually after one time they've been bit, they kind of know what it feels like and they would give up. And then in custodial settings, I know that a lot of 4850 claims by the deputies have gone down when they've had K-9s in there, because usually the individuals who were not wanting to give up did give up once a K-9 was on scene.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
So there are many uses to them, and there are many other factors that come into this as far as savings of money for employees, deputies, even the person that could be getting apprehended. And I see that also being a debt for the cities or the counties or even the state by not having those people available to those communities that they're sworn to keep safe. So I, unfortunately, will be a strong no on this.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other? Mr. Zbur.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I just had some questions. Are the K-9 units considered peace officers? So we have in the Committee analysis a host of a description of existing law that requires that a peace officer has the ability to use certain levels of force based on totality of the circumstances of what they may believe may be threats to people.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
For me, one of the things that is, I think, a difficult thing, especially given that this Bill is restricted to crowd control and apprehension, I think. Isn't it? Is how the K-9 unit is making these very specific determinations about risk levels from the individual who's being apprehended or the crowd that's being controlled, is the K-9 unit. I've seen in some of the letters being referred to peace officers. So are you expecting that the dog is making these determinations of who's a high risk?
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
It just sort of seems like this is a very crude way of making these kinds of determinations that I think are required under the law, where you have to make a determination at an early time. Then you set the K-9 out, and then there's no ability to really adjust the determination of the risk level. The K-9 is just sort of unleashed. And to me, that feels really inhumane to individuals to treat any human being that way.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So I'm just wondering how you comply with the existing law related to use of force when you're using a K-9.
- Brad Meyer
Person
K-9s can't evaluate use of force. Only humans can. So that dog's not going to evaluate that use of force prior to going out there. That human is going to make that call, evaluate the totality of that circumstance prior to that deployment.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So do you consider a K-9... I mean, it sounds like from the statistics, K-9s can inflict deadly force or pretty significant force. So how would you make a determination of that in the context of crowd control for example?
- Alex Turcotte
Person
Just to speak to your first question, the K-9, while we all love animals and there is some other protections for attacking a police dog, the K-9 itself is a tool. It's a less-than-lethal tool. The person held accountable to weighing the factors and deploying or launching the dog would be the handler.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
The human police officer is in charge of that scene and would be held accountable for utilizing that force.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
If I could just respond quickly to your question as well. I think it's a great question. The K-9 handler is absolutely making the decision to deploy the animal. However, at the moment of force, it's the K-9 that's making the decision. And as Sergeant Allen spoke to, the K-9's ability to exercise judgment there is not the same as an officer's.
- Adrienna Wong
Person
And that's why Professor Christy Lopez, who is a veteran Department of Justice attorney who looked at K-9 practices across the country, managed a number of consent decrees that address this issue, has concluded that the use of K-9s will result inherently in excessive use of force. Because a K-9 cannot know to modulate the force that it exerts in a moment to account for whether it's necessary, to account for whether it's proportionate in that moment, and in some instances, even if it's against the right person.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I just had one other question. Thank you. I really appreciate all of the responses. I think in your comments, you spent a lot of time focusing on some of the things that would be prevented by this Bill, which don't seem to me that the Bill prevents. The Bill looks to me like it's pretty focused on activities related to apprehension and arrest.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And so some of the things about losing the ability of K-9 units to, for example, search for weapons or that kind of thing, I'm just wondering why it is that this Bill prevents those other things that you listed as being threatened by the Bill. Because it doesn't seem to me that the Bill does that.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
Thank you for the question. I understand the logic there. I would like to say that whenever police officers are in situations where the level of violence is significant, which would allow for the K-9 to be in that environment, the environment itself is inherently dangerous. So to prevent or to be absolutely sure that the K-9 would not bite in that kind of apprehension situation basically takes any type of defense away from the dog itself, too, and takes that.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
The efficacy of that tool reduces it significantly, largely just not make sense, than to utilize the K-9 in that situation. I don't know if you want to add to that at all.
- Brad Meyer
Person
Yeah. The Bill is not going to limit the searching for weapons the K-9s are going to use to search for people that are armed or dangerous to the officer. That's kind of what we were talking about, I think.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Yeah, I guess, but in terms of the restricting, the Bill seems like it's focused on restricting use against humans to apprehend humans, to arrest humans. It doesn't seem like it would prevent the continuation of K-9 units to, for example, search luggage at the airport or do searches in a supermarket for weapons or bombs that might be there. It seems like those kinds of uses would continue, would be able to continue. Am I misunderstanding that or would.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
That's correct.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Thank you very much.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Mr. Bryan.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
No, I think my colleague from Santa Monica raised kind of an interesting point, right? And you all mentioned this as well, that many times the presence of a K-9 leads a suspect to surrender, to give up. But if you've already sent it after me and I drop down, I'm still getting bit because the dog can't... or your call-off has to be to a point that I think POST sets a really minimum level for its effectiveness. You can call the dog off within a foot from somebody?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
You can call the dog off kind of immediately after letting off? How quickly can you adjust your commands to the dog given that you see somebody is known, and how often does that happen in practice?
- Brad Meyer
Person
So that happens all the time. That's one of those things that we constantly train on. It's the only tool in law enforcement that, once deployed, can be stopped prior to making contact with the suspect and called back to the handler. That control is what we hang our hats on.
- Brad Meyer
Person
We want that. So we're constantly working on that. So that line, and you talk about POST and POST, says that the dog has to be dedicated to the suspect, and then the call-off must be accomplished. But we continually train with those higher standards where we're trying to make that call-off. So it's right at the person, and the dog listens to the handler and comes back. It's the only tool, like I said earlier, the only tool that can be called back once deployed. We can't stop a bullet. You can't stop a baton strike.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I would love to see data collected on how often the call-back happens, right? Because I think what the author is getting at is the legacy of this usage.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
That reminds me of the DOJ Ferguson report, which I was interesting that it was in the analysis, because I remember being an undergrad in college, reading the fact that 90% of the dogs in Ferguson prior to the uprising were unleashed on Black people and that every bite was a black Berson. I'm thinking about the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department and the historical reference to Black and brown people as dog biscuits, right?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And so I think that is the harmful legacy that the author is trying to get at. I think the crowd control situation is something that while our sheriff in LA County had a broader opposition, the Bill has no opposition to that, nor do, I think should anybody, knowing the legacy of law enforcement dogs and the civil rights movement. I think the author has raised a willingness to collaborate and work, because right now it's kind of a blanket, no apprehension.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
It makes me wonder, when is the K-9 unit deployed? Is it that this is a burglary, we feel like it's the K-9 unit. Who's making that determination and is there a strict criteria for when the K-9 unit is deployed, or is it just there available in a you want to go? Especially when you use such a blanket thing like a violent scenario. When is the K-9 unit deployed?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I know somebody makes that determination, but is there a statewide standard for when you can and cannot deploy the K-9 unit, or is that at the discretion of whoever is leading the K-9 unit at the time and the availability of it?
- Brad Meyer
Person
That's going to be the discretion. Use of force policy is going to dictate that, and the officer is going to make that determination on what crime that has been committed, how severe that crime is.
- Brad Meyer
Person
Does that person pose a danger to the public or the officers? Is he actively resisting? He's going to evaluate each and every call differently, and that's how that determination is going to be came to.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And I think it's some of that variation that I think the author and I don't want to speak for the author, but this Bill appears to be attempting to address as well, right?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Especially when we have the characterization of the K-9 unit as a less lethal versus could do permanent harm is inherently excessive force, right? We've got these two dichotomies here, but as a less lethal that can be deployed for anything, right?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
In fact, we prefer to deploy less lethal, not in all instances, but relative to a situation where you would have lethal force if you're not viewing the K-9 as lethal force, whereas if it did fall under lethal force or excessive force guidelines, it might fall under a different deployment schedule. But it seems like there's just wide variation right now. So I think there's a lot of work to do here. I think some folks need to sit down and talk and think about it.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And I know the Vice Chair has a deep history in this as well, but I know the author's intentions are noble and I know there's a giant gap here. And through that gap, many people are suffering life-altering damage at the hands of what we're calling a less lethal. And so I'd like to see this move forward in the work to continue, and I want to thank the author for bringing it today.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Ms. Bonta is next. Ms. Ortega. I'm sorry. Ms. Ortega is next.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
I just had a quick question. You mentioned Hayward a couple of times. That's the city that I represent and was reading the article that talked about the incident there. And in that incident, the dog that caused the death of the 89-year-old who was innocent, that dog had bitten 29 other people, and three of them were innocent.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
So I guess the question is what happens in these situations where you clearly have a K-9 who has a history of or, I don't know what happens in the situation where it's clearly that this K-9 has bitten three other innocent people and then led to the murder of another. And so I'm wondering what's happening in between that time and what you're doing to prevent that from happening.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
So I'm not familiar exactly with the Hayward scenario, but I can talk to general practice. So there's generally a use of force review that happens over any significant use of force, and K-9 definitely would be there. The reasons surrounding the deployment, including what the want was thought to be when they got there, other factors, and tools that were available to the handler at the time. All those things are taken into consideration. I'm not sure with the statistic of the innocent person.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
I don't know if that is ultimately found innocent of a crime or the wrong person in general. But as long as the handler and the K-9 have been properly trained, they're following training procedures, they reasonably did what appeared necessary in the eyes of statute, policy, and another K-9 handler, then that would be deemed proper use of force.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
If that was deemed improper because there was lack of training, lack of following through policy, the handler let the K-9 go when they shouldn't have, then that would trigger accountability measures such as either suspending the dog, retraining the handlers, or discipline, depending on the severity of the issue and the severity of the violation.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Assemblyman.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. So I just want to help for all those out there as well.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I know a lot of questions from one of my colleagues was about using options for weapons, bombs, those kind of detections. Are your K-9s cross-trained to do that for the most part? I know most are, for the most part are protection dogs. How many of them would you say if this Bill was passed, would be able to be able to do the bomb detection, the weapon detection? Because in my neck of the woods, not all of them are cross-trained and able to do that.
- Brad Meyer
Person
It depends on the agency. Majority of dogs probably are cross-trained. They have patrol apprehension functions, and then another detection portion on top of that, either firearms, explosives or narcotics, something like that. And then there's agencies that don't do that at all. So it's kind of across the board. Some just have apprehension dogs and some just have detection dogs. So it's kind of across.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay. So I just wanted to clarify that right there. And as far as my other colleagues with the call-offs, I've actually been an agitator with the sleeve and actually had the dog stop in front of me when called off. And that also will come back to a lot of training. And you can obviously tell which ones train with their dogs more often than those that don't. And I think that's something that will also be addressed later. And Chief, you alluded to the K-9. As far as my colleague giving the example of the K-9.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
How would that process go? I know you talked about policy, but would you guys immediately pull that K-9 off the street, or would you guys let it continue its shift? If you guys found immediately that there was another bite that wasn't warranted.
- Alex Turcotte
Person
If there's a K-9 bite that on its face appears to be outside of policy or egregious enough or significant enough to have caused severe injury, we would pull that K-9, in our Department, we would pull that K-9 off the street, until which time we could conduct a full investigation.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Mr.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Ms. Bonta? Go ahead. You want to answer a question or do it in your close?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Well, one of my witnesses wanted to respond to the question as well.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Go ahead. She wants to hear.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
In terms of the call-off.
- Sean Allen
Person
So it's all over social media and other places. You see many instances where the dogs are sent out to apprehend and they're either already biting or they're not biting and they're called off and they do not respond as they're supposed to.
- Sean Allen
Person
There's a case in Kern, County, I think it's all over the media, where a deputy accidentally opened the door of a K-9 officer and the K-9 went and bit a person who was already arrested in handcuffs, face down on the cement.
- Sean Allen
Person
Throughout dog training, when you're training dogs, one of the biggest things, even the dog sports that are associated to police dog certifications such as KNPV and Schutzen and IPO and all these other disciplines, one of the biggest things you see, even with high-level training dogs, high-level trained dogs, is they negate to call off when they're told to, or when they turn the corner and they face an agitator or a suspect, they bite anyway. So dogs aren't coming... they're pretty unpredictable.
- Sean Allen
Person
I mean, again, talking about the instances where there was a little boy bitten at a community service event, the dog just took off and bit the little boy in the face. It's all over social media. There is a guy walking down the street and an officer opens the door of his patrol car just to let the dog out, and the dog ran across the street and bit him. So in these instances, the dogs are being called off, but they're still biting.
- Sean Allen
Person
In the case in San Jose, which is a big issue, they send the dog out to find the person who's in a trash can and knock the trash can over, and the dog bites and locks onto the person's throat. And for over a minute, for over a minute, the dog refuses to let off. You can hear the officers, some of the officers saying, oh, my God. And once the dog just refuses to come off and continues a bite, then they resort back to saying, stop resisting.
- Sean Allen
Person
How do you resist with a dog locked onto your neck? So the dog's out of control. You can't control the dog in many situations. And that's why we're seeing instances where police officers, when they're attacked by the same dogs we're talking about, they resort to using deadly force. We only resort to using deadly force as we're trained to prevent great bodily injury or death.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Ms. Bonta.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I think my challenge is that while POST has minimum training and performance standards for police K-9s, it's very clear that there is a huge variance in terms of the deployment practices and procedures for use of K-9s. And that is of concern to me. We want to essentially have the same kind of policy applicable so that if I'm in Oakland versus Hayward versus Fresno, as a citizen, I can understand how and when K-9 might be deployed.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
And then I just wanted to comment on the opposition's initial comments around bias and the use of bias, or the sense that bias has or has not been fully addressed here. Very clearly, from the data that we have here, there's a disproportionate use of an experience of people of color being the victim of the use of K-9s, and that's irrefutable and something that should be significantly recognized. So I'm a little suspicious of the comment that you made related to that. I will be voting for this Bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other comments?
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So I just want to thank you for being here and I want to thank the author for bringing the Bill. I think it's a righteous Bill and it's important, but I am hoping that the author will work with the opposition to maybe focus on tightening it up a bit. I'm nervous about, and I know this isn't the author's intent at all. I'm nervous about the continuation of use of K-9 units for searching for bombs and weapons and those kinds of things.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And so if there could be some kind of focus on leashed versus unleashed uses of the K-9s, I would appreciate that. But I will be supporting the Bill today.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. You may close.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Thank you, Members. Very robust conversation. And this is what this Bill is intended to do. Whenever we see data that is disproportionate in use, whenever you see stories of innocent people being injured with lifelong injuries, whenever you see that, obviously there is not a statewide standard in terms of how we use K-9s.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
That means there's a problem that needs to be solved. And throughout this time, I've gotten more death threats, I've gotten more threats of violence based upon law enforcement posts about this Bill than I have received any legitimate substantive options for amendments. So the idea is that, and those who know me know that I'm trying to make sure that we have a balanced approach, but just trying to kill this Bill is not going to happen. But if we have some things that will make sure.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
I've heard stories of a K-9 that actually saved a law enforcement officer because that they were being attacked by someone, but they were able to call on the dog to save them. Legitimate. Let's figure out how to fix that to make sure those things can happen. 90% of people who see the dog, I would be one of them on the scene, they give up because they don't want to deal with the dog. Let's find how to fix that so they can be on the scene.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
But we need to protect people from being bitten in these ways. So if we want to get to the crux of making sure that we have both safety and justice, I am all for that. And I will have as many substantive meetings as possible to make sure that we get this right. Right? But we're going to leave ideology off the table because we're not going to get anywhere with that.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Let's get to making sure that both people and law enforcement, innocent and guilty, are both treated with dignity, humanity, respect, and that we can both have safety and justice at the same time. I respectfully ask for an Aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. And you and I have had several conversations about this and I've also had several conversations with Chief Luna on this and their practices.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I know you are open to some kind of statewide... I mean, there's an opportunity, as Ms. Bonta said, for maybe a statewide policy on the use of K-9s in law enforcement. And I think you're open to that because at the end of the day, as was said earlier, what happens in Hayward may be different. What happened in LA City, what happened in Tulare County. And there doesn't seem to be a statewide practice policy procedure for how to deal with that.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And so obviously I'll be voting yes to that. But I just also want to leave with the opposition that if you're listening, the author is willing to work through this, leaving you with the use of this tool that probably 90%, probably 99% of what you want to use this tool, you can do it. And there's search and rescue where there's no problem with that. It's what happens when you let this tool loose. It's just like having a gun.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
A gun by itself, sitting on the table doesn't do anything. It's the people that takes the gun. And then something may happen that could lead to tragic events, tragic events that happen in other places. So we really need to address that to make sure that no tragedies happen because of the use of K-9s.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And the last thing I would just tell individuals when it comes to K-9s and minorities and people of color, my uncle, my grandfather in Little Rock, Arkansas, to this day have problems with police dogs because what happened to them in 1957, '58, '59, '60 with police and dogs. Some of us learned what was going on. And so as you look at this esteemed body, majority of us are people of color and may not have had a good relationship with K-9s and law enforcement.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And so that's what you're hearing. And so please take that into consideration and read your audience, especially when you come and bring people up to speak on this. Because as I was watching, I didn't see a whole lot of people of color opposing us from law enforcement side. I saw a lot of diverse people from all over California that supported the Bill. And that should tell you where the people of California, when they look at this, what they want to do.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
But ultimately, you have an author there that's willing to come up with a statewide policy that you can live with and that we can live with. And I would encourage you, if it gets out of this Committee, to take full advantage of that and to figure out how we can make this happen, because we do need a statewide policy, in my opinion. And that's the beauty of this Committee, where we talk things out and hopefully, we come up with something that works for everybody.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
So hopefully we can get to that. With that, do we have a motion? Is there a second? Call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 742 by Assembly Member Jackson. The motion is do passed to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measure passes. Next, I have Phil Ting, but he's not here. I have Diane Dixon. I don't see her if she's here. I have Villapudua. Not here. So Lowenthal is here. You made it. No, I had to go through the list so they know I at least called all the names before we got to you.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
As you should, Mr. Chair.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
AB 725, item number nine.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. And I understand you received my brother here in Committee last week. My older brother.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The judge.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
The Judge, yes, the Honorable Judge Lowenthal. I appreciate the care you gave him. Thank you, Mr. Chair and Members. I am very pleased to present AB 725. This is a common sense bill. It is closing a loophole in our existing laws. It's supporting responsible gun owners in our state. It's also supporting law enforcement.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
It requires the owner of a firearm, frame, or receiver to report the loss or theft of those components to a law enforcement agency so that they can be entered into the Department of Justice Automated Firearms System. While frames or receivers are considered firearms for the purpose of registration under licensing under current law, they are not treated as such when it comes to requirements for reporting lost or stolen firearms.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
AB 725 closes this loophole by making failure to report a lost or stolen frame or receiver the same infraction as failure to report a firearm. The frame or receiver serves as the base platform for most firearms and typically houses the trigger, hammer, bolt, firing-pin, with some variants depending on the type of firearm that allow them to operate once assembled. So while these parts may seem innocuous on their own, they represent one of the critical components of any operational firearm.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
I should also point out that there is clear regulatory definition of frames and receivers by the ATF. Requiring anyone who owns a frame or receiver to report them to law enforcement agencies if they are lost or stolen is a common sense approach to ensuring that we are appropriately tracking these components that can be used to assemble a fully operational firearm. Finally, AB 725 is in keeping with existing gun laws.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Under current law, lost or stolen firearms must be reported to law enforcement agencies, and so long as they are reported, the owner is not in violation of the law. AB 725 simply represents an additional component of responsible gun ownership. I'm pleased to be joined by Ben Rudin on behalf of the Conference of California Bar Associations, who is here to testify in support of this bill.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Thank you. You have five minutes.
- Ben Rudin
Person
Thank you, Members of the Committee. Thank you for this opportunity to testify. As you said, I'm Ben Rudin, on behalf of the Conference of California Bar Associations in support of AB 725. This bill would require gun owners to report not only a lost or stolen firearm, but a lost or stolen frame, receiver, or precursor part. The frame or receiver is the part of the gun that has the firing mechanism and is considered a firearm under federal law and most of our state laws.
- Ben Rudin
Person
Reporting a lost or stolen frame or receiver or precursor part can help prevent gun trafficking. Some black market guns are built with a stolen frame, receiver, or precursor part and then sold in the black market. By reporting a lost or stolen frame or receiver, gun owners can help law enforcement track them down sooner. Furthermore, it can help prevent accidental shootings.
- Ben Rudin
Person
If someone else finds a lost frame, receiver, or precursor part and uses it to build a gun, the gun can lack valuable safety features and result in an accidental shooting. Finally, with rights come responsibilities. Reporting a lost or stolen frame, receiver, or precursor part should be a responsibility of gun ownership, as it's within the responsibility of ensuring firearms are always secure and accounted for. Now, while I still have time, I'm going to address an argument by the opposition.
- Ben Rudin
Person
In its letter, it said the term 'precursor part' is so vague that it could require people to report as lost or stolen something as benign as a pin or a spring. Luckily, that interpretation doesn't fit within the statutory scheme. The definition that we use in this bill is the same definition used in many of our firearm statutes already. Examples include requiring background checks, firearm safety certificate, and waiting ten days.
- Ben Rudin
Person
So unless the opposition is going to argue that those people might be breaking the law every time they buy a pin or a spring without a background check, a firearm safety certificate, and wait ten days, or they don't wait ten days, that interpretation falls flat. Finally, this bill simply means that if you have to do a background check, get a firearm safety certificate, and wait ten days to buy it, then you have to report it lost or stolen if that happens. It doesn't expand--it doesn't expand what's considered a firearm compared to with many of our other statutes. Thank you again, and I urge an aye vote.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Thank you. We'll hear from other witnesses in support.
- Elizabeth Buchen
Person
Lizzie Buchen, Prosecutors Alliance of California, in support.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
We'll move to witnesses in opposition. Seeing no witnesses in opposition, we'll bring it back to the Committee. I'll second. Any other comments? Mr. Lowenthal, you may close.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
I respectfully request your aye vote. Thank you.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 725 by Assembly Member Lowenthal, the motion is 'do pass to the Appropriations Committee.' [Roll Call]. That measure's on call.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Measure is on call. It needs two votes.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
That measure's on call. It needs two votes.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
We will move now--seeing in the room--Item Number 19: AB 862, Rebecca Bauer-Kahan.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair and Members. I'm here to present AB 862. Mr. Lackey has seen this bill many times. It is a simple bill that would require the County Sheriff's Office to submit a report to the Legislature that focuses on the Board of State and Community Correction success rates in reducing recidivism.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
A 2021 state audit report found that counties are lacking in their oversight for realignment spending and are withholding surplus funds that could be used to improve public safety. The Legislature should focus on bringing full transparency to the rehabilitative, exercise, and educational programs offered in our county jails.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
AB 862 will require a standardized look at the valuable information provided by the sheriffs about the success rate within the county jail's rehabilitative services. Through the use of recidivism reports, state legislators will be able to make legislative decisions that will help us ensure that those programs that work will happen more often and those that don't work we maybe won't fund. The bill will help maintain public safety, reduce the overall size of incarcerated populations, and reduce local corrections costs.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
With me today in support of AB 862 is Lesli Caldwell-Houston with the California Public Defenders Association, and Thanh Tran with the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Thank you. You'll have five minutes between you.
- Thanh Tran
Person
Thank you. Thank you. My name is Thanh Tran with the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, pronouns: he/him, Policy Associate, and AB 862 is about collecting data so we can best serve our communities by making sure that we are spending money on resources that actually work, right? So resources that are actually stopping this cycle of humans coming in and out of our county jails and then either dying or graduating to prison. So this is a very common sense bill.
- Thanh Tran
Person
If you pay an electrician to fix your lights, you want to know if your lights got fixed. And it's the same concept here. We invested millions of dollars into rehabilitation in county jails, and we just want to know if folks are getting rehabilitated. That's simply what this data bill is trying to do.
- Thanh Tran
Person
So I spent two and a half years incarcerated in Santa Clara County Jail, and 80 percent of that two and a half years incarcerated in Santa Clara County Jail, I spent locked down inside of a cell. Programming was not incentivized or was it a priority. We got, on average, about one to two hours a day outside of our cells.
- Thanh Tran
Person
I learned also in county that the majority of people who were incarcerated with me in that county jail were going through either a mental health crisis or substance abuse crisis. And these were the people who tended to cycle in and out of the jail regularly. So I understand that offering services in jails is extremely difficult. I understand that jails are not centers for healing or support.
- Thanh Tran
Person
However, it is vitally important that if a person gets to a point where they are committing a crime and getting incarcerated, if they get to that point where they are in the state's care, we have to ask ourselves why. We have to ask ourselves what happened to this person and not simply what's wrong with this person, because every person who does not come back to county jail is a person who is not committing crimes, and that is public safety.
- Thanh Tran
Person
So lastly, I want to say, no program, no county, no country can be successful without data. If we do not know what is working or not working, we cannot fill the gaps to see what will ultimately stop people from committing crimes and crowding our jails and prisons. So as conscientious problem-solvers that we are, as responsible stewards of California's tax dollars, I implore you, please pass this bill.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Thank you. Next witness.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Good morning, Committee Members. My name is Leslie Caldwell-Houston. I have nearly 40 years of work within Indigent Defense, and I'm very pleased to be here to testify in support of AB 862 offered by Assembly Member Bauer-Kahan. We as a society are always calling for data, as it's how we know what works and what does not.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Requiring sheriffs to report the nature of their anti-recidivism programs and the program's success rate in reducing recidivism can tell us what is working and what needs to be changed or reworked. We know that recidivism can be reduced by addressing the criminogenic needs of the individuals in the criminal justice system. As public defenders, we always encouraged our clients to participate and complete, be successful in any programs that were available to them. Without data, we don't know definitively what is truly successful in the endeavors to reduce recidivism.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Local sheriffs are responsible for providing these important services. Looking at success rates will assist local authorities in determining how to best distribute our resources. Because it's the sheriffs that provide the services, we need their data. Thus, this bill's requirements are critical to the overall success in reducing our recidivism rates. Therefore, we urge your yes vote. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Any other witnesses in support? Name and organization.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of Initiate Justice.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses in support?
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, State Policy Director for the San Francisco Public Defender's Office, in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Jeronimo Aguilar
Person
Jeronimo Aguilar, Policy Analyst with Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, in strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alissa Moore, Elder Freeman Policy Fellow, Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Tatiana Lewis
Person
Tatiana Lewis with All of Us or None, in strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Joanne Scheer
Person
Joanne Scheer with Felony Murder Elimination Project, in strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
All right, thank you. Any witnesses in opposition? Mr. Salzillo. Hello. Good morning. Good to see you again. Still good morning.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Mr. Chairman and Members, Cory Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association, in opposition to the bill. This is the third version of this bill, I think, and several others have preceded it. Sheriffs across the state provide meaningful rehabilitative program to jail inmates with the desire to enhance reentry into society. The offenders that come into our jail, we don't want them to come back.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
That's just the bottom line. Unfortunately, the bill is ambiguous. It's not that we're opposed to knowing outcomes about the programs that we offer, the bill just says recidivism rates, and it defines what recidivism is. We have no way of knowing when somebody recidivates, particularly outside of a particular county.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
So if I work at Los Angeles County Jail and I know that John Smith is in my custody and he gets a program and he recidivates and he comes back to the LA County Jail, I can measure that. I know that. But if John Smith is in my jail and goes through a program and gets out and then moves to Fresno County and recidivates and ends up in the Fresno County Jail or in state prison, I don't know that.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Don't have a way of knowing that short of calling the Fresno County Sheriff and getting lucky and saying, 'hey, by any chance, has John Smith been in your jail?' There's no acknowledgement of there's a lack of available ways of tracking this information. Right, wrong, or indifferent, that's just the reality of it. This bill has been vetoed. Governor said last year, 'this is overly broad, creates a large mandate, potentially costing the state millions of dollars.'
- Cory Salzillo
Person
We're not in any better fiscal position this year than we were last year. On the notion of realignment and the rehabilitative programs that sheriffs are providing, we see the value in providing those programs. We know we need to do that, but we did not ask for the obligation to supervise the population that we're talking about here, the realigned population. So it's not like the state is making an investment by giving the county's money for realignment. That was part of the deal.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
The deal was you take all of these people and put them in your jails and you supervise them on probation, and in connection with that, we will provide you the funding because we think you can do it cheaper and better than the state. We were around for that, right? So that was the deal. So it's not like the state is saying, 'hey, here's a bunch of money. Go do good stuff with it.'
- Cory Salzillo
Person
And we're saying, 'okay, we're going to spend your money, but we're not going to tell you what we do with it or how good of a job we do with it.' That's not the case. So you just need to be clear about what we're talking about. The tens of thousands of offenders who we now supervise prior--or subsequent to realignment that we didn't have before. This bill, the predecessors, none of them have money attached to it.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
I know you sit on the Subcommittee that is appropriate to this, as do others, and I know that we've had that conversation before, but none of those bills have had money. This bill doesn't have money. So if it's important that we do that, I think we ought to have that discussion. But anyway, for those reasons, we'd ask for your no vote. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any others in opposition? Seeing none, we'll bring it back to Committee Members. Any questions? Comments? Mr. Lackey.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah. This is an interesting discussion and one that I've believed in for a long time that deserves recognition, and we deserve a better metric. We deserve to know what level of success because I will tell you something from a personal side. I was very, very discouraged in believing in rehabilitation. Being a law enforcement official, all you see is failure after failure after failure after failure. So I had the unique opportunity to go to the prison as elected official, and I made an arrangement to meet with LWOPs.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
That's Life Without the Possibility of Parole. And the reason for meeting with them, these were people who had indicated that they wanted to change, and within the institution, the best thing they could hope for was an honor camp. And so I was meeting with these individuals, as a White, Republican law enforcement person. So there was no holds barred. They had nothing to gain by giving me misinformation. And I met with--it was about a dozen of them.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
And in my discussion with them, I told them the reason why I was there is I wanted to believe in change of heart because it seems like the more hardened criminals rarely, if ever, really rehabilitate. And I will tell you that I was convinced that every one of those individuals that I spoke to had a change of heart, and they wept. And these were people who identified themselves as monsters and said that they deserve to be in custody.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
And why our institution doesn't use people like that to help, I don't know. I'm trying to make that actually happen because they are the best trusted advocates that our society could ever hope for. But I do believe in change, and I do believe that we need to be better at trying to encourage positive outcomes. I do believe that there are some that will not change, that have no desire to ever change, but that should not stop our effort.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
That should not keep us from trying to be compelling and to try to track, and we need a metric to know success because all we seem to hear about are failures, and failures are something to pay attention to as well. I'm not saying that they are not. But let's also track success, right? And so we can know where we are failing in this system because I believe that there's a lot more failure than there is success.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
But that does not--I mean, I'm a super minority member. If I measured my value on success, I'm telling you, I don't know why I would be sitting here. So I'm just trying to be honest with everybody. This is a good measure. This is something. And I know there are financial challenges. When aren't there, right? To kill something because money is scarce, sometimes maybe that'll be the path, but I would tell you in 2018, I had a similar bill, and it went the direction that I hope this does not go. We need this kind of thing, and thank you for bringing it forward, and you clearly have my support.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Lackey.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Yes, Mr. Bryan?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I fully agree with Mr. Lackey.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Whoa.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I agree with Mr. Lackey.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I'm glad I could bring you together.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Ms. Bonta.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Well, speaking as the others referenced, as the Chair of Public Safety Subcommittee, I certainly agree with Mr. Lackey as well. We actually have found a lot of common ground in our Subcommittee, Budget Subcommittee related to this very same thing, making sure that we have additional transparency and information and data to be able to inform the decisions that we need to be able to make.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
And that, quite frankly, is investments in an opportunity to be able to know whether or not the rehabilitation programs and programs that we are focused on to reduce recidivism are effective and to what extent they are actually being utilized. There's no better use of our funds than to ensure that we actually have the ability to measure our progress and success with legislation as this does that allows us to be able to understand in totality in the aggregate what we are looking at.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
And I see Assembly Member Dixon right over your shoulder there, who had legislation that would have done the same but was much more specific to the individual, which I found some privacy issues with. This bill does not propose to do that. It really is trying to understand what is happening at each facility, and I appreciate that and the author's move to that. And if you are seeking co-authors, I would love to co-author this bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Love that. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Any others? With that, you may close.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I am just going to let Mr. Bryan and Mr. Lackey's words be my close. Thank you. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And I want to thank you for bringing this. As the opposition pointed out--I'll call him Cory because we've been together for so long--when we foisted everybody down to the local level, the numbers was like 160,000 that were incarcerated. It's now in the 90s. We need to know for better or worse, if we're going to be honest with one another, we're going to be honest about Prop 47, 57, rehabilitation. We need to know what happened to those individuals. Did they get into rehabilitation programs?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The reason why that number is not jumping up is because they're doing well. If they're not doing well, we need to find out why so we can make corrections to that. And so I do believe we need to fund it because I don't believe in unfunded mandate coming from local government. But most important, if we find programs that are very successful, we need to continue to fund those because there's an ROI--return on investment. We're looking at about 230 million if we close ten prisons right now.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Think about if we could close more, ensuring that the public is safe and that people don't recidivate and do more damage, how much more money we can save taxpayers. And I think we're on the same page with the opposition, that we just need to make sure they have the resources to do it.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And what bothers me, and I've said this a million times, that we can find out that information if we cut across, and maybe this is where we can help lines to give law enforcement the tools to be able to give us that information or having another group do it because as far as I'm concerned, if you just check people's state franchise tax records, if they're working every day, hopefully they're too tired to go out and create mayhem and problems.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
If they're working every Monday through Friday, hopefully they're good citizens. And I would think the majority of them, if they have a steady job which cures poverty and other problems, that they won't have time to do that. And that's an easy--think about it--that's an easy fix, but as the opposition said, they may not have access to that or we may have some constitutional barriers to be able to provide that.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Maybe we need to also help with your bill to eliminate some of those constitutional barriers so that we can get that information readily and easily. I mean, we have the technology. We can instantaneously get that information so that there's not a whole lot of staff hours at the local level.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And so I'm putting that out there as a possible solution as hopefully this moves forward so that we're working together to get this done and listen to what the local entities need to be able to be successful. Yes. This is a Policy Committee. The money part I will have to deal with later when we come over there, but we'll deal with it when it gets there, if it gets out of here. Is there a motion? Is there a second? Mr. Bryan seconded. Okay. We have a bipartisan motion and second. Call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 862 by Assembly Member Bauer-Kahan, the motion is 'do pass to the Appropriations Committee.' [Roll Call].
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measure passes.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
So we have a half hour before--is Mr. Ting here? No. Ooo. Your timing is impeccable.
- Philip Ting
Person
My ears were burning.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
So we're going to recess really close to noon and then come back again. So those of you who are waiting, we may not get to you until after 1:30 and across the way in Room 127. So depending on how long Mr. Ting is, this may be the last one.
- Philip Ting
Person
That one is short.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay. If it's short, then Mr. Patterson is after that.
- Philip Ting
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair. AB 881 is my Be the Jury bill. It builds on a pilot that I did for San Francisco to allow San Francisco the ability to privately raise funds to pay jurors, to pay low income jurors or working family jurors more money, from $15 to $100. The pilot's been so successful, we'd like to expand that throughout the state. Too often our juries do not reflect the people who are in the system.
- Philip Ting
Person
We always say you are allowed to have a jury of your peers. Most often you have people who are facing criminal trial and you have a jury that doesn't really look like them or represent them. Too often we have working people who take financial hardship and because of the fact that we're only paying them $15 a day, we excuse them. But what happens is jurors are not diverse, and they don't really represent the people who are facing potential court cases.
- Philip Ting
Person
So just for example, after we did the pilot, and the numbers are still coming in because it's a real time pilot in San Francisco, we found that the jury pool became much more diverse. 68% of the people identified as people of color, 81% of the people said they wouldn't have been able to participate without financial assistance from the pilot. And so we were very pleased with the results, and we're still getting more data. But it's clear that this is absolutely critical to make sure that we actually do fulfill our promise to allow people a jury of their peers. With that, I have one witness.
- Michelle Lau
Person
Good morning. My name is Michelle Lau, and I'm the Senior Manager of the San Francisco Financial Justice Project in the Treasurer's office. I'm here today to speak in support of AB 881, Be the Jury California, and to share our experience implementing the San Francisco Be the Jury pilot program.
- Michelle Lau
Person
By increasing jury pay for criminal cases to $100 per day of jury service for low to moderate income Californians, AB 881 would ensure that all Californians have access to a jury of their peers, which is required by our Constitution and is the bedrock of our justice system. Raising juror pay has been identified as a solution to improve our justice system for many years. In a report by the Judicial Council, they found that financial circumstances were the top reason people were granted hardship excuses.
- Michelle Lau
Person
This bill builds on a successful pilot program that we implemented in San Francisco, along with all of our justice partners at San Francisco District Attorney's Office, the Public Defender's Office, the Bar Association, and the Superior Court. In San Francisco, it's unusual to have the DA and public defender on the same side of an issue, but this bill is one of those rare cases where everyone agrees that fairness and equity are critical to having a strong justice system, and jury diversity is core to that.
- Michelle Lau
Person
Our DA and public defender both sent representatives here today because this is such an important bill for our justice system. We've also heard from DAs and public defenders across the state that this is sorely needed. In the San Francisco pilot program, we wanted to test if raising jury pay from $15 per day to $100 per day for low to moderate income jurors would make a difference in the economic and racial diversity of juries.
- Michelle Lau
Person
We have now had the program up and running for a year, and the results have been very promising. As the Member cited, the vast majority of participants, 81% of people said they could not have served without the $100 per day stipend. Participants reflect the racial demographics of our at large San Francisco population, and feedback from people has been overwhelmingly positive. People report having learned more about the importance of jury service and encourage the continuation of the program for other jurors.
- Michelle Lau
Person
Participants also have a household income of just under $40,000 on average, which means the program is indeed serving people who need the stipend the most. In terms of administration, it's been a smooth process. We worked closely with our court to build information about Be the Jury into their processes, ensured that we got the word out about the program and streamlined the application process so that's not burdensome for people applying or for the courts to review.
- Michelle Lau
Person
We'd be happy to share all of our materials with other county courts so that everyone in California has access to a jury of their peers. Lastly, I wanted to share a direct quote from a juror who participated in Be the Jury. Keith Wincitis said, Be the Jury made it possible for me to serve as a juror without worrying about whether I could afford meals or meet my basic needs.
- Michelle Lau
Person
He also explained how this program has demonstrated our commitment to building a more inclusive and just legal system. We're very excited about the possibility of expanding this impactful program statewide. Thank you to Assembly Member Ting for introducing this important legislation, and I respectfully ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Move the bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Second? Are there any other witnesses in support? Name and organization.
- Elizabeth Buchen
Person
Liz Buchen, Prosecutors Alliance of California, in support
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel on behalf of Initiate Justice and Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area.
- Melissa Cosio
Person
Melissa Cosio with Californians for Safety and Justice in support.
- John Vasquez
Person
John Vasquez on behalf of Communities United for Restorative Youth Justice in support.
- Ivana Gonzales
Person
Ivana Gonzales with Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, the Coalition for Family Unity in full support
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, San Francisco Public Defender's Office, co-sponsor in support. And on behalf of the following organizations: ACLU California Action, Fair Chance Project, Safe Return Project, GLIDE, Coalition on Homelessness, HomeRise, San Francisco Financial Justice Project, a co-sponsor, Santa Cruz Barrios Unidos, Young Women's Freedom Center, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, Sister Warriors Freedom Coalition, Asian Americans Advancing Justice Southern California, California Public Defenders Association, Communities United for Restorative Youth Justice, Conference of California Bar Associations, Drug Policy Alliance, HomeRise, Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, Prosecutors Alliance, University of San Francisco School of Law Racial Justice Clinic, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Good morning. Carmen-Nicole Cox on behalf of ACLU California Action in strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Jeronimo Aguilar
Person
Jeronimo Aguilar, here on behalf of Legal Services for Prisoners with Children. Thank you.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
Kim Stone, Stone Advocacy, on behalf of the California District Attorneys Association, in support.
- Alice Michel
Person
Alice Michel on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association, in support.
- Analisa Ruiz
Person
Analisa Ruiz on behalf of Young Women's Freedom Center and Sister Warriors, San Jose Chapter, in support.
- Tatiana Lewis
Person
Tatiana Lewis on behalf of All of Us or None in strong support.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alissa Moore, Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, in full support.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox, All of Us or None, Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, in support.
- Raynon Ross
Person
Dr. Raynon Ross on behalf of San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins, in very strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any witnesses in opposition? Any witnesses in opposition? Seeing none, bring it back to Committee Members. Any questions, comments? Seeing none, you may close.
- Philip Ting
Person
Very much appreciate the help with the Committee. Appreciate all the sponsors. Just respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Chair's recommend an aye vote. I think we have a motion and second. Call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 881 by Assembly Member Ting, the motion is do pass to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That is on call we need...
- Philip Ting
Person
Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
One more Member. Ms. Dixon.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Good morning.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Good morning.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Thank you. Are we ready?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
It looks like a bunch of people are coming up.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
All right.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I feel like you have friends.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Come on up. Thank you. All right, I think we're all here.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Item number 12, AB 758.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
That is correct. Good morning. Good morning? Good morning, Mr. Chair and members of the committee. I'm here today to present Assembly Bill 758, a form of gun control. AB 758 creates an enhancement for the possession or use of an unserialized gun, also known as a ghost gun, at the time a felony is committed. This bill specifically targets individuals who use unregistered guns because they are untraceable in order to commit crimes. This bill is not unprecedented.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
It would bring ghost guns to the same level of enhancement as using an assault weapon when a felony is committed. California has some of the strictest gun laws in the nation, yet we still experience tragic mass shootings and senseless killing every year. According to the ATF, more than 30% of all guns that law enforcement recovers are considered ghost guns. Individuals who commit crimes hide behind the anonymity of using a ghost gun.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
Good morning, and thank you, Assemblymember Dixon, and good morning, Chair and members. I'm happy to speak in support of this bill. We do have serial number requirements on firearms for a reason.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
This is a simple gun control bill that intends to reduce the criminal use of ghost guns. My primary expert witness this morning to speak in support of the bill is San Joaquin Deputy District Attorney Cindy De Silva.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
They're required by federal law, and they help us identify if the gun has been stolen so we can get it back to the true original owner. They also help us, if it's been used in a crime, to figure out who potentially was the perpetrator. It helps us go back in time and find out where it was purchased from, by whom, what time, when, and what town, et cetera. so we can put things together and try to figure out how this gun ended up in the chain of commerce, in the stream of commerce, and in the hands of the perpetrator. And crimes are solved that way. It also helps us to determine if the gun was used in a crime at all. And what this measure would do is possession of a firearm without a serial number is only a misdemeanor. That's not a very strenuous legal situation for a person to find themselves in.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
What this bill does, it's rather creative. It only targets the higher-level offender who's using it to commit a felony. So, while possession of the unserialized firearm is just a misdemeanor, if they actually use it in the commission of a felony, that's when this bill would kick in. One of the letters in opposition said that we should let financial penalties deter manufacturers of these type of weapons, rather than criminal penalties deter the perpetrators.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
But I see no evidence that that would be any more deterring for the manufacturers than the criminal penalties would be. The opposition to these types of measures oftentimes quote studies that say that penalties and enhancements do not deter crimes. But those studies are subject to their own biases. And there are studies on the other side that say the opposite. I think we're all in favor of using a health care approach to help with gun violence, but it can be a both and.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
And I don't see any health measures right now that are protecting against the use of these unserialized firearms, which are one of the crimes confronting law enforcement today. I don't want to speak out of turn. I'm not the author of the bill, but if we're concerned about having a public health approach, maybe we can do something like a sunset date until that healthcare approach kicks in because it has not yet this bill does something. And so with that, I'll seed the rest of my time.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you. I think that's it. I'll turn it. Any other comments?
- Kimberly Stone
Person
You know what? I don't have anything else. Kim Stone, on behalf of the District Attorneys Association and enthusiastic support, as is the animal or child or whatever that was along the line.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
It deterred her from further speaking, Mr. Chair.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I'm sorry. That's my grandson. Any other witnesses in support?
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Mr. Chair and members. Cory Salzillo on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association, in support.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Ryan Sherman with the Riverside Sheriff Association and all the other POAs I previously mentioned in support. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any witnesses in opposition?
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Thank you. Assemblymember.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Whenever you're ready. Five minutes.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Good morning, Chair and committee members. I'm still Lesli Caldwell Houston, representing the California Public Defender's Office, and I'm here to testify on their behalf in respectful opposition to AB 758. AB 758 proposes yet another sentencing enhancement to our criminal code. While we agree that eliminating ghost guns is a worthy endeavor, this bill and those of its ilk will not solve the problem of guns, ghost guns or otherwise. Diverting our limited resources to imprisoning Californians we know is not a solution.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
It is a return to the mass incarceration that we are trying to and succeeding at getting passed. We need to pivot to a public health approach now to the pandemic of guns in our state and our country. This approach would be and has been more cost-effective, humane, and successful in achieving our goal of reducing guns and gun violence. Adding enhancements of years in prison to crimes is not heard by the audience you seek to reach.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
I can tell you that none of the individuals that I represented in my many, many years as a public defender thought ahead of time about how much time they would get for what they were about to do. They don't think that way. People don't think that way. They think about the needs they have due to poverty or violence in their community or health, both physical and mental. When we work together to solve those issues, we can have a more just and safe community.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
The legislature could allow individuals to sue companies that supply or manufacture ghost guns or ghost gun equipment. Serious financial penalties are more likely to slow or stop the flow of ghost guns into our state. We know this in other areas, such as cigarettes, tobacco. Also, this bill is not needed. There are many laws already on the books that punish the possession of use of a gun in a crime.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
These penalties range from a year up to 25 years to life, depending on the seriousness of the offense. We respectfully request your no vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in opposition?
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Me?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Oh, go ahead. Oh, you're sharing. Go ahead. Yes.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Thank you.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
That's okay. Good morning, Mr. Chair and members Carmen Nicole Cox for ACLU Cal Action. ACLU Cal Action is opposed to AB 758 respectfully, and in fact, we have a history of opposing policies that seek to ratchet up criminal punishment for conduct that is already a crime. We have been in every hearing of this committee since this session of the legislature began singing the harms of sentence enhancements and the elimination of judicial discretion.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I'm sorry.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
AB 758 seeks to do both while we respect the goals of the author and that is to improve the lives of Californians in District 72 and beyond by addressing criminal conduct. As my colleague has said, we know this bill will not achieve its aim. AB 758 removed the tool from the justice toolkit with language that explicitly tells judges they cannot dismiss firearms-related enhancements even when it's in the interest of justice.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
We are opposed to AB 758 because research indicates that it is the certainty of punishment, not the severity, that best serves as a deterrent. Further, the creation of these redundant crimes contributes to a relentless trend known as over-criminalization.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Meanwhile, we have not made our community safer or our children healthier; even if we are not dissuaded by the racist outcomes known to flow from over-criminalization, we should care that over-criminalization is expensive, so much so that even conservatives and republicans have embraced the necessity to balance budgets by reforming the criminal justice system.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
This reform started in the south, in Texas, where a traditional lock-them-up approach gave way to a new way of thinking about how best and how economically to protect citizens from criminals. I'll just note quickly that from 2001 to 2004, Texas experienced a 9% increase in its prison population by seven. It had billions in prison costs and had an incarcerated population that required the building of at least four new prisons.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
The article, The Conservative Case for Criminal Justice Reform, reports that the state never built those prisons. Instead, it passed comprehensive criminal justice reform packages that focused on reentry, treatment, and diversion programs. These reforms have generated impressive results, and in fact, Texas has begun closing prisons, saving billions in taxpayer dollars. Unfortunately, 758 only perpetuates overcriminalization and inordinate spending on the operations of carceral facilities. I'm just going to close by saying AB 758 does the opposite of what it is we should be trying to do.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
And I ask for the committee's no vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay. Any other witnesses in opposition? Seeing none. We'll bring it back to committee members. Any questions?
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah, I'm supporting this particular measure, Ms. Dixon, because the legislature should send a very universal condemnation for the use of ghost guns. You know, there's always this great debate that comes up in this body about the effectiveness and the efficacy of punitive circumstances. But I will tell you, as a person with a degree in special education and the study of behavior modification, there's a reason why timeout works.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
There's a reason why punitive measures if done properly, are effective. And I think that punitive measures deserve to be taught because they're not automatically thought about. And this is what your measure just tries to address and attach behavior with ghost guns because when you clearly have violated the public trust by using a ghost gun, it's another egregious affront against society, and that's why you deserve to be support on this measure, and you do have my support.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Anyone else?
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I'd also like to make some comments. Again, thank you also for bringing this bill up. And it's unfortunate that we're already trying to chase down guns, let alone now ghost guns. And with the opposition comparing it to tobacco, I don't think that warrants a comparison. And that your clients, they don't think that way when they're committing the crimes. Well, the victims are not also expecting them to be thinking that way also.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
And I think if there is nothing as far as a consequence, then it's not going to prevent them from continuing to victimize people. So, I will definitely be supporting this. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Anyone else?
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So I want to thank the author for thinking about issues of gun safety. I'm not going to be supporting the bill today. I don't believe that penalty enhancements sort of at this level are effective. I agree with the folks from the ACLU on that.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And importantly, if we were going to be doing things like this in this area, I'd want to see support from the major gun safety organizations on the bill, and I don't see that here. So, I won't be supporting it today. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Anyone else? You may close.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Well, thank you, committee. Just to reiterate a couple of the points. Just to understand how we can create safe communities and criminals are using these guns. There is an act of crime being committed and they intentionally are using ghost guns so they can evade law enforcement. So that's what I'm trying to get at.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
And if with this enhancement, and I agree with the public health and rehabilitation, you've heard me speak about, that there's nothing more than we want is to have people rehabilitate their lives and let help us help. And I'm all in favor of that. Of course. Actually, an enhancement gives a small enhancement of two years or three years of the commission of the crime, more time to help rehabilitate the individual. They committed a crime with an illegal weapon.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
And that's what I'm trying to get at and control the use of illegal weapons. And further, I don't want to think any of us want to see another senseless killing in our cities when we can take this step to deter the use of ghost guns used in criminal activity. I just want to do everything I can to eliminate the use illegal use of guns. And that's the purpose of this bill.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
But I'm very grateful for your thoughts and comments, and I encourage and aye vote, so thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And I believe you sincerely want to do this. Actually, this is one of the items where we're in full agreement that we need to eliminate ghost guns by any means, just about any means necessary. The challenge with this, it goes back to the three strikes. Like, the more people we lock up, the better society will be. And that did not work for a lot of people in my community and in other places.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
So while I agree that we need to do more, it's good to see someone from across the aisle want to get rid of guns because sometimes it's not always the same. We're usually at opposite ends. So this is refreshing in a lot of ways. And maybe we can continue to talk, if this doesn't get out of this, out of this committee, about what the appropriate ways are or getting more money for public health-related type of help to make sure we can keep those ghost guns out of people's hands. And you're right, we haven't done enough. And we probably need not only do more, but get it done quicker, which where I think you're getting to.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Well, I would appreciate the committee's reconsideration. I'd be honored.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Well, first...
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
I got ahead of myself.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Yeah, you don't know what's going to happen with the vote yet. Well, we may not have enough members. Go call the rolls.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 758 by Assemblymember Dixon. The motion is do passed to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Motion fails, and you're asking for reconsideration?
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
I am indeed.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay. There's no objection. Unanimous consent for reconsideration.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Thank you very much.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
As the hours is noon and we all need to get to some meetings right now, we're going to adjourn. I'm sorry? Recess. Recess. I'm not going to hit the gavel. Recess until 130 across room 127, which is across the hall from this room.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
All right, that's fine.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I didn't pound out. No, I did not. Because I'd remember. We're coming back from recess. We now have Mr. Patterson.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
All right. Joe Patterson.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Mr. Joe Patterson. I do have to make that distinction. I'm sorry. Assemblymember Joe Patterson. AB 890 item number 21.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
All right, well, hey, thank you very much. I did have. Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members. Switch around real quick. I'm here today to present AB 890. I want to thank the Committee and the staff for working with me on this measure. AB 890 would essentially require folks granted probation for violations of laws pertaining to fentanyl to take a class developed by the Department of Public Health. It's important to know that current law already mandates education as a condition of parole for these types of crimes.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
This one just specifies what kind of education it needs to be. It really creates no additional burdens on the individual on probation. As many of you know, tackling the fentanyl crisis has been a top priority of mine. I'm sincerely trying to approach every single avenue. Yesterday, my woman of the year, honored just yesterday, was Laura Didier, who's in the audience. She lost her son to fentanyl poisoning two years ago. Since that time, she's educated over 50,000 people about the dangers of fentanyl.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
One of those people being me. I had absolutely zero idea what fentanyl was until Zach died right in my community. As a result of his poisoning, my 10 and 8 year olds already know about the dangers, but it isn't just parents and kids. To my surprise, it is also people currently involved in the criminal justice system. I don't believe in coincidences, but, no lie, Laura received this letter from an individual incarcerated just a few days ago.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
And I was going to read a lot of excerpts, but I know it's been a long day. But I'll say that this letter is very heartfelt about what this individual has learned from Laura's advocacy and the tragedy of losing her son to fentanyl poisoning and is really a touching letter. And he doesn't ask for anything. He just wanted her to know how much this education has meant to him.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Because I do believe that some can be changed and helped, and perhaps the dangers and the real world consequences might help folks change their direction, saving lives and also keeping those folks out of prison. Today I welcome Placer County District Attorney Morgan Gire and my friend and also inspiration, Boomer Bennett, one of my favorite constituents to testify here in support of AB 890.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
You both have a total of five minutes. Whenever you're ready.
- Morgan Gire
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon, Mr. Chair, fellow Committee Members. Again, my name is Morgan Gire. I'm the District Attorney of Placer County. Like so many other communities across our state, we've been hit hard with the fentanyl crisis and have seen too many lives taken too early. The devastation of fentanyl, its lethality, combined with its addictive properties, and sadly, its accessibility, has been truly damaging. To meet this challenge, we've launched an aggressive outreach and education campaign across our community.
- Morgan Gire
Person
We've partnered with public health, our treatment providers, and substance use disorder experts, as well as bereaved parents who have lost children to fentanyl poisonings. We've spoken to every high school in Placer County, two assemblies a day, over 30,000 students. We've hit thousands of parents in parent teacher nights, as well as launched a campaign at our middle schools. We've posted billboards, we've wrapped buses, we've put things in inserts.
- Morgan Gire
Person
We've done everything we can to reach as many people as we can about the dangers of fentanyl. Reaching those at the epicenter of this crisis, battling addiction, those who distribute in our community, those are who we need to reach. AB 890 does exactly that. It provides critical information and resources to those who have intersected with the criminal justice system. AB 890 will educate, everything from its addictive properties to the effectiveness of naloxone to, as we see in the letter, the tragedies of fentanyl.
- Morgan Gire
Person
Our goal is to educate everyone we can and this Bill enables us to do so in a way that reaches a critical segment of our community. I thank the Committee for your time and respectfully request an aye vote on AB 890.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Thank you. Yes, sir.
- Boomer Bennett
Person
Thank you guys for having me. I was incarcerated for the majority of my life. My last stint, I did 12 years in California State prison because of drug usage and gang banging and all of the violent things. While being in prison, there wasn't anything like this. There was things that they made you aware, but it lacked the educational perspective. So for me, the reason I adjusted my behavior because I seen from an educational perspective what the harm I was doing to myself and the community.
- Boomer Bennett
Person
And because of that, I was able to change my perspective. There are many other individuals who are in prison. I got many friends and family members who are in prison right now who are lacking the educational perspective of certain things, such as drugs and fentanyl, specifically speaking.
- Boomer Bennett
Person
Definitely in the African American and Latino communities that are poverty stricken and have economical factors, being able for them to understand. When an individual is given fentanyl to sell the only reason it's used to being sold is because of the profit that you gain from it. So when someone older than me gives it in my hand and says, hey, go sell this, this will give you what you want in regards to money and all those kind of thing.
- Boomer Bennett
Person
But it doesn't tell you the negative properties of it. From my perspective as an individual who used to be a gang member and a criminal, if I knew that fentanyl would do what it does to my sister, her son, and killed her son, if I knew that that was a possibility while I'm selling this, I would have that knowledge in my head. I would be informed educationally about the harm that it does, as well as me trying to make money off of it.
- Boomer Bennett
Person
And because of that, I think individuals, from an incarcerated perspective, from a probationary perspective, I think giving them the proper education about this matter is one of the most effective things we can do in regards to letting individuals know who think selling fentanyl or any other drug, to think that that's the only way that they have, giving them the educational factor of the damage that it causes, and then giving them the ability to think of which one to choose. Like me, myself, I chose the latter.
- Boomer Bennett
Person
I chose to forsake that lifestyle and get on board. And that's why I'm talking to you guys here now. So thank you, guys. Appreciate it.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in support?
- Laura Didier
Person
My name is Laura Didier. I'm here in support representing my son Zach, killed at 17 by fentanyl and the Empower and Resilience Project. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you, and thank you for being here.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
Cindy De Silva, on behalf of the California District Attorneys Association in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Stephanie Herrera
Person
Stephanie Herrera with the BTS Commission in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Anyone in opposition? I think she can sit there as long she gets the mic.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Good afternoon.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Good afternoon.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
My name is Lesli Caldwell-Houston and I'm here on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association in respectful opposition to parts of AB 890. My heart breaks for the families that have lost family members because of fentanyl poisoning. My husband and I lost a very dear friend to fentanyl poisoning. He did not know what he was taking. While we completely agree that teaching individuals about fentanyl dangers, we agree with that. We do not agree with charging a fee.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
We do not agree that that's the appropriate approach. While the amendment removed the explicit authority to charge people a fee to take the program, the resort will be to revert to a pay to take program situation. The Bill does not require explicitly that the programs be free. This means that participant programs will impose a fee, much like other court-ordered programs such as anger management courses. They may not say they're charging a fee. They'll call it a sliding scale.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
But this rarely, if ever, means no fee. A pay-to-participate program is problematic because clients can't pay, therefore they don't take the program. Therefore, they violate probation. Therefore, they go back to jail. Further, there's no opt-out clause allowing a court to decline to order classes if the defendant's real issue is not drugs, but rather something else, like mental health problems. Ordering a mentally ill defendant to do tangential things is a detriment. Putting too many requirements on those defendants often leads to their failure.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Their failure leads to more incarceration. In my long career, and many of you have seen decade after decade of this drug, heroin, then we had methamphetamine. Now we have fentanyl. Soon we will be hearing about trank. We need to be really careful about how we put these programs together and how we get people into the programs and to successfully complete. For these reasons, we respectfully request your no vote. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in opposition?
- Glenn Backes
Person
Good afternoon. Glenn Backes for the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights. The Bill is much improved by the amendments, but until the issue of the fee is dealt with, we remain opposed unless amended. We're opposed to putting fees on defendants and their families because that's who ends up paying them for participation in probation services. We think the education is important, but until we deal with the fee, we align ourselves with the comments of CPDA.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses in opposition? We'll bring it back to Committee Members for questions. Mr. Bryan and Ms. Bonta.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I very much want to support a Joe Patterson Bill. I see your thoughtfulness. I see the way you're growing with all of the stakeholders on these issues to try to make something happen. This particular problem with this Bill is not new to this Bill. In fact, I actually left a testifying judiciary to remove a fee required for parents to reunify with their children. If they can't pay for a program, we're barring reunification.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
It's a common punishment on poverty where we impose additional conditions for you to be successful, but then prevent you from being successful because you can't afford them. If we're going to require people to take an education class on fentanyl, we should make sure that it's paid for, particularly if the inability to pay for it could result in them violating their supervision and so I very much hope that you find a way to incorporate that into the work of this Bill.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
But I would like to see you get out of Committee today.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Yes, Ms. Bonta.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I would like to see it get out of Committee today with the amendment around the fee payment, for the same reasons that the comments in opposition, or I guess, support, if amended, made and for Mr. Bryan's proposal. I would love to hear from the author why there is an insistence on requiring a fee, and that will definitely help me understand whether or not I'll be able to vote for this.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
You know, by the way, we can talk about what we do in Placer County. In Placer County we'll take care of tha, but obviously, there's, I think, 57 other counties. But I am not insistent that the fee must be paid, and I think the original version of the Bill did have language to have the fee waived by a judge if needed.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
So I don't have any opposition to adding some kind of fee waiver process to this legislation, and I would definitely do that if that was the desire of the Committee.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
So you're proposing a fee waiver ability by the judge. At the discretion of the judge, the judge may be able to issue a fee waiver?
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
That was the language in the Bill originally. My understanding is there are other types of fee waivers, for example, like on DUIs and things like that. So if there are specific desires from the Committee in terms of extrapolating the fee waiver, I'm happy to do that. I'm not looking to not waive the fees. If the Committee wants a fee waiver, we will get a fee waiver in there 100%.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
What about the option of not having a fee at all?
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Honestly, I don't personally care. I think there are a lot of, obviously, probation programs and things like that, and there's probably systemic issue there that I think we need. Hey, I happen to sit on that Committee with you as well that would probably look at things like that. But I do think we probably have a systemic issue in terms of how fees are in probation programs in general, and I am more than willing to have that ongoing discussion.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
I don't know what the impacts would be if I just did a complete fee waiver for anybody and how that changes this particular probation versus other types of probations. Does it make this one unbalanced and the other ones where they're still having to pay fees? And I think that's a broader discussion. Again, I don't really object to having a fee waiver in it. I am concerned, however, that maybe in appropriations it gets stuck there. But I have no issue with having a fee waiver.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
I think it's important. I think if people are granted probation for possessing or selling fentanyl into communities and they can learn about it and that saves lives, I think that governments should pay for that 100%. I think it's much cheaper to do a fee waiver, and like Boomer said, and then also this letter, to be able to learn about it and learn about the risks and the possible deaths. And if we can waive fees for that, I'm all for it, 100%.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Can we hear from the witness in opposition regarding this proposal? A fee waiver.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
My problem with a fee waiver is that there are many old school judges and even some new school that feel like you can't learn if you don't have some skin in the game and you have to pay a fee. We've worked very hard to get rid of a lot of fees and fines across the board and to come in and impose another one saying, oh well, but the judge can waive it, that's not necessarily going to happen.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
I hate to have a jaundice view of what the judge will and won't do, but I do have that jaundice view, and I worry about that.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Let's just say there is a mechanism, and I think it will be very helpful, especially if you want to get it out of this Committee. There is a mechanism where if you were to agree on no fee, that could be done in Appropriations. That's from a procedural, but I have a feeling you'd have to agree to that. So I'll let Mr. Lackey speak.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah. Thank you. First of all, to Boomer. Congratulations. We're very proud of you and hope that it continues to work in your favor. I will also say that I believe that this Bill and the fee, which seems to be the focus of opposition, that you agreed to go silent on this issue.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
It wasn't that you said that you're insistent on a fee being existence, because essentially, it was my understanding that you had a similar provision that would identify, similar to a domestic violence circumstance where the fee may be imposed. And I have a jaundice view, too, and it's usually against victims.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
There comes a point where you have to respect judges training, expertise, and their ability to make that. But I think no matter what needs to happen, I think Zach's tragedy and the tragedy of others deserves recognition of the urgency of us doing better on this particular issue. And this is a very, very reasonable proposal. And if we have to waive fees, then let's make sure that happens, because we need to move on this, and it's clear you're going to have my support. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I agree with Mr. Lackey. There's a lot of that going on right now. Mr. Patterson.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
I mean, not being a lawyer and understanding the probation system like my good friend over here, maybe he can address that some more. But I can tell you, we can get rid of the fee. It's not about the fee to me. I understand why it's important to the opponents, because obviously people would have to pay it. I don't want people paying the fee if they can't afford it. I want people to get the education.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
So whatever the mechanism is to make that happen, I'm supportive of that and also hopeful that in the Appropriations Committee, that they feel the same way.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And just so you know, you are the author of the Bill, so you have 100% control.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Well, I have control over what I do, but the Committee has control over what happens in that Committee.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Right now it feels like to get it out of this Committee. You can commit. If it gets out of this Committee, then when you get to a props.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Oh 100%. I will 100% commit to that. I won't even hear the Bill if we can't come. I'll call my good friend Assemblymember Bryan over here, and he can tell me how it's done, and we'll do it. But we got to make sure Assemblymember Lackey agrees. Just to keep the synergy going on. Exactly.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Just don't mess up the karma, right?
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
I mean, look, I'm not going to try to jam this Committee in Appropriations. I mean, I'll never get a Bill out of this place again if I do that. So I commit to working on that.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay. Is there any more comments? Move the Bill. Is there a second? Okay. With the provisions we have stated, Chair is recommending an aye, especially when we get to Appropriations. Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 890 by Assemblymember Joe Patterson. The motion is due passed to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measure passes.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
We'll now do Bryan. Item number 17, AB 819.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Hi.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Good morning.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Afternoon, Mr. Chair.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Good afternoon. Time flies. Whenever you're ready. I flew up on the plane. You could have just explained it to me yesterday.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
That's a good witness. Afternoon, Mr. Chair and colleagues; I'm here today to present AB 819, a bill that will remove the possibility of a person receiving a misdemeanor and incarceration simply for evading a fare for public transportation. Fair evasions, we know, disproportionately impact low-income riders of color.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Studies in Los Angeles and in the Bay Area consistently showed that fair enforcement disproportionately targets black and brown communities and that people of color face harsher penalties when they are stopped. Recent data in Los Angeles showed that only 8% of the population is Black, but over 20% and only 19% of the metro ridership. Yet over 50% or more of all fair citations and arrests for fair evasion from 2018 to 2021 are Black people today. If you evade the fair, you can be cited.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
If you evade the fair again, you can be cited again. If you evade the fair a third time, you can be cited with a $400 fine and spend up to 90 days in jail. If we put somebody in jail for 90 days, just to be clear, in Los Angeles County, we could have also just bought them a metro pass for 37 years. It's not a deterrent. It's the criminalization and the punishment of poverty.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And we can remove that threat of incarceration because if we actually ever acted on that threat, it would be significantly better for the public interest to just start buying folks metro passes, which would be my ideal goal. So what this bill would do is remove that threat of incarceration and end the punishment of poverty for evading the fair.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And your witness?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And my witness is Bubba Fish, Co-director of State Policy for Streets for All. Take it away, Bubba.
- Bubba Fish
Person
Thank you, Assemblymember, and good afternoon, Mr. Chair and committee members. I am Bubba Fish. I'm the Co-director of State Policy for Streets for All, a transportation advocacy organization, and we're proud sponsors of AB 8119 with Assemblymember Isaac Bryan and currently, in California, using transit when you can't afford fare can get you charged with a misdemeanor on par with driving under the influence or property theft, and even up to 90 days in jail.
- Bubba Fish
Person
AB 819 will remove the possibility of criminal charges and incarceration for not paying public transportation fare. So, at its core, as Assembly Member Bryan just said, the criminalization of fair evasion is an equity and social justice issue. Studies in LA and across the nation in places like Washington, DC, New York City, Portland, Minneapolis, and other cities have shown that fair enforcement disproportionately targets black, brown, and low-income transit riders and that people of color face much harsher penalties when they are stopped.
- Bubba Fish
Person
An analysis performed by Labor Community Strategy Center shows that 50% of LA Metro citations for ferry evasion are given to black transit riders, despite those black transit riders making up just 19% of overall ridership. There are agencies across the state whose enforcement policies are undefined and unclear, but several, including VTA in Santa Clara County and El Dorado Transit in El Dorado County, list their ferry evasion penalty as, quote, up to the maximum penalty allowed by law.
- Bubba Fish
Person
So that's really why this matters because there are still transit agencies citing the full extent of the law. And in current California law, that law is if they evade fair three times, they can be sentenced with a misdemeanor and spend up to 90 days in jail. So not only does the punishment not fit the crime, the numbers don't add up.
- Bubba Fish
Person
A transit pass costs one to $3, and the cost of incarcerating someone for 90 days could pay for 37 years, as Assemblymember Bryan just said of LA metro monthly passes. So that's why recently, transit agencies and cities across the country, including Washington, DC, back in 2019, removed criminal penalties for ferry evasion on transit, and the legislature first took steps in 2016 in California to no longer criminalize and incarcerate minors for ferry evasion through SB 882, authored by Senator Hertzberg.
- Bubba Fish
Person
So, the time is now, in our view, to expand this policy to all Californians and stop the criminalization of poverty and streets for all. Respectfully urges an aye vote on this bill. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses in support?
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of Initiate Justice and Californians for Safety and Justice.
- Rebecca Gonzales
Person
Rebecca Gonzalez, National Association of Social Workers, California Chapter, in support.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Lesli Caldwell Houston, for the California Public Defenders Association in support.
- Anna Reeves
Person
Anna Lisa Reeves, with Young Women's Freedom Center and Sister Warriors Freedom Coalition, San Jose Chapter, in support.
- Joanne Scheer
Person
Joanne Scheer, on behalf of Felony Murder Elimination Project, in support.
- John Vasquez
Person
John Vasquez, on behalf of Communities United for Restorative Justice in support.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Good afternoon. Glenn Backes, Ella Baker Center in support.
- Jeronimo Aguilar
Person
Jeronimo Aguilar, here, on behalf of Legal Services for Prisoners with Children and strong support. Thank you.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox, All of Us or None in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any witnesses in opposition? Any witnesses in opposition? Seeing none, bring it back to the committee. Any questions? Mr. Lackey?
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah. Let me begin by congratulating the witness and admit that Bubba Fish is a much cooler name than Tom Lackey. Thank you. Just thought I would acknowledge that. But here's the problem with this particular proposal.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
I believe that ridership on the metro system, wherever it is, is plummeting because there's lack of trust because of, and the loss of ridership is quite significant because of lack of trust and confidence people have because of misconduct that happens in that system. I will tell you that I just took that system last week, and it was about 11:00 and I was in fear with some of the behavior that took place right next to me. So that's not unsubstantiated.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
And I feel like, I know that your intent is clearly noble in trying to address a very significant need, but I don't think this is the right pathway. And I do acknowledge that we need to do better in the way we're handling our homeless population. I think the services that we are not offering and the support that we're not offering is the problem.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
But I don't think this pathway because I think it enables habitual offenders, and I know that's not your intent, but I think that is the outcome, so I can't support it. I'm sorry about that. I broke our streak.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Yes, well, certainly move the bill and appreciate that in the Bay Area, transit system is widely used. We have BART. My family has often been on BART at all hours of the evening.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
And I want to just offer an opportunity to make a distinction between the evading of the fair and jumping the booth, which, by the way, I used to probably do in New York City when I was a kid and hope the statute of limitations has run out on that and what may or may not be appropriate behavior or criminal behavior when you're in the stations and on the booth. And those two things are separate.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
A toll evader is not necessarily somebody who's then going to continue to commit other kinds of offenses. So, with that, I will be voting for the bill. Would love for you to be able to speak to that issue in particular. And I'll also move the bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Mr. Zbur?
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I'll second the bill, but I did have a question for either the staff or the author. When folks have repeated parking violations for their automobiles, do we ever criminalize them, and with fines that are this big and potential jail time?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
We do not threaten you with 90 days incarceration for a parking ticket. In fact, I had very many of them at UCLA and was never threatened with being incarcerated for not being able to pay them, which I couldn't do as a student.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
That, I think, is sort of a key point on why this bill is so important, which is that it focuses on the differences between people who have cars, who are treated in one way, and people who don't have cars and rely on public transit who are treated in a different way. So, I will be supporting the bill. Thank you very much for bringing it. And I second it.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Any others with that? You may close.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I think, I want to thank my colleagues for the conversation. I think that's a tremendous point, Mr. Zbur. If you engage in any kind of criminal conduct on transient, it is still illegal. This doesn't stop that. This doesn't even stop you from being cited for a fair evasion, although I think we should have that very necessary conversation in the legislature.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
All this does is say that we will not incarcerate you for 90 days and charge you in a misdemeanor because you were too poor to pay your fare or you chose not to pay your fare because you were balancing the trade-off of eating or feeding your family in addition to riding public transit, as was mentioned earlier, the idea that we would spend 90 days incarcerating somebody instead of just buying them 35 years of metro passes, which would be cheaper, it's a problem in state law, and we can fix that problem today.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. And I want to remind the members of the Committee that we generally have law enforcement here. So before you admit to a crime that you may want to repeat,
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I was a poor kid in the Bronx taking the train for an hour and a half every day.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Law enforcement people are laughing. Okay, I hear that. The three things that why people in LA don't ride the metro, obviously because of the fear of crime. But the other two is cleanliness and reliability. And I don't know which of those two or three is the most important. But crime is not the most important. It's one of the factors. And to assume that people who don't pay the fare are automatically the ones who are creating the crime? We don't know that.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
We don't know that at all. So I'm glad you're bringing this forward because, at the end of the day, I like your analogy that if we were to just pay for these for people who are impoverished or in poverty, we might be able to eliminate it altogether because that's the only reason why somebody wouldn't pay it unless they're having fun just jumping, jumping over things. So with that Chair is recommending aye vote.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 819 by Assemblymember Bryan, the motion is do passed to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call].
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The measure passes. And Mr.Villapudua. AB 701, item number 7. Control substance fentanyl.
- Carlos Villapudua
Person
Thank you, Chair and members. I am proud to present AB 710 today, an effort to crack down on fentanyl epidemic and save lives across California. Fentanyl has been responsible for 83% of the opioids-related deaths in California in recent years and has increased the opioids-related deaths toll by over 40% year over year. It is 50 times stronger than heroin. But despite of all this, possession of large quantities of fentanyl with the intent to sell has been treated with more legency than other familiar controlled substance, and that is not right.
- Carlos Villapudua
Person
AB 710 is a common sense measure that simply provides a level of playing field for the enforcement of a lethal substance. The bill allows us to penalize high dealers and high-level dealers. Those are people in possession of a kilogram or more in quantity. This is the same manner that we penalize dealers of heroin and similar substance. AB 710 does not target users or low-level dealers.
- Carlos Villapudua
Person
With me to testify today in support of this measure is Cindy De Silva with the San Joaquin County District Attorney's Office and Mrs. Fleming, a mother who has experienced the tragedy of the epidemic firsthand.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
Thank you, Assembly Member.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
We both have five minutes altogether, whichever way you want to split it up.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair. It was December 31, 2019, and I got a call late at night. It was New Year's Eve from a law enforcement officer who's a narcotics agent. I'm on the narcotics team, so it made sense that I would get the call from him. But he called to tell me that there was a young man in the hospital who had experienced a fentanyl overdose, and it did not look like he was going to make it.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
He was in the United States Navy, and because it was the holidays, he was in our county on leave, and he apparently had been a recovering heroin user and was trying to do good things with his life, but got a hold of a fentanyl pill that day on New Year's Eve and ended up in St. Joseph's Hospital. So I, along with our narcotics agent, went to the hospital to go meet this young man. He was visibly bloated.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
He had a ventilation tube down his throat, and he was hooked up to an IV full of medications. And I never did get to meet him with his eyes open, but my intention was to fight for him in court after his parents discontinued the life support, which they did a few days later. So that was the opportunity I got to see of what an overdose looks like. I had the pleasure of speaking with Mr. Glenn Backes of the Ella Baker Center.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
He and I had a marvelous conversation about this bill last week. Very classy of him to discuss his concerns with me, and it's my hope that I can address some of his concerns. I'm quite certain that they'll continue to oppose the bill, but I'd like to point some things out that I know in my neck of the woods as a narcotics prosecutor. 11370.4: the health and safety code section we're looking at makes it an enhancement for carrying anything from a kilo up to 80 kilos of heroin, cocaine, and things like that, but does not include specifically fentanyl. And as the Assemblymember mentioned, fentanyl is 50 times stronger than heroin a kilo. Forgetting the 80 kilos, one kilo of fentanyl pills is about 10,000 pills because of the way the users break up the pills and consume them.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
This equates to anywhere between 36 thousand and 92 thousand doses, about $10,000 wholesale, or a whopping $180,000 retail that that would cost. So we're not dealing with low-level dealers or addicts. We're dealing with people that are highly connected with the cartel. Even if they're so-called mules, they're highly connected. They're trusted with moving this amount of the narcotic. If we're dealing with fentanyl powder, that makes up to 1 million pills costing about $45,000 retail. And the DEA estimates about 60% of fentanyl pills carry a lethal dose.
- Cindy De Silva
Person
So for one kilo, that's potentially 6000 deaths. I will wrap up because I want to let Ms. Kioti Fleming tell you her story. First of all, I would like to thank my Assemblymember, Carlos Viaputua, for bringing this bill to this committee. And now I'd like to turn it over to Ms Fleming, a friend of my office.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you, Ms Fleming. Bring the mic to us.
- Kioti Fleming
Person
Yes. Good afternoon. On the morning of Tuesday, December 14, 2021, my first love, Chad Earl Watts, was taken at the precious age of 19. Chad had a bright future. Chad was intelligent, making the principals list in high school, and throughout his school years, remained an honor student. He was on the wrestling team. He loved the outdoors, skateboarding and riding four-wheelers, playing video games, and watching anime. I'm so sorry. This is my first time speaking.
- Kioti Fleming
Person
Chad had a gift for repairing things and aspired to become a police officer. Whatever Chad put his mind to, he would accomplish with greatness. He was so charming and to know him was to love him. Chad was an amazing big brother to his siblings. He was so loving and protective. Chad did not see color in a person, only the character. He had friends of all nationalities. Chad suffered from anxiety, and he was just one visit away from prescribed medications.
- Kioti Fleming
Person
But he self-medicated and encountered a fentanyl lace pill, which took his life. Fentanyl has no bias on race, gender, or creed, and therefore, anyone that makes a conscious decision to distribute lace fentanyls must be held accountable for their actions. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses in support?
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Cory Salzillo on behalf of the California State Sheriffs Association, in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Raynon Ross
Person
Dr. Raynon Ross, Sr on behalf of San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins. We are in very strong support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in support? Now we'll hear from witnesses in opposition. If you don't mind... If you just need... I don't know how many come up. Just need one more seat.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Good afternoon. Glenn Backes on behalf of Ella Baker Center for Human Rights in opposition. We ask when discussing human lives and public dollars that we should all follow the science. The enhancements in state law for heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine did not reduce their availability. Sending a person for an additional three years to 25 years will waste a tremendous amount of money but will not reduce the availability of fentanyl. Those public dollars should be reserved for things that work, things like drug treatment, harm reduction, and housing.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Extensive research has established that the United States mass incarceration binge failed to protect the public and in fact, negatively impacted community safety and public health. In 2014, the National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine published a 444 page report on the available research on long sentences, including long sentences for selling drugs.
- Glenn Backes
Person
And their recommendations, I quote, are their recommendations to policymakers was alternative responses that rely less on incarceration and more on health measures may both reduce the social and economic costs of imprisonment and improve public health. Careful study has shown that criminalizing people who sell drugs and use drugs amplifies the risk of fatal overdose and diseases, drives people away from needed treatment, health, and harm reduction services, and exacerbates racial disparities in incarceration, and is injurious to the families and communities that are over policed. For these reasons, we respectfully ask for no vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Good afternoon, Chair Jones-Sawyer and Committee. Lesli Caldwell on behalf of... Lesli Caldwell-Houston on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association in respectful opposition to AB 701. AB 701 feels like the same war on drugs mentality and would cause more harm than it would prevent. We already know that relying on ever increasing penalties does not work. We know this bill would not reduce the distribution of fentanyl, nor would it prevent overdoses.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
It would not reduce the supply, nor would it reduce the demand for this drug. Worse, it would discourage the effective method of dealing with the opioid crisis. The primary risk of overdose on fentanyl results from its unknowing ingestion. The process of adding fentanyl to other drugs or making it look like other drugs is done early in the production process. Therefore, we know that lower level sellers don't often or don't even know that they're distributing fentanyl, as it takes place high in the distribution chain.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
California voters have signaled again and again that their preference is for a health approach to drug offenses and their desire to unwind the war on drugs. Efforts such as this bill need to stop. We need to pivot to a new and better approach than the war on drugs' ideas. I respectfully request your no vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in opposition? Name and organization.
- James Lindburg
Person
Jim Lindburg on behalf of the Friends Committee on Legislation of California in respectful opposition.
- Analisa Ruiz
Person
Analisa Ruiz with Young Women's Freedom Center in also respectful opposition.
- Jeronimo Aguilar
Person
Jeronimo Aguilar, here on behalf of Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, in respectful opposition.
- Joanne Scheer
Person
Joanne Scheer with Felony Murder Elimination Project. We're in opposition.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox, All of Us or None, respectful opposition.
- John Vasquez
Person
John Vasquez, Communities United for Restorative Youth Justice, respectfully opposed.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alissa Moore, All of Us or None, in respectful opposition.
- Henry Ortiz
Person
Henry Ortiz, All of Us or None, respectfully opposed.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Now bring it back to Committee Members for any comments or questions. Mr. Lackey.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah. First of all, let me just once again respectfully disagree with the characterization by the opposition. It's how we interpret science, not just the science alone. COVID-19 proved that to be very true. Poor decisions result, in this kind of category, result in such severe consequences, as poor witness came and shared with us the example that is unrepairable to her and to her son. Society and this legislature needs to send a message of intolerance to this massive misconduct.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
And even the reference to these tragedies being characterized as overdoses I think is a little misleading because I think it should be a poison. One pill should never be an overdose. That's a poison. And what we're doing here is we're trying to bring attention to those biggest abusers in our society who are actually selling this poison in massive, massive quantities. This is not low level offenders that we're trying to address here. These are the big time, the large scale abusers of the public good. Can't we send that message? I hope so. I'll be supporting you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other comments. Mr. Zbur.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So this is a bill that I admit I've lost a lot of sleep about because I'm not often on the other side of things with Ella Baker Center or the ACLU and some of my other friends in the criminal justice reform movement. But I do think that this bill is different than the other bills that I've voted against. I'm not someone who believes in penalty enhancements. I really don't.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I agree with everything that you both said about that, about them not being effective for street level folks and folks that are selling drugs on the street. The difference for me in this bill is that it's unlike the others where fentanyl was being attached to bills that criminalized lots of drugs and were increasing penalty enhancements is this is a penalty enhancement that's already in place for drugs that I think are less harmful than fentanyl.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And then on top of it, it's targeted to people that are really not folks that are using it on the street or selling it on the street. It's such high quantities. When you look at the fact that a kilo could result in lacing a million fentanyl pills, to me, that puts this in a very different category because it is so limited and because the harm of fentanyl is so great.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And so I look at just the kids that are out there. And these are the people that are making, in my mind, making the decisions to actually put the fentanyl out on the market and get it to dealers on the street and lace the pills with whatever they're substituting because this stuff is cheaper or more available or whatever. So I really don't like voting for penalty enhancements.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
But in this case, I do think it's directed at the folks that I think are really doing horrible things to our kids. And I've got a group of folks in my district that, the one thing I'll say in my district, the calls that I've gotten the most calls about have been calls related to issues related to fentanyl. Now saying all of that, I do believe that the appropriate approach generally should be health based.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
We should be looking at approaches where we're providing Naloxone in places where pills may be available. I think we should be requiring every club in California to have stocks of Naloxone in stock somehow. And I think there needs to be a lot more education. But this is one where I just have a hard time opposing it, given the high levels of quantities that we're talking about. So thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Anyone else? You may close.
- Carlos Villapudua
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Members. I was listening to everyone because this affects all of our communities. This is not a district bill. This is a state bill. This is almost a national epidemic. It is. I was in LA, and I remember turning on TV and was watching it on TV of an actor's son. I see it in the paper. I see it on the news. And you're right, this is a different war. This isn't your typical heroin, cocaine.
- Carlos Villapudua
Person
This is much cheaper. It's more addictive. And you can see it out in your streets. Just drive anywhere. You can almost see it. This is so addictive that it's not meant for the user. It's not meant for the guy that's nickel-and-diming. It's meant for the guy, the person that is selling that kilo, that killer. He is literally killing our community. He has changed our community, not just overnight. And it's going to continue.
- Carlos Villapudua
Person
And all of you in this room have been asked, what are you doing to change this? I'm not trying to incarcerate people. I'm just trying to make sure that... I didn't say the word cartel, right? But it's the folks that are in that you don't see behind the screens, behind that door that is sitting there laughing at us and going, look at how much money we're making off this. And I literally hooked folks in my district, in your districts.
- Carlos Villapudua
Person
And that's all I'm trying to do, is going after that big baller that is sitting there making tens of millions of dollars. Too many families are now dealing with the unimaginable grief. They are crying out for us to do more. And I hope today that we can answer that today. And so I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. And I want to thank you and thank your witness for being here. I mean, it's incredibly brave to bear all in front of everybody here. And so I want to make sure that she understands we not only respect what she did coming here and how brave it was for her to be here today. I also remember the same kind of conversations with crack cocaine. Words like predators. And then we started the war on drugs because we were scared. Scared to death. I'm scared now with fentanyl. At least with crack cocaine, they had reoccurring customers. This thing I don't understand. You're selling a project that will kill your customers.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
From a business standpoint, it doesn't make any sense whatsoever. And so we do need to continue to look at ways we can do this from a public health standpoint. I think the Governor is trying to produce more NARCAN out there so we can help those that make the unfortunate mistake of using that. And we need to do more. We need to do more on the education front. I don't know where we need to get to.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I'm going to lay off today because it is a hard one. I firmly believe we need to get to the source and to be able to stop the source. I don't think we've gotten to how to get to the source yet and to really crack down on that. But if we look at where crack cocaine is from what it was 20-30 years ago, I think part of that is people got educated and started to learn not to use that anymore.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And I trying to get us, hopefully, in a way we can get to that part where we start to stop people from using it. Especially where I think in your bill, it has a person convicted of a violation and or conspiracy to violate with respect to a substance containing heroin, fentanyl, cocaine. So it's not just someone taken directly the narcotics. So I want to get to a point where law enforcement doesn't use this.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And I think what you're hearing as a way to go after people because of poverty, because of drug addiction, or because of other things, that this becomes something that ultimately becomes problematic for individuals. And so if it doesn't make it out of here, we need to at some point. Because I'm seriously thinking of maybe even holding any other fentanyl bills until we come up with a comprehensive idea of how to handle this.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Because there's either incarcerate, incarcerate higher penalties, penalties, then we got the public health people, but we don't have people coming together. And at some point we got to come together. And if we don't do it here, I don't know if we're going to do it anywhere. And so I'm hoping that as I start looking at the bills coming forward, that we do that. Because it's just now time that we just stop being on one side or the other. And we actually have a meeting in the minds with both sides looking at all the options to come up with a clear. So was there a motion?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So moved.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Second.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 701 by Assembly Member Villapudua. The motion is do pass to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That bill is on hold. It's on call. It's on call now. Mr. Maienschein. AB 806, domestic violence. Item number 14, whenever you're ready.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and Members. AB 806 would extend the list of domestic violence-related crimes that can be joined and tried in one jurisdiction when the alleged crimes are committed by the same defendant and against the same victim. Current law allows for certain crimes relating to domestic violence to be combined and tried in one jurisdiction.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
However, the statute has not been updated since 1998 and overlooks many domestic violence crimes that commonly go along with domestic violence. Some of these crimes include criminal threats, witness dissuasion, and protective order violations. Repeated crimes of domestic violence often involve the victim of a crime rotating through the cycle of violence with their perpetrator frequently moving through different jurisdictions with their perpetrator. AB 806 would help limit the many levels of exposure and involvement with prosecution and trial.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
The very issue the 1998 statute was enacted to prevent. This Bill would help protect repeat victims of domestic violence by including crimes not currently recognized by the statute. Here to testify in support is An Dang, Deputy District Attorney at the San Diego County District Attorney's Office.
- An Dang
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon. I want to thank the Chair and the Members for the opportunity to testify in support of AB 806. My name is An Dang. I'm a Deputy District Attorney at the San Diego District Attorney's Office. When a domestic violence abuser exerts power and control over their victim, things like distance, venue, and jurisdiction are not limitations. For the victim of domestic violence, however, jurisdictional limitations can mean retraumatization, prolonged victimization, and costly delays in both healing and holding abuser accountable.
- An Dang
Person
AB 806 allows a list of domestic violence crimes to be joined and tried in one jurisdiction when the defendant commits crimes against the same victim and the relationship between the defendant and the victim is recognized in Penal Code Section 13700.
- An Dang
Person
Current law under Penal Code section 784.7B allows a jurisdiction to combine cases for specified offenses that occurred outside of their jurisdiction if the defendant and victim are the same, and when looking at the legislative intent behind this existing law, which this Legislature passed in 1998, it's clear that crimes of domestic violence in general are what the original author intended to protect. As this Legislature has recognized, domestic violence victims have a high propensity of being repeatedly victimized by the same offender.
- An Dang
Person
However, as written, the statute only lists one specific crime of domestic violence. That's Penal Code section 273.5A, which requires a traumatic condition or injury, and this overlooks several crimes of domestic violence that involve no injury at all, including assaults without injury, threats of death or bodily harm, and violations of protective orders.
- An Dang
Person
Practically speaking, this means that if an abuser were to injure his victim in San Diego County, that victim garners the wherewithal to flee to Orange County, but the abuser finds her and threatens to kill her at gunpoint if she should ever leave him again. That victim is now going to be subjected to two separate investigations, prosecutors, judges, defense attorneys, and testifying in front of her abuser in multiple jurisdictions on multiple occasions.
- An Dang
Person
AB 806 seeks to solve this issue and also conserve judicial resources, working on the minimizing the backlog of criminal cases in California. This Bill does not increase punishment for defendants, nor does it create a mandate. It simply allows prosecution officers the discretion to unify prosecutions when it is both in the interests of justice to do so and that of the victim.
- An Dang
Person
By simply amending the statute to match its legislative intent, we can solve this problem and relieve victims the trauma of having to testify in multiple trials against the same offender and allow them to begin the process of healing. I respectfully urge the Members of the Committee to vote aye in support of AB 806. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses in support? Any witnesses in opposition? Seeing none. Bring it back to Committee Members. Any questions or comments? Mr. Alanis.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you for your comments. And for those who don't know, I used to be a domestic violence and crimes against children's detective and forensic interviewer, and our point was to try and limit what the victim had to testify like over and over again as you were speaking to. And I thank the author for doing this.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
You guys are using that same mechanism, basically, to prevent them from having to relive that traumatic time in their life over and over again, having to retell it. So I thank you guys for doing that. I'll be supporting this Bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses, any comments? Okay, you may close, Mr. Maienschein.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and Members. And we would respectfully request an aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Chair is recommending aye. Is there a motion? Is there a second? Madam Secretary, call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 806 by Assemblymember Maienschein. The motion is due pass. [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measure passes. I had Mr. McCarty next. And after Mr. McCarty, Mr. Assemblymember Tom Lackey.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
All right, well, good afternoon. I appreciate the opportunity to present this bill. Its number is AB 898. And I thank the committee for working with our office, and we do accept the amendments that were offered to us. And I'm introducing AB 898, which is a bill on juvenile hall injury reporting requirements, with the sponsor of the bill, which happens to be the state coalition of probation officers.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
As operations and responsibilities shift from DJJ, which is the Division of Juvenile Justice, to county-operated juvenile halls and secured youth treatment facilities. Counties, most notably LA County, have struggled to keep up with standards set by the Board of State and Community Corrections. In LA County, the number of assaults on juvenile hall staff in 2022 rose more than 60% compared to the previous year.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Similarly, the number of times officers encountered resistance and required to use force on youth residents spiked 50% in the first half of the year relative to the same period in 2021, and the number of times officers needed to use pepper spray during these encounters quadrupled. I introduced this legislation to put in place stronger reporting requirements for these types of incidents across the state.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
While LA County has received the vast majority of news coverage on this issue, the difficulties persist in probation departments around the entire state, especially as we move towards full transition away from DJJ operations. The bill will require all juvenile probation departments in the state to submit an annual report of all injuries to staff and residents that occurred as a result of an encounter between staff and the residents.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Additionally, it will mandate that each report of an incident includes information, including the extent of an injury, what the staffing ratio of the facility was at the time of the incident, and whether the incident occurred in a secure youth treatment facility as established by SB 92. By standardizing and expanding the report process, we will be giving BSCC a key tool that can be used to evaluate how well probation departments are able to handle this trans- that's easy for me to say - transitionary period, while also providing greater accountability for both staff and youth residents. Alberto Torico is here, and I'll let him take over the next part of this discussion.
- Alberto Torrico
Person
Thank you, Mr. Lackey. Thank you for authoring the measure. Mr. Chairman, Members of the Committee, good afternoon. Alberto Torrico, on behalf of the State Coalition of Probation Organizations, just want to highlight a couple other things that have happened in the juvenile justice world in the last few years. Under state law, and somebody mentioned earlier the science, the probation officers don't dispute the science of brain development up to age of 25.
- Alberto Torrico
Person
The other part of the science that is unstated is that physically, a 25-year-old is a lot different than a 15 or 16-year-old. They're now housed in the same facility. The other thing is that in many of the counties, a majority or more of the officers are women in the juvenile facility. So, the size differential is exacerbated. Overwhelmingly, juvenile probation officers, probation officers, and more so, juvenile - those who work with juveniles are committed to rehabilitation.
- Alberto Torrico
Person
It's getting more and more difficult to give the rehabilitation services when you are faced with assaults of staff, assaults between the juvenile offenders the job is harder. I know that the opposition is raising concerns about it; I think one of the letters said that this was not a good use of public resources and we should come up with solutions. We have, in fact, proposed solutions in the past, increasing staffing, modernizing the facilities, ways to enhance rehabilitation. Those efforts have not been seen favorably here.
- Alberto Torrico
Person
We think this is the first step, gathering the information and starting to better understand what the level of assaults are, what the level of injuries are, and trying to make the facilities a safer place. Yes, I represent the probation officer staff, but also a safer place for the juveniles that are in the facilities in order for them to get the rehabilitation they need and deserve. We respectfully ask for, an aye vote, and I will thank you and I also want to thank the committee staff for your assistance with the bill.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in support? Any witnesses in opposition?
- Analisa Ruiz
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon, Committee Members. My name is Analisa Ruiz, and I'm the Policy Director at Young Women's Freedom Center. For nearly 30 years, the Young Women's Freedom Center has supported, mentored, and employed folks impacted by incarceration. As impacted individuals with not just personal experience but professional experience supporting youth and facilities across the state, we oppose AB 898. First, we acknowledge and appreciate the author's effort to address safety in juvenile halls.
- Analisa Ruiz
Person
However, not only is there already a system in place for quarterly reporting to the BSCC of assaults on staff, this bill lacks necessary measures to create the changes needed to ensure true safety for all. AB 898 attempts to capture data on altercations between staff and youth, but what it fails to do is capture the full context needed to create solutions.
- Analisa Ruiz
Person
By simply gathering the age of the resident, the extent of the injury, whether or not a report was filed with the DA, and whether charges are filed against the youth, and a few extra data points, it is clear this bill is one-sided and only works to further criminalize and perpetuate the narrative that youth in need of the most resources are violent.
- Analisa Ruiz
Person
What the bill doesn't request or attempt to gather is what efforts were made to deescalate, what were the conditions at the time, what programs were being provided, and more. These are all factors we know that contribute to tension among staff and youth. We can see the impact of all these factors. Most recently in media coverage in LA County, youth have reported physical and sexual assault, and most recently being confined to cells for long periods of time.
- Analisa Ruiz
Person
This not only has taken away from educational, recreational, and other programming, but is scientifically proven that these conditions are detrimental to a person's mental and emotional state, especially a child or a young adult. Aside from this, we know this culture of violence and deprivation is an issue in multiple facilities across the state.
- Analisa Ruiz
Person
We know this because we've seen multiple devastating incidents surface the Internet, in Los Angeles, in San Mateo County, in Santa Clara County, and more. Most importantly, we know this because as impacted individuals, our folks have firsthand experience that hasn't been captured in the media. We've seen firsthand the harmful dynamic between probation staff and youth. The reality of this is none of this will change until we're committed to capturing the entire picture of what is happening in juvenile facilities.
- Analisa Ruiz
Person
The request of this bill is inadequate and simply does not do enough to inform best practices and solutions. We as a state will not see change until there's commitment to culture change, proper deescalation training, and properly allocated resources when supporting young people. I respectfully urge your no vote on AB 898.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses in opposition?
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Lesli Caldwell-Houston for the California Public Defenders Association, in opposition.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I don't know if people are trying to get to the front. It's a little cramped in here. Name and organization.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox, All of Us or None, in opposition.
- Jeronimo Aguilar
Person
Jeronimo Aguilar, on behalf of Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, in strong opposition. Thank you.
- Tatiana Lewis
Person
Tatiana Lewis as well, as in strong opposition with All of Us or None.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alissa Moore, All of Us or None, in opposition.
- Henry Ortiz
Person
Henry Ortiz, All of Us or None, opposing. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. With that, we'll bring it back to Committee. Mr. Bryan first and then Ms. Bonta.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. Prior to being a Legislator, I was a researcher, specialized in mixed methods, and at one point, I had a probation contract with LA County, and I went up to Camp Challenger when it was housing the children from Kilpatrick for nine months, interviewing the young people about the implementation of the LA Model. It wasn't going well.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I went into the camp, I'd be there for five, six hours talking to the youth, talking with staff, collecting data, and reported that back to probation, and ultimately wrote a report. I bring that up because the data we collect, how we collect, and what purpose we're collecting, it has a huge impact on its utility. You mentioned that yourself earlier. My problem with this, as it's currently structured, is there is no youth voice in it. The data is collected by probation. It's submitted by probation.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
It covers all of the things that are important to probation. I don't see, for example, if there's a youth-on-youth encounter, why are we not qualitatively asking or interviewing the youth why?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I can also know many instances where law enforcement agencies across the state can escalate a situation and then report out that a conflict occurred when, if you talk to the young person, they would tell you that this particular probation officer makes me eat last or always takes my bread or whatever, doesn't let me go out when everyone else goes out. Those kinds of things are not captured here because the youth are not included in any of the key data points here.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And so my bigger concern with this bill is not just where it sits, but where it's headed. The way this data collected for probation, by probation and then reported to the BSCC.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I think if we pass this out as this is currently written, we'll be back here in less than two years with probation citing this data to justify the use of returning pepper spray, rubber bullets, or all kinds of stuff that they'd like, and I think that's not the way that we need to address the trauma for staff and young people in the facility. I do think we should collect data. I do think there is an approach here, but the way the bill is currently written, I don't see the youth voice.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And since this is about them, for them, for their benefit, for their future, the way that that future relates to the greater public at large, I think we have to find ways to include their voice into what's reported to BSCC or alternatively, have another reporting mechanism besides the Department itself to collect this data and report it upwards. I just have some concerns.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Chair, could I have my witness respond to that?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Did you want to respond?
- Alberto Torrico
Person
Thank you. Senator Bryan, your points are extremely well taken. We took, at the behest of the Committee Consultant several weeks ago, expanded the scope of the data collection to include the injuries for the youth. My organization represents the rank and file probation officers, so I will take exception to being characterized as probation. We are the officers. We're not the management of the facilities. So there is a major difference.
- Alberto Torrico
Person
The purpose of the bill is to collect information because that information is not forthcoming today, even within individual departments. We don't know what's happening. All that being said, I think that your suggestion is extremely well taken. The author and I have discussed here today that if your amendment is that the report includes a statement from the youth regarding the altercation where he or she explains what happened, we don't have an objection to that amendment.
- Alberto Torrico
Person
Obviously, we can't take it today, but we're willing to take it as the bill goes on to approps, that we don't object to that. We're happy to do that amendment and commit to that amendment today.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I think that--what would make that good for me is if that statement is also not collected by probation, that if an incident happens, that there is a party to talk to the young person to get their perspective, and to include that into whatever data is being collected, I would appreciate that.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I don't think it makes a lot of sense for a young person who's housed in a facility overseen by civility being asked by somebody that they could potentially have a conflict with about what happened and then that data then being used against them--I could see problems there as well--but I do think we have to incorporate their voice in a way that is as impartial as possible.
- Alberto Torrico
Person
Yeah, I don't see any issue with that other than potential costs, but I think we can work something out that makes sense and integrate it with existing staff that aren't probation staff because, as you know, we have many staff inside of these facilities that aren't probation, they're Department of Children and Family Services. They could be educators. So I think that could be accommodated as well.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I trust the witness. A lot of respect for the witness and the process. I think something can be worked out, but I think we should work a few things out.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Ms. Bonta.
- Alberto Torrico
Person
Absolutely.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Mr. Lackey, I fully understand the intention and the thoughtfulness that you put behind this legislation. Having now sat on the Budget Sub Five with you, I sit next to you and experience the incredible frustration with not having the kind of transparency that we need and recognize that--I've been there for a short time.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
You've been there for a long time, having to not get the information that we need in order to be able to make qualified and good decisions about how our resources are used. I think with the amendments that Assembly Member Bryan is proposing, that would really provide much more of an even-handed--and to the opposition's testimony--much more robust and even-handed purview of what is actually happening there.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I'd be in support of it and certainly trust your ability as an author to be able to make sure that that happens. And if we are able to actually get that information, I think it's going to make us all the more wiser and better off and would alleviate some of the frustration and challenges that we have in making sure that we're doing the right thing.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Yes. Alanis?
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I just want to thank you for bringing this bill and thank our colleagues also for bringing very valid points up, and it looks like we just saw something happen right here. So glad to be part of that as well, and I'll be supporting this. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
You may close.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
I don't feel like there's much more to say, especially after Assembly Member Bonta paid the compliment. I will tell you that this is just about gathering good information so that we can make good policy afterward.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
So often we are afraid to gather data because we don't trust, and this is how we build trust, is by becoming transparent and gathering good data, and so the suggestion that was brought forward is a valid one, and we will definitely follow up on that, that suggestion, because we do want to be fair-handed, but we also want to get good information so that we can have good policy. I think that's what follows, and I would just ask for support on this measure.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I'm sorry. I cut off.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
I just want to say I missed some of the comments earlier. I'm sorry, I was in Higher Ed, but when I read this bill, I was wondering why it came to Public Safety because the way I looked at it, it looks like more of a workplace safety bill and was wondering why it was not in Labor. Reason I'm supporting it is because I hear, often hear workplace injuries happening to nurses, happening to other construction workers, et cetera.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
And so this, to me, looked like a workplace safety issue that requires data to be able to address some of the things that are happening with the short staffing. So today I'll be supporting this bill because of that.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Thank you. I just hope it doesn't get triple-referred.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
You may close--oh, you just did. I want to thank you. I'm just going to add a little to this, only because I've been dealing with this with LA Probation, and I've been in conversations with Supervisor Mitchell and Supervisor Horvath, and I believe they're putting in motions right now for LA Probation to really change the culture of LA Probation.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
One of the things they're looking at at DYD, Division of Youth Diversion, that they do some of the analysis along with the CAO, County Council, the Board of Supervisors, who are supposed to be the head. I think right now, the way contracts are written, the Chief Probation Officer is the one that makes decisions and does the analysis. Well, that has not been working very well for LA.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
So I had a bill which would have taken that--given Board of Supervisors the ability to put whomever over that, especially if the culture was resistant to the new way of dealing with young people. I will be working with the Board of Supervisors to change the way we deal with probation there and the atrocities that are over there are too numerous to name, and some of the things that I've seen in videos of how young people are being treated, accusations of young women being raped, and it's not the women guards that are doing it.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The numbers are astounding or they're here to say, well, I don't think a lot of them were fake ones. Well, just one. Just one person under their care. One woman under their care. Being raped is atrocious, and it's beyond--you won't see me get angry, letting that get away.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
So as you get the data, one of the things you need to understand, which has happened to my staff when they've gone out to LA County to view and to see what's going on, they were turned away from talking to the young people because they were told that by court order, they can't talk to the young people. So while you may want to do this, I don't want to find out a month from now, six months from now, probation then says, 'get back.'
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
'You can't talk to these young people' to find out what's actually going on from their view because they're juveniles and underage, and we can't talk to them. And when I say 'we,' I'm talking my public safety staff can't talk to them or you move them from one juvenile hall to another so people can't talk to them. I think that's what you're hearing from here. Why are we hiding that? What's going on? And the only way we're going to find out--you're absolutely right, Mr. Lackey--is to get that transparency.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The BSCC has been trying to get information, so we need to come up with a plan that we can actually find out what's actually going on in all of the juvenile facilities. And I would say especially, we need to work with the Board of Supervisors so that they can provide what they need.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
We can't just say, 'build me a new facility,' and everything will be okay because those abuses can happen in a nice, clean, spanking new facility, just as they have in the dilapidated conditions they are now. So we got to get to the culture and to what's going on there. We got to get people to come to work. We got to get people to actually want to take care of these young people, and now they need more than just caretaking.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
They need mental health, trauma-informed care, education. There's a lot of other things that they need right now. I do want this to move forward, I do want this to happen, but I think it needs to be more expansive than what you have, and I think that's what the opposition is saying, because I think at the end of the day, the more information you get, the better we'll be able to make a comprehensive evaluation of what ultimately is needed. And so I think we can make those changes. If you agree to it, we should be able to move forward with this.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
I think this is being recorded.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay. Is there a motion? Is there a second? Call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 898 by Assembly Member Lackey, the motion is 'do pass to the Appropriations Committee.' [Roll Call].
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measure passes. Mr. McCarty, you are here. There you go. Item number 15, AB 807 McCarty, police use of force.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Hi, how are you?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Whenever you're ready.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay. The last bill, right?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
No.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Well, thank you, Mr. Chair. I'm here to present a measure related to officer-involved shootings and independent investigations. This is not a new topic for the committee, and several of you on here have heard several versions of this before. This bill is based upon a simple premise that police should not police themselves. It's not that complicated. With that, you get not always the good product at the end, but you get a tainting of the process if people don't trust the outcome.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
This is why this committee and the Legislature three years ago passed my measure with bipartisan support. I will note that the then vice chair of the committee spoke up on this on the floor to make sure we bring independent investigations for officer-involved shootings. However, at the 11th hour, we had to attempt and focus on a compromise, which usually happens, that we only focused on officer-involved shootings of an unarmed civilian. So what does that mean?
- Kevin McCarty
Person
That roughly half of the fatalities in the hands of law enforcement aren't covered by this. So think of the death of George Floyd. It wasn't an officer-involved shooting. However, there was fatality, of course. Think of instances where there's debate as far as what is armed. I've heard from DAs across the state after this bill was implemented that focus on somebody had a firearm. What if they had a machete? What if they had gardening shears walking back from work?
- Kevin McCarty
Person
And so there's a lot of debate and ambiguity. So, following up on the bill from three years ago, the idea was we wanted to give the attorney general some time to implement this out of the gate and then follow up to make sure we cover all fatalities at the hands of law enforcement. This is about bringing back public trust in the process. This is not a novel idea. At the time, there were five other states who had implemented this before. California.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
I think two or three more have done so after that summer of 2020 and the idea of independent police reform. And with that, I ask this committee to further this work, to make sure that we cover all officer-involved deaths at the hands of law enforcement. And with me today are ACLU and the Public Defenders Association, and respectfully ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Five minutes.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Good afternoon. Lesli Caldwell-Houston for the California Public Defenders Association in support of Assembly Bill 807. I was the chief defender of Solano County, a midsize county, for 10 years. In that time period, the Vallejo Police Department, an agency in my county, was responsible for 19 citizen deaths, most of them by gunfire. While it was claimed they were investigated by the department along with the local district attorney, every single death was found to be justified.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
It was later discovered that many witnesses were not interviewed and investigations were not complete. By the time unarmed Sean Monterosa was shot to death by the Vallejo police in 2020, the public was so enraged at the situation that the district attorney recused herself, and yet at that time, the attorney general refused to investigate the death by police gunfire. Shortly thereafter, the law changed to allow the AG to investigate deaths at the hands of the police, but not in all instances.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
The district attorneys and police of their jurisdiction work hand in hand, necessarily raising questions, however, about the impartiality of investigations of themselves. This relationship causes many issues of bias and conflict of interest. While the vast majority of law enforcement officers conduct themselves ethically and professionally, sometimes things happen that should not. We have seen far too many unarmed or armed mentally ill individuals, or surrendering citizens killed by officers who are sworn and trained to protect our communities.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
It's critical that we close the gap in the law and require the attorney general to investigate all law enforcement-involved civilian field deaths as we desperately need the accountability, the transparency, and the oversight of our law enforcement in California and nationally. We respectfully urge your yes vote. Thank you.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Thank you. Carmen Nicole Cox. Good afternoon to each of you on behalf of ACLU California Action, I'm speaking in strong support of AB 807 and want to thank Assemblymember McCarty for bringing this forward. Of course, while not perfect and in need of additional resources, the DOJ's review of fatalities resulting from police conduct has been more efficient and transparent than some of the largest agencies in the state. The DOJ's mandate to conduct independent investigations of fatal officer-involved shootings became effective July 1, 2021. The very next month, Guadalupe Police Department shot and killed an innocent bystander, Juan Luis Olvera-Preciado. It was a terrible, terrible tragedy. The DOJ completed that investigation in approximately 16 months.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
By comparison, in January of this year, the San Bernardino County DA's office completed its review of an officer-involved shooting that occurred in December 18, 2020 a full two years later, and a December 2019 fatal shooting that wasn't complete until December 2022, 3 years later. Neither report offered recommendations for improving officer conduct, and both took longer than the AG's office has taken to complete just two investigations.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Now, while we'd like to see DOJ investigations completed sooner, surely we can't argue that these investigations are taking so long that they should remain limited. That argument proves too much. What AB 807 seeks to do is to add greater transparency and accountability, the kind that we expected to get after SB 1421 in 2019. Yet a review of, for example, the Bakersfield PD's 1421 web page says, quote, we apologize for the delay. We're working to organize and present this information to the public as quickly as possible.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
The Riverside County sheriff does not even post 1421 records until and unless a request is made. So apparently no request has ever been made for incidents in which the use of force resulted in a death or in great bodily injury because there is none on their page. AB 807 should be enacted because law enforcement agencies appear to be resistant to provide the transparency needed for the community to develop trust and hold them accountable.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
To be sure, CHP does not report on its website the number of officer-involved fatalities. This morning. I spent 15 minutes searching the website and the best I found was a link that was supposed to be to their RIPA data. That link required me to log in as a CHP employee to gain access. I am going to just skip to the end here because I know my time is up, sir, and say AB 807 helps shine a light on fatal police conduct that we cannot expect them to turn on themselves. And for that, we urge your aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any others in support? Name and organization.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel on behalf of Initiate Justice and Californians for Safety and Justice.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Rebecca Gonzales
Person
Rebecca Gonzales, National Association of Social Workers California Chapter, in support.
- James Lindburg
Person
Jim Lindburg, on behalf of the Friends Committee on Legislation of California, in support.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox, All of Us or None, support.
- Tatiana Lewis
Person
Tatiana Lewis with Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, in strong support. Thank you.
- John Vasquez
Person
John Vasquez, on behalf of Communities United for Restorative Youth Justice, support.
- Joanne Scheer
Person
Joanne Scheer, Felony mMurder Elimination Project, in full support.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alyssa Moore, All of Us or None, in full support.
- Henry Ortiz
Person
Henry Ortiz, All of Us or None Sacramento Chapter, strong support.
- Mary Rossetto
Person
Mary Lou Rossetto, Moms Demand Action volunteer and former police officer, in support.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any witnesses in opposition?
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and members. Cory Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association, opposed to AB 87. As the author stated during the discussions on AB 1506, a broader mandate similar to what's contained in this bill was considered but ultimately rejected. The enacted version of that bill was limited to officer-involved shootings resulting in the death of an unarmed civilian.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Since the operative date of AB 156, DOJ has dispensed with only two of the qualifying cases that it is accepted, and there are 34 pending cases. It's worth noting that neither of these two cases that have been resolved were found to justify criminal charges against the involved officers. The question of what's a weapon or what's armed DOJ has produced guidelines of its own as to what armed means. And it's not just firearms.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
The note about comparing the length of time that it's taken to resolve these cases versus other officer-involved cases are not apples to apples, necessarily. Without knowing the details of the case and why potentially one was more complicated than another, or noting that the fact that the case may have also been simultaneously investigated by a local law enforcement agency.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Given the time it takes for DOJ to complete these cases, the other challenges associated with AB 156 investigations, and specifically what I mean by that, is that this was not a function that DOJ really had prior to AB 156. They had to stand up an entire unit, hire investigators that have experience in homicide investigations, just not a task that DOJ was doing prior to AB 156. And so that process has been challenging.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
I think they've done a fairly good job in getting those cases in front of people and trying to respond timely. But the reality is they have four teams that are available to respond statewide, so it can be challenging. There is not always an immediate response. It creates challenges with protecting a crime scene or with a scene of where somebody has been shot. DOJ does not have the resources to adequately implement AB 156 as it stands.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
This bill contains no funding to fund DOJ to take on this massive expansion of the authority. This new mandate would slow down pet investigations, which respectfully already take too long, and subjects officers to more uncertainty as it relates to their actions. For those reasons, respectfully, we're opposed to the bill. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in opposition? Seeing none, we'll bring it back to committee. Yes, Mr. Bryan.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I think this is a good bill. I'm sorry that the compromise was made the first time I brought the family of Keenan Anderson up here to chambers to adjourn. In his memory, just earlier this year, he was tased six times by the LAPD in under 40 seconds and then went into cardiac arrest and died. That's one of those incidents that wouldn't be covered under existing law. It would be under this. And so I see why you're doing this. It makes a lot of sense to me.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
I think the DOJ not having capacity could be an issue, but I don't think that's the issue for this committee necessarily to decide. I think you're going to have to navigate that through the process. But it's a great bill.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
100% transparency. Great. I'm totally for that. But the same concerns that were brought up. Is the DOJ aware of this bill? Are they sponsoring or any part of it?
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yeah, they are well aware of the bill. Been working extensively with Mr. Bonta implementing this. He took office right when this was in effect, and he was a joint author of my bill and then, ironically, became AG six months later. So he helped write it and now he's implementing it. I will take a little offense. This bill was not rejected in this version, as the witness over here is telling.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
It was my bill, and I amended it to basically streamline the elements of it with a negotiation with the governor, because the governor said, hey, this is a new task in California. It soared through Legislature with the entire piece of it. But let's see how the attorney general can do this for a couple years. And so now we are almost two years in. So if this bill went into effect, if the pass was signed by the governor, would go into effect next January.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
So it'd be two and a half years and maybe I have another year implementation. We haven't decided on that as far as when this would kick in. But the notion was this is a new set of work for the attorney general and his team. Let's give it a couple of years, let's see how much it costs, and we'll go from there. There have been just two, basically, conclusions from the attorney general, and I'd like to see them come out soon.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
I'm told that a lot are coming, but I'd rather be right than fast. And he could push them out really fast and not get it right. And the notion here is we want to have more transparent and fair outcomes. It's not about locking up an officer. It's about if an officer does cross the line, that officer, he or she, needs to be held accountable. Like you would agree as a law enforcement officer, you cross the line, you'd be held up accountable.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
But it's also who's making those decisions and are they fair? And too often, the coziness between local prosecutors and local police departments, everything comes in a doubt. So this gives us the opportunity to implement the current law and work with the attorney general to basically expand the scope as we had initially drafted the bill in 2020.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
In the bill, and I apologize, I haven't read all the details of your bill, but I know with DOJ right now investigating what they're doing now, I know they're relying a lot on the agencies themselves just because they're so spread across the state as was brought up. Is there something in your bill also that maybe addressed that also to allow that?
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Because unfortunately, sometimes our crime scenes are places where people need to get open to, but we need to freeze them for evidence reasons and make sure that the investigation is 100% taken care of so the timely manner that was brought up. I fear also that maybe if the DOJ doesn't have the resources to properly address the crime scene, is there maybe some kind of language in your bill on that that maybe addressed that for the time being?
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yeah. There will be a financial piece with this. We are negotiating with the AG's office, Department of Finance, talking to the governor's people. As we move along, we realize that it will cost more to essentially double the work. So this is a pilot for two years. And so last year's budget, we did give them more resources to focus on some equipment needs, and they feel that they're now launching this and knowing what it takes.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
And so the good news is I didn't just come back a year later. I wanted to wait a couple years until see how this plays out. But right now, irony, though, is some fatalities across California, there's confusion is somebody died, an officer involved. There's really like a checklist. Is this 1506 eligible? So you don't know right away if the person is armed or unarmed. Sometimes it takes several hours. Sometimes there's a determination.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
So by having all fatalities with a law enforcement officer involved, it'll actually be easier because the Attorney General's Office will be immediately engaged in the case as opposed to having to wait for the determination if it's 1506 eligible.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Ms. Bonta.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
I just want to thank Mr. McCarty for bringing forward this bill on behalf of my community, one of the cities that I represent, and Mario Gonzalez, who died on April 19, 2021 because of a police involved. It was a police-involved death. He did not have the ability or recourse, nor did his family to be able to avail themselves of the AB 156 provisions.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
And quite frankly, there's also an issue or concern with the capacity of the cities to really be able to make the kind of investigation that justice would allow. So I really want to thank you for bringing forth this bill, for broadening it out. And I do think that there are capacity issues to consider from the perspective of cities that just, quite frankly, don't have the resources to make sure that justice is served. So thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any others? You may close.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
I appreciate the discussion and thank you for your consideration. Ask for your aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Is there a motion?
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Second.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Chair is recommending an aye. Call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
That measure is on call. It needs one more. Since Mr. Santiago isn't here, Mr. Santiago says he's going to the restroom, but he'll be right back. I don't know how long that'll take. Everybody knows you went to the restroom. The world knows. I know. People admitting the crimes, needing to go to the restroom. True confession today. Item number 25, AB 958.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
Mr. Chair, I must confess. I had to go to the restroom on the second floor because the first-floor restroom -
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
TMI.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
Well, you started it. Had a field trip. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Whenever you're ready.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair. First, I want to thank the Chair and the committee staff for helping us to improve this bill, and thank you to the witnesses who have waited for some period of time today. Appreciate it.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
This bill is a simple and very necessary bill that would strengthen the rights of family members to incarcerated people by, that would help - sorry, family members and incarcerated people by restoring visiting rights and establishing a three-day minimum. You might recall that last year the governor did include in there the additional dollars to do a third day of visiting, and the committee entertained and helped us to pass a bill that wanted to do this same work.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
And instead we were able to put some portion of that in the budget. But this year we're coming back because we want to formally codify that there's three days, as well as making sure that visiting rights, the visiting is a right to folks who are incarcerated and also communities. And we all know the reasons why. Right?
- Miguel Santiago
Person
Because this is very important not only for the mental health and the rehabilitation process for those who are incarcerated, but because it also helps family members and those who are visiting, and oftentimes, when we think about this, you think about one person who is incarcerated. And while I believe that this is very important, I think it's also important to understand that there are people on the outside that are family members.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
There are people who are very connected where this also helps and link that person to some sort of dignity, that they could visit their father, they could visit a family member, they could visit a husband, they could visit an uncle. This would only impact state institutions and those who are serving felony charges at the county level because realignment sent some folks who otherwise would have been in state to a local county. So it's very limited in scope, very necessary, and also funded.
- Miguel Santiago
Person
So we took care of that last year when people said it wasn't funded. Having said that, I want to now hand it over to two of our witnesses. I'll let them introduce themselves in the interest of time. Thank you, Mr. Chair.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you.
- Joanne Scheer
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chairman and members of the committee. I'm Joanne Scheer, founder of Felony Murder Elimination Project and proud sponsor, co-sponsor of Assembly Bill 958. 16 years ago, my only child, Anthony, was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole under the felony murder special circumstances law. He was 20 years old and never been, and never been in trouble. I was 52, his father, 67 at the time. We have spent every weekend of the last 16 years visiting our son in prison.
- Joanne Scheer
Person
We've traveled thousands of miles and spent tens of thousands of dollars to keep our family together and encourage through the devastation that is prison. Our commitment to maintaining a strong family bond has been met by callousness and disregard by CDCR. We have found that our precious visits can be taken away for nonsensical and petty reasons. Our visits have been terminated for infractions such as saying hello to a vending machine vendor as they passed by our table, conversation welcomed at my son's previous facility.
- Joanne Scheer
Person
Our visits have been terminated for infractions, such as my accepting a ride to the visiting lobby when offered one by prison staff during a rainstorm seven years ago. During a visit with my son, his cellmate bought and was using drugs in their cell. Though my son had no knowledge of his cellmate's actions, he was charged and disciplined for that behavior because of the unwritten CDCR rule that holds both cellmates guilty for anything in the cell.
- Joanne Scheer
Person
The discipline he received, and we, as a family, received for his cellmate's infraction was one year with no visits, followed by two years of behind-glass visits. That's three years total. The horror of this separation would have decimated a child unable to hug her father for three years. Prison is supposed to be the punishment for a crime, not the decimation of families. CDCR should not have the right to withhold family visits unless, of course, a visiting infraction occurred in a visiting room.
- Joanne Scheer
Person
I did not give up my right to my son when he became incarcerated. This civil right to visit must be firmly reestablished. For the sake of families, please vote yes on AB 958. Thank you very much for your time.
- John Vasquez
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair and members of the Committee. My name is John Vasquez. I'm the policy manager for Courage and a proud co-sponsor of AB 958. When I was 16 years old, I was transferred to adult court and sentenced to 31 years to life. A prison guard once told me, "Hey, youngster, do yourself a favor and hang yourself. You're never getting out of here." Many times, I felt hopeless and depressed. The only thing that kept me going were visits from my family.
- John Vasquez
Person
Hugging my loved ones made all the difference, and it motivated me to work on myself. I received visits four days a week until the right to visit was repealed, and visiting opportunities were cut in half. This created many hardships for me and my family because we weren't able to stay connected in a meaningful way. The repeal also led to many unnecessary barriers.
- John Vasquez
Person
For example, my mother, who was already visiting me, had to renew her application, and she forgot to list an arrest from about over a decade prior, and because of that, it took a whole year. She was denied her application after she's already visiting me, and it took a whole year of her writing the warden to be able to see me again. AB 958 will eliminate these types of barriers and keep families together. Even CDCR admits to the value of visitation.
- John Vasquez
Person
Quoting CDCR's 2020 budget proposal to this Legislature, and I quote, "High quality visiting programs for inmates have been proven to reduce prison violence, maintain family bonds, break the intergenerational cycle of incarceration, and smooth the reentry process, thereby reducing recidivism rates." End of quote. I couldn't have said it better myself. For these reasons, I respectfully request your aye vote. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Are there any other witnesses in support? Name and organization.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of Initiate Justice, Transformative inPrison Workgroup, Grip Training Institute, Californians for Safety and Justice, Anti Recidivism Coalition, and in my personal capacity as somebody directly impacted by this issue.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Lesli Caldwell Houston for the California Public Defenders Association in support.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Carmen Nicole Cox, ACLU Cal Action in support.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Glenn Backes, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights in support.
- Ivana Gonzalez
Person
Ivana Gonzalez with Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, the Coalition for Family Unity, and some of the organizations with the coalition are Mary Mack, Transition Homes, Pillars of the Community, Place for Grace, Prisoners from the Inside Out, Starting Over Inc., and Sister Warriors Freedom Coalition, all in support.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox with Legal Services for Prisoners with Children and also A New Way of Life, All of Us or None, Alliance of Boys and Men of Color, Anti Recidivism Coalition, California's Family Against Solitary Confinement, California Impacted Families Project, all in support.
- Tatiana Lewis
Person
Tatiana Lewis with Legal Services for Prisoners with Children as well as All of Us or None in strong support.
- Natasha Minsker
Person
Natasha Minsker, Smart Justice California and the Prosecutors Alliance of California in support.
- James Lindburg
Person
Jim Lindburg, on behalf of the Friends Committee on Legislation of California in strong support.
- Henry Ortiz
Person
Henry Ortiz with Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, All of Us or None Sacramento Chapter, and Community Healer in strong support. Thank you.
- Melissa Moore
Person
Melissa Moore, All of Us or None in strong support. Also with Communities United for Restorative Youth Justice, Courage, CommunityWorks, Drop LWOP, East Bay Family Defenders, Family United to End LWOP, Felony Murder Elimination Project, Homies Unidos, and, of course, Legal Services for Prisoners with Children.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Opposition. Good. We need two seats.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Sorry about that.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Mr. Chairman, Members Cory Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association, in opposition to the Bill. I don't think anybody disputes the benefits of visitation. Sheriffs certainly understand the benefits of visitation for not only incarcerated persons, but those who visit them. But this bill goes too far in mandating visitation, the expense of several other considerations. So it's not that we don't want there to be visits, we don't think there shouldn't be visits. There's more than that to this Bill.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
By limiting the ability to suspend visitation to issues related to a compelling security interest, jail authorities would be prohibited from conditioning visitation in terms of visitation on behavior and discipline considerations. This would also preclude the suspension of visitation of the type that was adopted by prisons in most jails. Because of the pandemic, it necessitated limiting access to and movement within correctional facilities for medical safety of inmates and staff.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Future pandemics, natural disasters, even logistical realities like a broken HVAC system, the visitation room is too hot or too cold to go into. That's not a reason to suspend visitation even for a day under this Bill. It's just so rigorous in how it reads. And the challenge is that by codifying visitation as a right, we're going to get sued every single time a visit is denied. It's just the reality of it.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
I'm being a little hyperbolic there, but we will be sued for suspended or disallowed visitation if it doesn't fall under this bill. Because this bill says it's a right to receive visitation, it will invite costly litigation. This concern was highlighted in the governor's veto message, and we aren't sure what's different. So for those reasons, we're respectfully opposed. Thank you.
- Matthew Easley
Person
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and Committee Members. Matt Easley, representing the California Correctional Peace Officers Association. First of all, I'd like to say that CCPOA definitely recognizes the importance of visitation and the development of family bonds, and also want to clarify, too, that we are not the Department. So with that said, we don't disagree with many of the arguments put forth by the support, and many of the examples they offered were certainly sympathetic.
- Matthew Easley
Person
And I think we would be completely okay if not even supportive of addressing some of those petty reasons for visitation restrictions. There's certainly a lot of room there. Nobody should be denied visitation because they said hello to a vendor and we'd be happy to participate in fixing some of those problems.
- Matthew Easley
Person
With that said, this bill goes far beyond that and way beyond the examples given in the support testimony, this bill says that under no circumstances can you use someone's criminal history to restrict that visit, and that could be ongoing criminal activity of someone in the same gang as the person they're visiting, using that visit as an easy access into the prison to conduct gang business and easily exchange messages back and forth.
- Matthew Easley
Person
It's an easy avenue to introduce contraband in prisons, whether or not that's directly handled in the visitation room. Getting them the guaranteed access inside is a way to drop contraband in order for other participants in the smuggling operation to allow things to get inside. So the expansiveness of this Bill is what is most problematic to us.
- Matthew Easley
Person
But again, I just want to clarify that we don't have any particular issues with addressing a lot of the examples brought forth by the really tragic examples, honestly, that our support witnesses went through.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you, sir. Are there any other witnesses in opposition?
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair Members Ryan Sherman with Riverside Sheriff's Association and the Deputy Sheriff's Association of Monterey County and Placer county in opposition. Thank you.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. We'll now bring it back to Committee Members for any comments or questions. Ms. Bonta.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Thank you. Well, first, I'm happy to be a joint author on this Bill and appreciate, Mr. Santiago, for bringing it forward. I wanted to clarify that on page four of the analysis, you'll see that item number 21, this permits in person visitation if impossible, due to a public health emergency, the in person visiting hours to be replaced by an equal number of video calling hours in addition to the regular video calling hours.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
So I don't think that the scenario that you presented in terms of public health emergency isn't actually contemplated in this legislation. I also just want to just reiterate again, we had the CDCR actually tell us very directly in our budget submeeting that rehabilitation includes family connection and family visitation. So when we are limiting an individual's freedom of movement, including the person who is visiting, we are touching on and infringing on that person's civil rights.
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
So I have no qualms about making sure that this is a civil right that's protected both for the person who is inside the prison and for those who are trying to visit. And it just does what we should do, which is offers basic human dignity of the ability to stay connected with family Members. So with that, I'm thankful for the Bill and for your bringing this forward.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Any others? Mr. Bryan?
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Yeah, no, I'm one of those Committee Members who is also a co author and also has a loved one who they visited in prison before Christmas Eve, actually, it's been many times, on many occasions where it's been healing for me. It's been healing for them, for me to be there to make special days special even inside, it's been powerful to the rehabilitation process.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
One of the concerns that, well, one I take just like great offense with the idea that we would criminalize someone's entire family and intimate partners to suggest that they would bring contraband. They would do all of those things.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
But even if you are suggesting that just by being related to somebody and coming to visit them, that you are more likely to bring them contraband, it literally says, provides that a visitor or incarcerated person may have their visits denied or restricted based only on the following conduct during a visit. Conduct one, bringing contraband into the visiting area. That is in the bill. It's a thoughtful Bbll, it's a humanity bill, and happy to support it today.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Any other. Okay, you may close.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And I want to thank my colleagues for their comments. I won't repeat those comments because that's part of what I was going to answer. But maybe I want to talk about the litigation piece because we felt that the language was strong, and I always encourage folks. Okay, then tell me, what is a stronger language to prevent litigation? Because this is not a bill that wants to encourage litigation. But is there something there if there's a natural disaster?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Because for those who are following this, the theory is that if we say that it's a civil right, then if we try to take this civil right away, there could be litigation. But certainly there may be a public health care crisis.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I know it's stated in the bill, but what is the language that holds harmless then when there is a bona fide emergency, if there's an earthquake and the place breaks down and you can't have a visiting, what is that language that does that if there's a health care crisis that we hope never happens again, if there's a flood? I recognize, and I think the sponsors and coalition would recognize, that there are bona fide places where there may be a physical obstacle to visiting.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
But I think it's very important to understand that if you make it a civil right, then you just can't take it away anytime anybody wants. Now, it's been brought up also over the last couple of years that there's no other sort of method for discipline, but clearly there is. I'm going to save what my colleague said a second ago, or maybe repeat it, that visiting rights can be removed.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
If there is something that has happened during that visiting period where this individual cannot be trusted, for lack of better word, during visiting. So if I am visiting you or you visiting me and something happens within this particular time and space, we're not arguing that, okay, you may have done something during this period of time and therefore can't visit, have visitation rights or visit, okay, that's different. But you still have other disciplinary actions that could be taken. I'm going to list a few, read them.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
You can get good time taken out. You can have administrative segregation. I'm not saying I agree with any of these things, but they are there in the books that could be used. There's denial of quarterly packages. There's write ups. There's a number of other sort of disciplinary actions that can be taken if a person is doing something not supposed to be doing outside of visiting rights. And the other thing, too, is that let's say that we agree that.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I don't agree, but let's just say that we believe that most people who are visiting are handing something over a contraband. Let's just say for a second, I don't agree with it, but let's say with it, there are still, we still don't state about how to limit that sort of visitation. So if there is somebody who is prone to doing that, you could still do it through a glass. You could do it through a number of different ways. We're not touching those pieces of it.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
There's still some sort of discretionary action taken to prevent those kind of things if they do happen. All we're saying is that if you make it a civil right, you start off with the understanding that somebody has the ability to do this, has the right and it cannot be taken away just unilaterally. And I think it's incredibly important. I just can't state enough. And we want to codify that it's three days, and here's why.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Because the money is there, too, but we need to codify it because if it's three days, that means that one of those days is going to have to land on the weekend. And this is a game changer for people who are going to visit. If you work Monday through Friday, and currently the only days are Monday through Friday to visit, you're going to have a hard time visiting a loved one or getting visits.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And if you do it three days, which the money is already there, it's just not codified. So we want to codify it. One of those days will happen to be on the weekend, so people won't have to miss a day of work to go visit a loved.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
There's. I could speak about this for a significant period of time because I feel so passionately about it. But when this Bill was introduced to us by a former Member of this house who's now the AG, when we looked at it, we realized that there's some serious merits to having somebody be visited and having the ability to visit. And these are just modest steps. So I would argue there's already disciplinary actions that could be taken outside of the Bill, outside of the visitation.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Anyway, I can go on forever. I don't want to repeat myself. Mr. Chair, I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Chair is recommending Aye vote. Is there a motion?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Second.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 958 by sub Member Santiago. The motion is do passed to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Second.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
We're now going to go to item 23, AB 912. Mr. Chair, you have it getting in your way?
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
No. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Members, I would like to thank, first, start by thanking my Committee staff for their diligent work, and I will be accepting my Committee amendments. Members, I present AB 912 strategic Anti-violence Funding Efforts Act or Safe Act. The Department of Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation announced a closure and deactivation of two prisons, which the LAO estimates the total 235.3 million in annual savings.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
The reduction in the prison population are not by accident, but are instead the direct result of sensible legislation and budget items achieved to improve public safety and advance justice and equity. Rather than returning to the General Fund, it is imperative that these savings are kept within the Legislature's crime prevention budget and reinvested into effective, strategic, proven strategies to further reduce crime and violence. As such, the SaFE Act Rec calls for reallocating 235,000,000 in annual savings to five programs.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
50 million annually will go to the Youth Reinvestment grant program 35 million annual will go to programs that reduce gang violence and gang involvement modeled after the ceasefire in Oakland. 50 million annual will provide operational grants to school based health centers to provide physical and mental health services to children. 50 million annually would expand the cognitive behavioral intervention for trauma in schools to the counties with the highest violent crime rate.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And then finally, 50 million annually would create new parks and Fund recreational health-based opportunities during peak times of violence. The Safe Act is a comprehensive measure that will fund effective strategies to prevent violence from occurring in the first place divert youth and people from entering the system and divert people from recidivating.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
With me to speak in support of this Bill is Darya Larizadeh pretty close Senior Policy Attorney, Youth Justice Initiative with the National Center for Youth Law, and Lesli Caldwell-Houston with the California Public Defenders Associate. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Darya Larizadeh
Person
Good afternoon, Chairman and Members of the Committee. My name is Darya Larizadeh and I'm a Senior Policy Attorney at the National Center for Youth Law on our Youth Justice Team. Thank you for the opportunity to speak on behalf of the Youth Reinvestment Grant Program.
- Darya Larizadeh
Person
In recent years, the Legislature has demonstrated its understanding that a public health approach, which provides access to services outside of the juvenile justice system, is the most appropriate and cost-effective way to improve youth outcomes and public safety, as seen through the Legislature's support of the 2018 and 2019 Youth Reinvestment grant and Tribal Youth Diversion Grant Programs, which have yielded amazing results.
- Darya Larizadeh
Person
At this time, when low-income youth of color have endured and continue to experience unprecedented levels of mental health distress due to the many challenges caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, community-based youth health and development programs are needed more than ever. The Legislature's previous investment in the youth reinvestment grant programs have positively impacted the lives of over 11,500 youth. The BSCC data for the 2018 cohort shows that over 70% of the youth served are Black, Latina, or Native youth.
- Darya Larizadeh
Person
Of those youth who were evaluated, over half were assessed as moderate to high risk. These are populations of youth that have historically been funneled into the juvenile justice system. Instead, youth participated in comprehensive programs, including education support, mental health, substance abuse treatment, mentoring, and prosocial activities in their communities. Of the youth that exited the diversion programs, 70% were evaluated as successfully completing their programs.
- Darya Larizadeh
Person
Similarly, when looking at recidivism, over two thirds of the youth who completed their programs had no further contact with law enforcement throughout the grant reporting period, which is a three year period. This is the inverse of what we see for juvenile justice system outcomes in many counties across the state. This works. Over half of the youth who have entered the diversion programs are still enrolled in programming today. They have found a sense of community, belonging and stable support.
- Darya Larizadeh
Person
A $50 million annual allocation to the Youth Reinvestment grant to support programs and services through community based organizations and tribal governments as alternatives to system involvement would help to continue to reverse the harmful and costly trend of relying on the juvenile justice system to meet youth's health and development needs. As such, we believe the state investment in community based aversion programs is both socially and fiscally responsible. I urge your aye vote. Thank you.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
Good afternoon, Committee Members. I'm Lesli Caldwell-Houston, and I'm proud to provide support testimony for AB 112 on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association. I'm going to get into a little bit of history right now because I think it's important to keep in mind in my nearly 40 years of working. zero, thank you.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
In working in indigent defense, I have seen the hard swings from extremely harsh punishments to an era where we clearly see the wrongs of the war on drugs and the rush to send our citizens to prison for decades at a time. At the beginning of the three strikes era, I watched my young client, 22 years old, sentenced to 27 years to life in prison for stealing $8.61 in change.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
He was recently provided a lawyer to assist him in securing a resentencing due to the law changes, and that is thanks to a three year grant given to public defenders across the state. Now, unfortunately in doubt, that was just the start of a very sad and dark time in my career in our communities. Years before three strikes, I was watching my clients coming into the system more and more mentally and physically ill.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
And yet prison sentences became longer and longer and there were no health services available. The moves to draconian punishment are known to have failed us all, and particularly black and brown people, through mass incarceration. Now, thanks to the many new laws reforming criminal justice, we have significantly reduced the population in our state prisons and we are beginning to close prisons.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
These closures are saving millions, hundreds of millions of dollars, and these dollars must be redirected into the Legislature's crime prevention budget and reinvested into the strategies we know to reduce crime and violence. AB 912 recognizes the need for a new vision of youth justice, crime prevention that must focus our precious resources on mental health, education and physical needs of our young people and their families as a primary force in ensuring healthy youth, healthy communities and public safety.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
AB 912 wisely places Administration of the Youth Justice Reinvestment grant under an Office of Youth and Community Restoration OICR, housed in the California Health and Human Services Agency, which is where it should be. The mission of the OCYR would be to promote to promote a youth continuum of services that are traumain responsive and culturally informed, using public health approaches that support positive youth development, build the capacity of community based approaches, and reduce the justice involvement of youth.
- Lesli Caldwell-Houston
Person
AB 912 provides additional grants for targeted prevention and intervention programs. Such programs are what justice advocates, researchers, families and our communities definitely need. It is one step toward what our communities truly need, and we therefore respectfully request your yes vote.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else in support? Name and organization, please.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of Initiate Justice Transformative in Prison Work Group and Californians for Safety and Justice.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Glenn Backes, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights in support.
- Natasha Minsker
Person
Natasha Minsker, Smart Justice California and Prosecutors Alliance of California in support.
- James Lindburg
Person
Jim Lindbergh, on behalf of the Friends Committee on Legislation of California, in support.
- Robert Harris
Person
Robert Harris on behalf of St. John's Community Health, in support.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone in opposition? Going once. Okay, turn it to Committee. Any comments? Questions?
- Mia Bonta
Legislator
Just want to thank the author for bringing forward this Bill. I think this is on that list, that very special list that we know is incredibly important and want to appreciate you for acknowledging and recognizing the work of Oakland chief Cesbedes in particular, as one of the examples of what you'd be able to do, what we'd be able to do with this public health approach to ensuring our youth get the support that they need. So thank you.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay, I'd like to conclude with, as you know, our discussions and talks that we've had. Me being a prior school resource officer, believing in youth programs and getting to them younger dare, back in the day when we used to have that as well, I thought that was a great program, too, where we got to the youth and got to mentor them and teach them the values. Also why I got into coaching and Boy Scouts as well.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
And so I'm very strong about this Bill, especially getting to the youth. And if you would mind, I'd also like to co-author it as well. And I'm pretty sure the Chair is asking for an aye.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I would be honored to have you on as a co-author.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. You may close.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
For me, this is the culmination of 10 years of reducing the prison population and actually the culmination of proving that if we invest on the front end, we would have even more savings and reduce crime even more. So for me, this is the legacy piece of all the 10 years of work on this. This is why we came here. This is why I came here. This is what it's all about. So thank you.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Those moved second. Thank you. Take roll, please.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 912 by Assemblymember Jones-Sawyer. The motion is do passed as amended to the Education Committee. [Roll Call] Congratulations.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Thank you. Next we will do add ons, vote changes and lifting of calls for all measures taken up today.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Excuse me. On the consent calendar, Santiago. Santiago Aye. Item number one, AB 329, has been dispensed with. Item number two, AB 455, was pulled by the author. Item number three, AB 523, was pulled by the author. Item number four, AB667 was pulled by the author. Item number five, AB695 was pulled by Committee. Item number six, AB697 was on consent. Item number seven, AB71 this measure was on call. [Roll Call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
Item number seven, AB 701 by Assembly Member via Pudua [Roll Call]
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
And we will grant reconsideration with no objection. There's no objections. Unanimous consent.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Item number eight, AB 724, was on consent. Item number nine, AB 725, this measure was on call. [Roll Call]. Item number nine, AB 725, by Assembly Member Lowenthal [Roll Call] That measure passes. Item number 10, AB 742, has been dispensed with. Item 750. Excuse me. Item number 11, AB 751, was on consent. Item number 12, AB 758, by Assembly Member Dixon.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call] On reconsideration, Assembly Member Brian? They had given it unanimous yes, we did, by unanimous consent. Would you like to be added? No, they have not. But you can go as either no or not voting, sir. Not voting. Santiago. On reconsideration for AB 758, Santiago Aye. Item number 13, AB 763, was pulled by the author. Item number 14, AB 806 by Assembly Member. [Roll Call] Item number 15, AB 807. This measure was on call.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call] That measure passes. Item number 16, AB 808, was pulled by the author. Item number 17, AB 819 [Roll Call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call] Item number 18, AB 855, by Assembly Member Jackson. [Roll Call] Item number 19, AB 862. [Roll Call] Item number 20, AB 881 by Assembly Member Ting, this measure was on call. [Roll Call] That measure passes. Item number 21, AB 890. [Roll Call] Item number 22, AB 898. Excuse me. Has been dispensed with. Item number 23, AB 912, was just dispensed with.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Item number 24, AB 959. Excuse me. 943 was on consent. Item number 25, AB 958, has been dispensed with. Item 26, AB 977, was pulled by the author. Item 27, AB 994, by Assembly Member Jackson. This measure was on call. [Roll Call] That measure passes. Item 28, AB 997 was on consent. Item 29, AB 1047, was pulled by the author. Item number 30, AB 1064, by Senate Member Low [Roll Call]. Item 31, AB 1080, was on consent.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
For the record, item number 30 passed.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Yes, it already passed.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okay with that? This concludes the hearing for the Assembly Public Safety Committee. Yeah.