Senate Standing Committee on Public Safety
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
The Senate Committee on Public Safety will come to order. Good morning. The Senate continues to welcome the public in person and via teleconference service for individuals wishing to provide public comment. Today's participant number is 877-226-8163 and the access code is 694-8930 phone testimony will be limited to 15 minutes for each Bill. We are holding our Committee hearings here in room 2200 in the O Street building.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
I ask all Members of the Committee to be present in the room so we can establish our quorum and begin our hearing. We have 19 bills on today's agenda and one is on consent. Before we hear presentations on the bills, let's establish a quorum. Assistant, please call the role.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
The assistant notes a quorum has been established. Now let's hear from our first author, Senator Portantino. SB 2, welcome. The floor is yours.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair and Committee Members. SB 2 will implement various improvements to California's existing concealed carry weapons regime in response to the recent United States Supreme Court decision in New York Rifle and Pistol Association versus Bruin, SB 2 helps strengthen our state law by ensuring those carrying firearms in public are responsible, law abiding citizens. Who would argue with that? Being responsible, law abiding citizen who do not pose a danger to themselves or others, who should argue with that?
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Protecting children and young adults from gun violence by setting a minimum age requirement of 21 to obtain a CCW, as opposed to 18 again, you have to be 25 to rent a car. Seems logical that we should have an age requirement that's commensurate with this awesome responsibility. Advancing safety through stronger training requirements about the proper handling, loading and unloading and storage of firearms creates a safeguarding the public by identifying certain sensitive public places where guns may not be carried.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Frankly, you don't need to take a gun to your daughter's AYSO soccer game. Additionally, SB 2 will also promote due process by allowing anyone whose application is denied to receive a hearing before a judge of the Supreme Court for an additional layer of review. Makes sense. Have an appeal process.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
These new procedures will ensure that we are consistent with California's supreme with the Supreme Court decision in Bruin, only law abiding and responsible applicants for CCW licenses will be authorized to receive one gun violence, as we tragically saw yet again yesterday, and God bless the families of those little kids. I mean, gun violence inflicts a terrible toll on our communities. Last year, nearly 20,000 people were killed in gun related homicides in the United States.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
To put that in perspective, it's enough people to fill 40 Boeing 747s, and sadly, the number keeps rising. And the problem is just not illegal guns. At least 76% of the guns used in mass shootings over the past 35 years were obtained legally. There is ample evidence showing that increased public carrying of firearms leads to more violence. Let me say that again, the data shows that we are less safe the more guns are in circulation.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Adding guns increases the chances that otherwise nonlethal interactions, such as road rage, dispute over talking on a cell phone, or even in a movie theater turn deadly. And more people carrying firearms leads to more thefts of firearms, up 35% or more. More firearms in public places also creates challenges for law enforcement. The DOJ consulted with public safety experts and prominent scholars across the nation to ensure that this measure is constitutional and consistent with the Supreme Court decision.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
So again, we're trying to comply with the Supreme Court's decision by promoting a consistent application of the CCW permit process and then using common sense and logic to make sure that we have a robust list of prohibited places to where one can carry their weapon. We should urgently pass this, we should put it on the governor's desk, and we should make sure that California is made safer. With me this morning have amazing person who's going to tell us about her personal story.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Mia Page Tretta, who is a survivor of gun violence and a Student Demand Action volunteer. Just, you know, please listen to her. We also have Candice Chung from the DOJ, and then we have Michael from the DOJ who's here to answer any technical questions. So I'll respectfully ask for an aye vote when appropriate. And if we could have our primary witnesses come forward. Thank you, Mia, for being here.
- Mia Tretta
Person
Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. You have 2 minutes.
- Mia Tretta
Person
Hi, I'm Mia Tretta and I'm a senior at Saugus High School in Santa Clarita, California in Southern California, where I lead my Students Demand Action group and I'm on the National Advisory board for Students Demand Action. I was a freshman at Saugus when a student I didn't know pulled a 45 caliber ghost gun out of his backpack and shot me and four others. I was airlifted to the hospital and underwent surgeries to remove a bullet from my stomach.
- Mia Tretta
Person
Later that night, my parents told me that my 14 year old best friend, Dominic Blackwell, who is standing right next to me, was killed. These days, being someone who is shot in a school shooting, it's not unique. What's unique about my story is that I'm still alive. Healing from this tragedy is an everyday battle, and so many others endure the same pain. I fear public places and large crowds and even school has become a place of anxiety instead of learning.
- Mia Tretta
Person
The thought that just anyone could be carrying a firearm in places that are intended to be safe is horrifying. Parks and libraries and colleges and universities need to be safe. This Bill will help me and other students who live in fear. If law enforcement officer is responding to a violent situation, it is so much harder to identify who the threat is. If everyone is carrying a firearm, this Bill will help law enforcement stay safe and protect us.
- Mia Tretta
Person
Guns are the leading cause of death for children and teens, and this is an American specific epidemic. The more guns in sensitive places is not the answer. I refuse to continue watching people like me die in schools, and I refuse to feel on edge at the grocery store. I refuse to avoid concerts and sporting events. I refuse to search for my exit signs everywhere I go. And this is the land of the free.
- Mia Tretta
Person
And we can be free of gun violence, but it will take all of us. So please, I beg of you to support SB 2 so we can continue leading the nation in California to end gun violence. Thank you. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Next speaker.
- Candice Chung
Person
Good morning, Madam Chair and Committee Members. My name is Candice Chung and I'm a legislative advocate with the office of Attorney General Rob Bonta, who is pleased to co sponsor this Bill with Governor Gavin Newsom. On behalf of the Attorney General, I'd like to thank Senator Portantino for his continued leadership on this issue and for authoring this Bill, and I don't see him, but dear colleagues Senator Bradford and Senator Skinner for co authoring this measure.
- Candice Chung
Person
As mentioned by the Senator, this Bill is critical to strengthening California's concealed carry weapon laws in response to the Supreme Court's decision in Bruin. Because of the Bruin decision, currently, applicants need only show that they're not prohibited by law from possessing a gun and of good moral character, which is defined by the individual licensing authorities. Instead, SB 2 will create a uniform, statewide standard that uses clear, objective criteria to assess applicants to ensure that concealed carry weapon permits are not issued to dangerous individuals.
- Candice Chung
Person
Just as important, it sets out gun free zones to allow Californians to gather, learn, and worship in safety. Young people like Mia should not be afraid to go to her local mall. While the Bruin decision changed our understanding of constitutional regulation in this space, it also affirmed a state's right to prohibit individuals who are not law abiding, responsible citizens from carrying firearms in public.
- Candice Chung
Person
And it endorsed the establishment of sensitive places. With SB 2, California seeks to set the roadmap to follow the roadmap set forth by the Bruin court. It contains evidence based restrictions endorsed by Bruin and based on real world data. In crafting this Bill, we've welcomed input from the stakeholders, including law enforcement, gun safety advocates, hunting clubs, and transportation groups.
- Candice Chung
Person
As a result of those meetings, we've refined the language to create a workable system that strikes the appropriate balance between respecting law abiding residents rights to keep and bear arms, and the public's equally weighty interest in having safe streets. Since Bruin, we've seen a roughly 40% increase in CCW applications. That means more guns in public, more guns in your grocery store, your cafes, movie theaters, gas stations. We know that more guns in more places means more people will die because of firearms.
- Candice Chung
Person
In fact, a 2022 study found that right to carry laws increased firearm violence by 29%. Without SB 2, more Californians will fall victim to gun violence. That is simply unacceptable. California has one of the lowest firearm mortality rates in the country, and that's because we have some of the strongest gun safety laws in the nation. SB 2 is a common sense measure that will further protect Californians from gun violence. I thank you for your time and respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Candice Chung
Person
At this time, I'd also like to introduce my colleague Michael Redding, who is a Special Assistant Attorney General that handles public safety issues, to answer any technical questions you might have.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Let's hear from any other support witnesses here in the room. Please state your name, your organization, and your position.
- Natasha Minsker
Person
Good morning. Natasha Minsker, Prosecutors Alliance of California, in strong support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jessica Hay
Person
Good morning. Jessica Hay, with the California School Employees Association in strong support.
- Assagai, Mel
Person
Good morning. Mel Assagai, for the Greater Sacramento Urban League in strong support.
- Cassandra Whetstone
Person
Cassandra Whetstone. I'm a volunteer with Moms Demand Action from Folsom. In strong support.
- Alex Navarro
Person
Alex Navarro. Volunteer with Moms Demand Action in strong support.
- Julie Chapman
Person
I'm Julie Chapman, a volunteer with Moms Demand Action in strong support.
- Moira C. Topp
Person
Moira Topp, on behalf of the city of San Diego, San Diego mayor Todd Gloria in support.
- Michael Rattigan
Person
Michael Rattigan. On behalf of the Board of Supervisors, Santa Clara County, in support. Thank you.
- Alexis Rodriguez
Person
Alexis Rodriguez, with the California Medical Association, in support. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Do we have any support witnesses left in the room that has not spoken already? All right, we will move on to opposition witnesses. This is for lead opposition witnesses. You have 2 minutes. 2 minutes each for two people.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
2 minutes total?
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Yeah. Each person, but only two people.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Understood.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Thank you, madam Chairman. Members Cory Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association, respectfully here in opposition to the Bill. We appreciate the author and sponsors who have listened to us and our concerns. Unfortunately, this Bill impacts a population that doesn't commit gun crimes. Addressing brewing in this way is unnecessarily complicated and overly burdensome. It will create unnecessary workload for the courts in terms of the appeals process.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
And given what we've seen in other states, it's likely to be challenged and probably overturned in whole or in part. We're choosing an approach here that's unlikely to fully survive a legal challenge and is unlikely to stop gun violence. So why are we proceeding down this road? With that likelihood in mind, this Bill disallows recording joint ownership of a firearm and requires a person to be the recorded owner of the firearm to list it on their CCW.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
That means a couple who reside together and jointly own a firearm, both cannot carry that firearm, even if it's lawfully and jointly owned. They both can't list it on their CCW. This will encourage the acquisition of more firearms. I just need to point out that a person who intends to commit a gun crime, or who doesn't intend to commit a gun crime but makes an impulsive or irrational decision or has a break, that person is not going to seek a CCW.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
They're not going to use that to help facilitate their gun crime. These restrictions will not keep any such person from carrying a firearm in public. For those reasons, we're respectfully opposed to Bill.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Thank you.
- Sam Pruit
Person
Madam Chair Members. Sam Pruit is representing Gun Owners of California and authorized to represent California Rifle and Pistol Association as well. We appreciate that the author includes severability clauses in his Bill. That is oftentimes, since my work in the Capitol since 1980 is a suspicion on the author's part that there are probably unconstitutional portions of this Bill. And I'm here to tell you that there are. Save the time, save the effort. What Bruin said is that any gun control law that's being considered has to be.
- Sam Pruit
Person
First of all, it said that this is not a handcuff to the government with regards to regulating firearms. But it also said it's not a blank check. And then the court said, here is your standard. Whatever you are considering, if it has an analog to 1791, then it can be considered. If it doesn't, by definition, it is unconstitutional.
- Sam Pruit
Person
And they specifically went and discussed about sensitive places and the expansion and churches and things, even though there were colonies at the time who ratified the the Constitution that said if you didn't bring your gun and ammo to, to church, you would be fined two pounds of tobacco, which was an enormous, you know, this was truly an effort to get around New York State Rifle and Pistol Association versus Bruin.
- Sam Pruit
Person
I think you will find that what's happening with the concealed carry weapons Permit Improvement act from New York, which is highly analogous to this piece of legislation that it is being going down in flames before the courts there. And we think that this will also save us all a lot of time and save the taxpayers money. This law will never go into effect. It will be challenged in the courts and it will be found to be unconstitutional, not in part, but in whole.
- Sam Pruit
Person
So thank you for your time. Appreciate it. If you have any questions, we'll be here.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. We'll now hear from other opposition witnesses here in the room. State your name, your organization and where you stand.
- Julius Mc Christian
Person
Good morning. Julius McChristian, lieutenant with the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department, in opposition. Thank you.
- Julio De Leon
Person
Good morning. Lieutenant Julie Delano with the Riverside County Sheriff's Office. On behalf of the sheriff's office and Sheriff Chad Bianco in opposition.
- Randy Perry
Person
Madam chair and Members Randy Perry with Aaron Read & Associates opposed and continue working with the offer.
- Daniel Reid
Person
Dan Reid, western regional Director with the National Rifle Association, also here for National Shooting Sports Foundation, in opposition. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other opposition. Support? It's already passed, so thank you. We will now move on to witnesses waiting to testify via the teleconference service. Please just state your name, organization and position. Moderator, if you would, please prompt the individuals waiting to testify in support or opposition. We will begin.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Thank you. And we first go to line number 33. Please go ahead.
- Silvia Shaw
Person
Sylvia Solis Shaw here on behalf of the City of Santa Monica in support. Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
And next we'll be going to line 27. Please go ahead.
- Molly Sheahan
Person
Molly Sheahan with the California Catholic Conference. I'm grateful for working with the author and in support. Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
And next we'll go to line 48. Please go ahead. Line 48, you are open. Please go ahead.
- Michael Finley
Person
Thank you. My name is Michael Finley with the National Shooting Sports foundation, Director of government relations in strong opposition.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Thank you. And we'll next go to line 37. Please go ahead.
- Carlene Ellis
Person
Thank you. This is Carlene Ellis. I'm a Member of the California Rifle and Pistol Association, the Gun Owners of California and the NRA in strong opposition. Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
And next we'll go to line 35. Please go ahead.
- Darren Bedwell
Person
Hi. Good morning, and thank you for this opportunity to call in. My name is Darren Bedwell. I'm a Member of the California Rifle and Pistol Association and Gun Owners of California and calling to voice my strong opposition to SB 2. Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
And next we go to line number 24. Please go ahead.
- Tim McMahon
Person
Madam Chair, this is Tim McMahon. I'm the chair of the South Sacramento chapter of the California Rifle and Pistol Association and NRA Member in strong opposition.
- Committee Secretary
Person
And next we'll go to line number 43. Please go ahead.
- James O'Brien
Person
Good morning. My name is James O'Brien. I'm a lifelong California resident, Member of the California Rifle and Pistol Association, an NRA life Member, and strong opposition of SB two. Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
And next we'll go to line number 32. Please go ahead.
- Kelly Hitt
Person
Good morning. Kelly Hitt on behalf of Sutter Health in support.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Thank you. And next we'll go to line 54. Please go ahead.
- Ray Grangoff
Person
Hi, Ray Grangoff with the Orange County Sheriff's Department voicing opposition. Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
And with that, there are no further lines in queue at this time.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you to all our support and opposition witnesses. We will now bring the discussion back to Members. Do any of our Members have any questions or comments? Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I guess I will. I wanted to give the author an opportunity to explain the Supreme Court's notion or understanding of being unconstitutional. This Bill could possibly, potentially be unconstitutional with regards to expanding it to the category of in regards to the sensitive places or simply all places of public congregation. Would you care to respond to the thought that this could be potentially unconstitutional?
- Anthony Portantino
Person
So any law that we pass through the Legislature someone can bring a challenge to, that's not a unique circumstance. This Bill will probably be challenged. But do we believe it's constitutional? Absolutely. Have we looked at the Bruin decision, as the Department of Justice said, as a roadmap to create a constitutionally sound approach. The Supreme Court said, you can't be arbitrary. So this Bill is not arbitrary.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
It's creating concrete criteria of who should and shouldn't be eligible to get this responsibility of having a concealed carry permit that's consistent with the Supreme Court. Supreme Court said you can have prohibited places. This Bill has prohibited places that make sense. We have looked at the recent court decisions. The Attorney General's Office has looked at those decisions. We believe at the end of the day, this Bill would be constitutional.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
If there's a specific point that you are concerned about, I do have DOJ here who can answer specific questions. But to the nature of this proposal, we believe it's going to stand up. And frankly, that's important. We're not here just to say we want to do this. We're here to make California safer. And we know statistically that this will make California safer. And so that's what we're interested in doing, and we're using Bruin as a roadmap to do it.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
The other question I had for you was, with regards to the CCWs, do you believe, and is there data showing that there's a problem with people who have committed murders or mass murders that carry CCWs in comparison to someone who does not have the CCWs?
- Anthony Portantino
Person
So the data shows that the more proliferation of weapons that are readily available to the General public, the more concentration of weapons, the more chances of violence occurs. That's statewide. That's nationwide. So states that have lack CCW permitting issues, states that allow more open carry, states that have a more proliferation of weapons in their possession have more violence in those states per capita than California, which has stricter rules.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
So, yes, we believe that by restricting CCWs to law abiding citizens and having prohibited places, we are going to cut down on the number of shootings in our state. And the statistics show that that's an aggregate.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
But specifically with individuals who have CCWs, do we have any data that specifically.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Shows, there is data to suggest that the more firearms in those homes, the more that homes have weapons in them, the more suicides, the more unintended violence? Yes. That is a valid statistical analysis to make on the proliferation of weapons. The proliferation of weapons in households. So the more weapons you put in private hands, the more violence we have in California.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Senator Skinner.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair. Thank you, Assembly Members. Our days together.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you, Senator, for bringing this Bill. On my drive to the Capitol yesterday, I was listening to an NPR report that basically detailed the research and the documentation that those states with the open carry laws have much higher gun violence incidents than those states without.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Now, this Bill is very important, and I really appreciate you bringing it to us because it addresses a situation where California, in my opinion, had a very good law, but a recent court ruling has raised some issues around our ability to enforce it. And so I greatly appreciate how thoughtfully constructed this Bill is to address those concerns and still give us in California the best protections we can to minimize gun violence.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And I think while people have varying opinions on what should be appropriate in these issues of firearms, I would hope that there is no one that wants to see more gun violence in our state. And because the data is clear that unrestricted open carry is more gun violence, this is essential and at a time that's appropriate. If and if it's appropriate. Now, I will move the Bill.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. We have a motion. Would any other Senator like to speak? Seeing none. Senator, would you like to close?
- Anthony Portantino
Person
I would. Thank you, Madam Chair and Members. And I do want to thank the Attorney General and the Governor for being the sponsors of this legislation. How many more tragedies? How many more children? How many more schools? How many more teachers? How many more movie theaters, malls? How many more do we as a society, embrace each other and say, enough. This is an opportunity for California to be safer from gun violence.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
And the idea that people are going to advocate for more guns as somehow a valid tool to make California safer when we know it's the opposite. More guns leads to more violence, not less. Arming people leads to more confrontation, not less. So if we want to have less death on our school campuses, we need to have less guns in circulation. It's pretty simple. And the states that allow it have more gun violence than the states that don't.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Now, frankly, this should be addressed on a national level. We should make sure that our neighboring states are just as strong in their advocacy as we are. Because then, collectively, as a society, we'll be safer. But we can't make Nevada or Arizona do what they should do. But we certainly can make California do what it must do. And that's why it's important that we put this Bill on the governor's desk, because we want Californians to be safer.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
And as Mia pointed out, this is a uniquely American problem. Other states don't have this issue. And frankly, it's because other states don't allow the proliferation of weapons that the United States does. And so I respectfully ask for you to embrace public safety, our children, our law enforcement, that has to respond to these tragedies and clean up these tragedies, and look at the faces of the family Members when their children are shot in schools or when a domestic violence dispute rises to this level.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
We have an opportunity to act. We should take that opportunity. And I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. So, this Bill has been moved by Senator Skinner. If we can have a roll call, please.
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 2, motion is do pass to appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
We will hold the roll open. Thank you. Thank you, Senator.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
So, we have another bill that is going to be presented by Senator Portantino as well. SB 368. Senator, the floor is yours.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair and Committee Members, I'll begin by accepting the Committee amendments outlined in the analysis. And thank you for your Committee staff for working with mine. I also want to give a shout out to my staff and the Department of Justice staff for working on SB 2 as well. It is a big bill, and there's been a lot of work. So thank you to my team and to the DOJ.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
And again, want to echo the appreciation as they work on SB 368, which is a comprehensive firearm safety package that would expand our prudent laws. It prohibits firearm stores and dealers from raffling off inventory items, accessories and firearms to anyone, whether it be purchased through the purchase of raffle tickets.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
And this became to my attention, because in Burbank, one of my cities, they were doing a protest against gun violence on one block, and one of the gun stores decided to do a raffle that same day across the street to give off things to bring in new customers, as sort of a back and forth between the folks who were protesting on the one side of the street. And I was sort of alarmed that you could use raffles to entice more people to buy more guns.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Just doesn't seem, again, more guns means more death. And so we, as a body, should not be encouraging more death. And so that's one of the provisions. It also expands laws around who, in a crisis, are having suicidal thoughts, folks who can turn their weapons back over to those stores.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
So if you want to get rid of your gun, we should force the stores to have skin in the game to make society a little bit safer by taking and storing those firearms from folks who want to turn them in. It also extends the 10 year prohibition on owning a firearm. To me, it seemed sort of illogical that we would just have a date, determine whether somebody is a threat to society. So after 10 years, they would automatically get their gun rights back.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
They still may have the same issues that cause them to be prohibited 10 years earlier. So there should be some system to evaluate whether somebody gets their gun rights back. And so we think it's a prudent step to sort of put gun stores in the game of trying to make them more responsible. We think allowing a breath at the 10 year point to make sure somebody is an upstanding citizen at that point and should get their gun rights back makes sense.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
And so with me, I have Kim Stone from the California District Attorneys Association and Tiffany from the California Federation of Teachers, who will offer witnesses in support.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
Chair and Members, thank you to the author for his leadership, Kim Stone of Stone Advocacy on behalf of the California District Attorneys Association in support. Just want to share a couple of brief statistics from E, the Educational Fund to Stop Gun Violence. Suicides comprise 52% of the firearm deaths in California. One third of California suicides are by gun violence. Approximately 1600 suicide gun deaths a year every year in California that has held steady from 2010 to 2019.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
California District Attorneys Association supports removing guns from people who should not have them, whether that be people who have used guns for violence against others or because they are at risk for using that gun to hurt themselves or others. This bill facilitates that common sense removal in many cases, either if that removal is because the person voluntarily agrees that they shouldn't have the gun or because their criminal behavior has led that to happen. We support the bill and urge your aye vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Tiffany Mock
Person
Hi. Tiffany Mock with CFT, a union of classified professionals and educators. We want to also thank the author for this thoughtful bill to remove guns from folks who may not have wanted them but just won them in a raffle and additionally find a safe way to store guns when they're not in the mindset of really wanting to have them around them. We've seen research across this country and this world that indicates that when folks have the ability to not have guns, that suicide numbers are reduced. And so for those reasons, we're proud to support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other support witnesses here in this room? Seeing none, we will move to opposition witnesses. We have no opposition witnesses in this room. All right, we will move on. More specifically to those individuals that are waiting to testify via the teleconference service. Please just state your name, organization, and position. Moderator, if you would, please prompt the individuals waiting to testify in support or opposition of this bill, we will begin.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Thank you. And once again, if they would like to make a comment, please press one, then zero. And first we'll go to line 44. Please go ahead.
- Samira Collier-Watt
Person
Hi, my name is Samira Collier-Watt. I'm a Member of the California Rifle and Pistol Association, the National Rifle Association, Gun Owners of California, and Gun Owners of America, and I'm in strong opposition to this bill.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Next, we'll go to line number 15. 15, please go ahead.
- Margot Bennett
Person
My name is Margot Bennett. I'm the Executive Director, and I am also representing Women Against Gun Violence. We are in strong support of SB 368.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And we'll go to line 35. Please go ahead.
- Darren Bedwell
Person
Hi, good morning. My name is Darren Bedwell. I'm a Member of the California Rifle and Pistol Association and Gun Owners of California, and I'm in strong opposition to SB 368. Thank you.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Next, we'll go to line 62. Please go ahead.
- Krishna Permal
Person
Thank you for the opportunity. Krishna Permal, Member of Gun Owners of America, CRPA, California Rifle and Pistol Association, strongly in opposition to SB 368. Thank you.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Next, we'll go to line 64. Please go ahead.
- James O'Brien
Person
My name is James O'Brien. I'm a lifelong California resident, Member of the California Rifle and Pistol Association, an NRA life member, and strong opposition of SB 368. Thank you.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Next we'll go to line 48. Please go ahead.
- Michael Finley
Person
Thank you. My name is Michael Finley, Director of Government Relations for the National Shooting Sports Foundation, Trade Association for America's Gun Manufacturers, Retailers and Ranges. In strong opposition. Thank you.
- James O'Brien
Person
And we will go to line 37. Please go ahead.
- Carlene Ellis
Person
Thank you. This is Carlene Ellis. I'm a Member of the California Rifle and Pistol Association. The Gun Owners of California and the NRA in strong opposition to this bill. Thank you.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And we will go to line 24. Please go ahead.
- Tim McMahon
Person
Madam Chair it is Tim McMahon. I'm the chair of the South Sacramento chapter of the California Rifle and Pistol Association and NRA Member in strong opposition.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And we will move to line 60. Please go ahead.
- Mark Rasmussen
Person
Hello, I'm Mark Rasmussen. I'm a retired Californian, and I strongly oppose this legislation.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And we will go to line 58. Please go ahead.
- Jeff Turner
Person
My name is Jeff Turner. I'm a Member of the National Network of Safe Communities and the California Rifle and Pistol Association. I strongly oppose this legislation. Thank you.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And we will go to line 67. Please go ahead.
- Rory Hanley
Person
Hi, my name is Rory Hanley with the Folsom chapter of the California Rifle and Pistol Association, Gun Owners of California, and the NRA, and strong opposition. Thank you.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And, Madam Chair, we have no further comments on the phone.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you to all our support and opposition witnesses. We'll now bring the discussion back to Members. Members, do we have any questions or concerns or comments? Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Really the only one with questions. Okay. And I guess this would not be for you, Senator Portantino, but more for anyone that is opposing this bill. I have here that there's a concern on whether or not it would be more appropriate for law enforcement agencies to be receiving these guns rather than the dealers. Could you speak a little bit to that?
- Sam Paredes
Person
Thank you. Senator. Sam Paredes, representing Gun Owners of California. California Rifle and Pistol Association. First of all, the lawful commerce in firearms is a lawful thing. There's nothing illegal about it. They follow a process. And now, for the state to mandate that they accept firearms from people who admit themselves that they are in crisis is wholly unacceptable for private businesses. If they don't have capacity for additional guns for storage, they're in violation of the law. The law doesn't say you may, it says you shall.
- Sam Paredes
Person
Now, when somebody is in crisis, don't you think it might be a little more wise for them to make an appointment and come to the fire, to the Police Department who can safely handle, make sure that all security is taken care of, instead of putting that inequity on a private business person, which is just not fair to force them? It is not the lawful dealer's faults that people use guns for crime or for suicides. And to make them culpable without trial just goes against our system for values. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Do we have any other questions or comments?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I do. So, Senator Portantino, would you care to respond to those comments?
- Anthony Portantino
Person
Absolutely. Frankly, the idea that that gun owner, who is suffering from some internal trauma, wants to turn in their weapon, I believe they'll be more comfortable bringing it to the gun dealer than the police station. And that's the point, is if they're thinking about giving up their weapon, let's help them do it. And frankly, I don't shed a tear for the gun store having to have some responsibility in this situation at all. They have the storage capacity.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
They're, after all, selling weapons that they properly store in their stores. So I don't see it as a hardship. I see it as a prudent step. To let somebody voluntarily turn back their weapon and let the place they bought it from hold it, to me, makes sense and should be encouraged, not discouraged.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. An additional question?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Yes, I do. I want to finish my line of thought on both the comments and the response. And I understand your point with regards, but I also understand the point that the gentleman is making with regards to having the law enforcement space accept these guns. Is there anything currently in law that prohibits dealers from accepting guns that want to be given off by people who are suffering from mental health issues? Is there anything in there that says they cannot?
- Anthony Portantino
Person
I do not believe they're prohibited from doing it, but this means that they must do it.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Okay.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
And there's nothing to stop somebody from going down to the sheriff's station and turning in their weapon either. People have that ability to do it. Now, the point of this is I believe they'll be more comfortable going to a place that they were comfortable enough to purchase their weapon from. And if they want to give it up, let them give it up.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So there's nothing in statue right now that prohibits them from doing that already. Number two, the follow up to that, by making this a mandate for the dealers, does it bring liability to the dealers in any shape, way or form.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
No more so than them having weapons on premises currently gives them liability, does not create any additional burden on them from a liability. They're selling weapons at that place of business. That's what they do.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
But with regards to the safety of the individual.
- Anthony Portantino
Person
They're charged with keeping their weapons safe on premises as they're currently doing their business. If they let their weapons go without having the proper dispenseful paperwork, they're liable. This doesn't create any additional burden or liability on them other than the capacity to store.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Okay, thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. Do we have any other comments? Senator Skinner?
- Nancy Skinner
Person
I moved the bill.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. No other comments. All right, Senator, would you like to close?
- Anthony Portantino
Person
If we prevent one suicide through this bill, the bill is worth it. I believe we're going to prevent more than one. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. A motion has been made by Senator Skinner. Can we call roll, please?
- Committee Moderator
Person
SB 368? The motion is do passed as amended to appropriation. [Roll Call].
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
We will hold the roll open. Thank you. Senator.
- Sarah Loftin
Person
SB 78. [roll call]
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Do I have a motion on consent items? Thank you. Motion has been moved by Senator Skinner.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
We'll hold the roll open. Thank you. We'll be waiting for our next presenter. Thank you. Guys. We have another lull.Senator Nguyen.
- Sarah Loftin
Person
Or Jones is here first. Jones is first. Actually, Jones is.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
I saw Senator Nguyen come earlier today. Would you like to present? No worries. Senator Jones. Senator Jones, would you like to present? Thank you. We normally have it here, but it's fine here since you have witnesses. Stand up behind here if you present there. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Senator Jones is presenting SB 31. You have the floor.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Safety Committee. I am first presenting SB 31, which does three things to help clean up California and protect public health and safety. First, this Bill prohibits encampments near sensitive communities such as schools, parks, libraries, and daycare centers. This will help us protect our most vulnerable population, our children who go to school and daycare centers play in parks, and go to story time at the libraries. Second, this Bill requires a 72-hour warning period before an encampment sweep can occur.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
This will give individuals in homeless communities a chance to find alternative living arrangements and hopefully accept services before their encampment is cleared. Third, when conducting the sweep, the Bill Requires enforcement officers to provide information about sleeping alternatives, homeless and mental health services, or homeless shelters in the area. This will help connect homeless individuals to desperately needed services as we compassionately clear encampments. California has spent over $20 billion in the last five years on homelessness. And what do we have to show for it?
- Brian Jones
Legislator
We have encampments lining nearly every block, children being exposed to open drug use and dangerous illicit activity. I'm not okay with letting this continue. Our state has over 170,000 homeless individuals. That makes up 30% of the nation's homeless population. Yet California only makes up less than 12% of the U.S. population. Our current approach to homelessness is failing, and Californians are simply tired of it. We need to try something new. Even Los Angeles gets it.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Our proposed law, modeled after a measure recently passed in the City of Los Angeles, aimed at preventing homeless encampments from being near sensitive areas where children often gather. Cities across the state, including Sacramento and San Diego, are taking action to protect sensitive community areas from encampments. We simply cannot continue allowing people to live in our parks or in front of our schools. This is a public health and public safety crisis.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
It is inhumane and unhealthy for our state to continue looking the other way when homeless individuals and families are living and building housing structures on sidewalks and streets. It's also unfair and often dangerous for the neighbors, families, and children in these sensitive areas.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Our measure, along with other legislation combating the homeless epidemic, will hopefully work together to help end the public camping in these areas while also compassionately assisting the homeless with getting the treatment for their mental and or physical health needs that they are struggling with and finding a more sustainable place for them to live. Finally, let me emphasize our goal is not to criminalize homelessness, but rather to protect the public and help lift homeless individuals up out of the streets through a compassionate approach.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Every Californian deserves a path off the streets, and SB 31 will help begin to make that happen. That is why over 2,000 Californians have signed the petition in support of SB 31. I have the petitions here on the table so that you can see the extent and the gravity of this concern from Californians. We have these petitions and we have sent copies to the Committee as well. We have a strong coalition of supporters and bipartisan co-authors.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
At this time, I'd like to introduce our witnesses in support. Former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer and Brett Bowman, a homeless advocate.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. You have the floor. You have two minutes.
- Kevin Faulconer
Person
Thank you, Senator. Thank you, Senator Jones. And thank you to Members of the Committee for allowing me to testify strongly support of this Bill because it's common sense and I think it should become California law. The street, of course, should not be a home. And what this Bill does, and I'm glad the center talked about compassionately helping people to get off the streets because we need to protect the cornerstones of our community. That's what this is about.
- Kevin Faulconer
Person
Our schools, our parks, our libraries, our daycare Center for our families, for our kids, and for all of our residents across California. And what this Bill does, of course, is it helps people to get off the street. And I can say from firsthand, based upon my experience as mayor of San Diego, when it comes to providing that information on where those services are available in San Diego.
- Kevin Faulconer
Person
Our neighborhood policing division from our San Diego Police Department was, in fact, our number one referral source to help folks get off the streets and into the shelters that we have created. This is an important step. It's not the only step, as the Senator has mentioned over and over again, but it's time to take action. It's time to take action because we are seeing cities across California go through similar ordinances.
- Kevin Faulconer
Person
And I think it's right, absolutely right, to have a statewide standard to say, here's how we're going to help people get off the streets. Here's how we're going to protect the cornerstones of our community. And that's why this Bill does exactly that. And I'm happy to be available for any questions later on. Thank you, Senator.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Next speaker.
- Brett Bowman
Person
Hello, my name is Brett Bowman, and I lived on the street for two years. I lived as a meth addict pushing a shopping cart around. Today I stand with Senate Minority Leader Brian Jones in support of Senate Bill 31 as it addresses a two-pronged approach to the homeless. My time on the street has given me some insight into the lives of many homeless and the reasons why they are homeless.
- Brett Bowman
Person
Small percentage of people dealing with homelessness are there because of catastrophic life events, job loss, eviction, loss of a contributing partner, et cetera. They will be the easiest to help, and most will exercise all options and avenues of services and go to any length necessary to get back to being a contributing factor in daily life. And there are people with mental health issues, most of them on drugs. These people will be harder to help.
- Brett Bowman
Person
As I witnessed, most do not make any attempt of getting any help for their mental health issues. These people need help nowadays, and they can't be forced into treatment. Then there's the largest group of people that are on the street. We are there by choice. It is usually choice to keep using drugs instead of being responsible. I fit all three categories.
- Brett Bowman
Person
A catastrophic life event that I use drugs to numb myself from the pain and anger of losing my son, instead of seeking counseling for my mental health issues. We are the hardest to help and treat. Some will never want out with some sort of deterrent. I got tired of being stopped and hassled by the police and being arrested. A forced time out, losing my stuff, my cart full of whatever I had stolen, got out of a dumpster, or accumulated. My mobile life in a cart.
- Brett Bowman
Person
Tired of the weather and the guilt I felt from abandoning my children before I had any interest in making a change. I finally got myself into the Salvation Army in Chico, and that worked for me. I took responsibility for my actions. But for many out there, that feeling of hope is not alive. I support Senator Jones' measure as it provides accountability and hope for many who find themselves at times feeling hopeless in their situations. Sometimes that first step, getting help, is the most difficult.
- Brett Bowman
Person
We also need to ensure that our sensitive areas in our communities, such as school, parks, and daycare centers, are not inhibited by encampments, but also those who need it get connected to services they desperately need. Senate Bill 31 balances both of those approaches and our legislators please support this measure. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. We'll now move on to witnesses in support here in this room. Do we have any witnesses? If you are a witness in support, please state your name, your organization, and whether you support or oppose.
- Julio De Leon
Person
Hi, good morning. Julio De Leon, on behalf of the Riverside Sheriff's Office and Sheriff Chad Bianco, in support. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Any other support witnesses seeing none, we'll move on to lead opposition witnesses. You have two minutes.
- Michelle Pariset
Person
Thank you. Good morning Chair Wahab and Committee Members, I'm Michelle Paracette, Director of Legislative Affairs for Public Advocates. First, I want to just say that we talk a lot about protecting children when we talk about these bills, but the vast majority of people who abuse children live in houses. Just want to say that right away. Many thanks to Committee staff and their analysis highlighting SB 301's significant due process issues and 8th Amendment implications.
- Michelle Pariset
Person
Paraphrasing from the analysis where staff write on the 1000ft prohibition, in a town or city with regular city parks and schools is the distance long enough that it would prohibit a person from sitting anywhere? The ACLU prepared some maps to provide examples of what 1000ft prohibition would look like in some cities, including some in the Committee Members' districts. I'm happy to share those with you if you're interested.
- Michelle Pariset
Person
The example I'm going to use today, though, is from Petaluma, where 77% of the land in Petaluma would be prohibited and the remaining 23%, almost its entirety, is private land. There would be nowhere left for people to be. So where are people supposed to go? SB 31 perpetuates a harmful trend of scapegoating our unhoused neighbors and wasting public resources on inequitable and ineffective enforcement-driven homelessness policy. Criminal penalties and fines create legal and financial barriers that make it harder for people to access housing.
- Michelle Pariset
Person
Sweeping people experiencing homelessness cruelly from one place to another does nothing to address the actual problem, which is they don't have housing. If this legislation's goal is to increase safety, there are many ways to do that that do not require police or criminal penalties, such as sanitation services, regular trash pickup, housing navigation, and onsite supportive services. SB 31 ignores the fact that families with children are homeless.
- Michelle Pariset
Person
I take this very personally as I myself was homeless in childhood with my family, living in a van with my mother and siblings. We parked at my elementary school at night during the week and on weekends we stayed at the park and went to the library, all places we could feel safe that didn't cost money. People experiencing homelessness are people. They are families, children, seniors, veterans, LGBTQ, disabled people. They are part of our community, and they need our help, not criminalization.
- Michelle Pariset
Person
Let's stop trying to arrest, find, and sweep our way out of homelessness and instead fund real solutions at the scale of the problem, like tenant protections, affordable housing construction, and the community-based mental health and substance abuse treatment we all know we need. Please vote no on SB 31. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Next lead witness.
- Carlos Marquez
Person
Good morning, Madam Chair, Committee Members. Carlos Marquez, Executive Director of ACLU California Action while we recognize that the author's aims are well intentioned, SB 31 is deeply misguided and we do remain strenuously opposed. SB 31 does little to address the vaccine crisis unfolding in our unhoused communities across the state. Instead, SB 31 has chosen a criminalization response over a health and safety response, and we know that this will disproportionately impact Black, brown, and Indigenous folks.
- Carlos Marquez
Person
We did publish, in partnership with our affiliates, a report in 2021 that looked at policies at the local level that resemble SB 31. And what we learned is that these policies ultimately resulted in unhoused people being forcibly banished to remote areas, including harsh desert landscapes, outside city borders, and far from life-saving resources such as water, food, and health care.
- Carlos Marquez
Person
These efforts resulted in the dismantling of efforts by civil society to provide aid like food, water, trash removal, blankets, and clothing. And perhaps most disquieting in the context of children in Mountain View, a community of unhoused people, which included several dozen families with children enrolled in Mountain Unified School District, were targeted for removal by a local ordinance, later challenged in court.
- Carlos Marquez
Person
So perhaps the most perverse feature of SB 31 is that it's cloaked in an effort to protect children, which ignores the fact that unhoused families with children, like the families in Mountain View, have chosen to live near the children's school. Just like most other parents would choose who are housed, SB 31 would criminalize and effectively banish these families to outskirts inaccessible to vital resources and services. And for those reasons, we urge a No vote on SB 31.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. We'll now move on to other witnesses. I do just want to state that. State your name, your organization, and whether you oppose or support. Thank you.
- Emily Harris
Person
Good morning. Emily Harris with the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, in opposition.
- Mia Neuman
Person
Mia Neuman with UCLA Alternative Breaks and strong oppose.
- Jessa Euden
Person
Jessica B. Euden with UCLA Alternative Breaks, in strong opposition.
- Lucy Liu
Person
Lucy Liu with UCLA Alternative Breaks, in strong opposition.
- Ashleigh Crable
Person
Ashleigh Crable with the Ella Baker Center For Human Rights, in strong opposition.
- Adriana Griffith
Person
Good morning, Committee. Adriana Griffith, with Initiate Justice, in strong opposition. Thank you.
- Elizabeth Buchen
Person
Good morning. Lizzie Buchen, Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights, in opposition.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other speakers in opposition?
- Margo George
Person
Marco George, on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association, in opposition. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Any others seeing none. We will now move on to witnesses waiting to testify via the teleconference service. Please just state your name, organization, and position. Moderator, if you would, please prompt the individuals waiting to testify in support or opposition of this Bill, we will begin.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Thank you. And just as a reminder, if they would like to voice their comment in support of opposition of SB 31, press one zero and first go to line 65, please go ahead.
- Tina Rosales Torres
Person
Morning, Chair and Members. Tina Rosales on behalf of the Western Center on Law and Poverty, San Bernardino Free Them All, Project Amiga, Break The Cycle Project, and Disability Rights of California, in opposition.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Next, go to line 53. Please go ahead.
- Oussama Mokeddem
Person
Good morning, Chair and Members. Oussama Mokeddem on behalf of Public Health Advocates, in strong opposition.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Next, we'll go to line 76. Please go ahead.
- Jean Ri
Person
Hi, my name is Jean Ri. I'm with We The People San Diego, strong opposition to Bill.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And we'll go to line 78. Please go ahead.
- James Lindburg
Person
Good morning. Jim Lindberg, on behalf of the Friends Committee on Legislation of California, in opposition.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And we'll go to line 79. Please go ahead.
- Debra Roth
Person
Deb Roth, Disability Rights California, in opposition. Thank you.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And we'll go to line 20. Please go ahead. Line 20. Your line is open.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, State Policy Director of the San Francisco Public Defenders Office, in opposition.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And next, go to line 80, eight zero. Please go ahead.
- Taina Vargas-Edmond
Person
Hi. Taina Vargas with Initiate Justice Action, in opposition.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And next, we go to line 73. Please go ahead.
- Avalon Edwards
Person
Avalon Edwards with Starting Over Inc., in strong opposition.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And we're go to line 68. Please go ahead.
- Erin Grassi
Person
Erin Tsurumoto Grassi, Policy Director at Alliance San Diego, in opposition.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And Madam Chair, we have one more line coming in. Just one moment.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And we will go to line 81. Please go ahead. On behalf of Disability Rights California. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you to all our support and opposition witnesses will now bring the question back to Members. Members, do we have any questions or comments? Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Yes. So it's interesting because I have to say I empathize with both sides, the opposition and the support witnesses with regards to this issue because I think it's also a perspective of the vision of what we see with encampments. On one side, we have those that see the people suffering from opioid use, mental health issues and so forth, and the need to have them redirected to services.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And then the other side we have the vision and understanding of individuals who literally are in house because they can't find affordable housing, housing that they can afford. So we have two different variant visions on both sides, and I think both are quite valid points to be made. With regards to criminalizing our unhoused population. One of the things that I wanted to mention is I'm grateful that the Governor is expanding the mental health bed capacity that we have a lack of in California to be able to house those people that are suffering from behavioral health and opioid that we need to take care of.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And on the other side, I'm working with my colleague right here from San Francisco with regards to trying to make sure that we are building more housing in the State of California, which we need because we don't have enough housing on that end. So we're working on that front. But on this end, I wanted to give the author an opportunity to explain. I keep hearing that we're criminalizing the unhoused. I want to give you an opportunity. It might be, would you mind sharing the thoughts of the difference between criminalizing and not criminalizing or incarcerating people that are homeless? I mean, would this Bill incarcerate people?
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Like, I'm going to give my answer and then maybe I can have Mr. Bowman speak to his experience on this, too, if he's willing to come back up. This Bill is, in my opinion, is taking a soft approach to enforcing these encampments. And I think most Californians have gotten to the point where they're frustrated with government's lack of attention to this particular issue. We're not saying that we're going to sweep up every person in that encampment and lock them up. That's not the purpose of this.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
The purpose of this is to protect sensitive areas and give the people in the encampment fair warning of that sweep. Is coming through and then also give them the information that they need to seek the services if they want to seek them. It's nothing in this Bill compels them to seek those services. But I think talking about the compassionate part of the enforcement, Mr. Bowman has a really interesting aspect in his story on what that difference made for him.
- Brett Bowman
Person
I was on the street for two years dealing with all kinds of people, the mental health people that have mental health before they're there, people that have mental health issues from their drug use, meth induced psychosis, heroin. I spent a lot of time sitting in front of businesses in my local community with groups of people smoking meth. There's so many people out there that you could offer them everything in the world, but they have to get clean to get these services.
- Brett Bowman
Person
And a lot of those people are going to stay where they're at. I don't know. They have to get tired of it or they need some encouragement. I had both. I had some people coming out and offering me some places to go, and to llet them know when I was ready. And so I went to the Salvation Army and that worked. It's a great program. If we could come up with some sort of program that helps people get back in the habit of taking care of themselves, getting up early, being responsible, some sort of work program.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
I appreciate it. Do we have a motion?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
We do, but we're not finished. I'm sorry. I want to make sure that I clarify and finish my line of thought.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Senator Rosalicie Ochoa Bogh, let me explain. Clearly, the language of the Bill presents a tool for the locals to decide whether they want to have this be a citation, infraction or misdemeanor. It's up to the locals determine how they want to enforce this. If they get to the point where they need law enforcement, all our goal would be that public health or some other homeless outreach agency of the counties would do this first without needing law enforcement. But you're not going to go to jail for violating a citation.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you, Senator.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So that's the other concern that I wanted to make sure that we addressed. Your thoughts - and I'm concerned with the notion that there are some communities, depending, you have 1000ft from these sensitive areas, library, schools and so forth. But there was a concern raised on whether or not there was communities that don't have those accommodations within it. So how would you address communities that don't have the ability to accommodate the distance for safety within those sensitive areas?
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Well, that's the great thing about the legislative process and presenting these ideas in Committee and getting the input from everybody, the stakeholders on both sides of the issue. If there is a possibility to discuss the proper distance, if it's 500ft, 750ft or 1000ft, that's certainly something I would be open to having a conversation about. And I'm sure the proponents of the Bill would be open to having that conversation as well.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Opioid, fentanyl, meth, everything.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Okay, perfect. So there could be accommodations and it doesn't have to be. You're not. And I say we because I'm the co author of the Bill, but I want to make sure that we have it for the record that the intent of this Bill is not to criminalize the unhoused, but to one, just make sure that we don't have them close to schools or daycare centers and so forth. More specifically, addressing the issue with opioid abuse.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Those are the primary target. And then the other point is to make sure that we have them connected to resources so that they know what's available. Now, the only concern that I have, and I think it's important to maybe talk to this point, is there is concern on whether or not there's sufficient housing to relocate or redirect individuals that are unhoused. Would you mind sharing your thoughts on that concern?
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Sure. And I think that I agree with the witnesses in opposition to the Bill that that is a major concern. Obviously, that's a major concern. We have 170,000 Californians homeless, and many of those people are struggling from drug addiction or mental illness. And they need help and we need to help them. And we need to have a compassionate approach to that. This Bill is not that solution. We're not looking to solve every aspect of the homeless situation in California with this one Bill.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
This is just one simple first step, to have a compassionate approach to two sides of the coin. One, a compassionate approach to the homeless people that are stuck in those encampments and are having a difficult time finding their way out of them. And the second thing is a compassionate approach to keeping our families safe, our children safe as they go in and out of these facilities, libraries, parks, schools, daycare centers, our families and our children should feel safe going in and out of those locations. And this Bill provides that compassionate approach to that as well.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you, Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. I want to thank the author for the conversation that we had a little while, probably a month ago about this Bill. And I want to explain why I'm not going to be supporting this Bill today. And I'm probably for probably some different or overlapping but different reasons to some of the opposition. I do agree this Bill is unbelievably broad. And for a lot of cities, we'll basically knock out the entire city.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
When we don't have enough homeless shelters, we certainly don't have enough housing. And I want to just acknowledge that the author has been very open minded about housing legislation, and I appreciate that. And I will also say I am not supportive of bills. I've never had to vote on one. But there have been efforts in legislatures to preempt the ability or ban cities from having any kinds of local restrictions on camping in public spaces. I don't support those cities.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
My take is that, and I think this is correct, cities currently have the power to decide locally whether they want to restrict encampments or camping in public places, if so, to what extent. And in fact, in San Francisco, we have a number of those laws. Some of them are not being enforced at the moment because of court rulings. That's a constitutional issue that the courts will be hammering out. But we have those laws.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I've supported some of those laws and taken a lot of heat from some homeless advocates for supporting them. But I do believe that cities should be able to manage their public spaces in a way that also facilitates people transitioning off the streets and making sure people have a place to go. I have serious concerns about the state coming in and putting in a law for every city in the state when cities already have the ability to do this.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
If a city decides not to do it, that's their decision. I think most cities probably have decided in one form or another to do this, and cities should be making those decisions at the local level. So for those who think because of my housing work, that I'm categorically opposed to local control, I've always said that that's not true. As a former local elected official, and it is not true. There are decisions that are most appropriately made at the state level.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
There are decisions that are appropriately made at the local level. I think this is one where cities have the tools to make these rules. And in fact, it's going to be the cities that will be enforcing. Even if this Bill were to pass in the law, it will be city police and city agencies that will be supporting the state will not be coming in and enforcing this.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
That's a very important point.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah, but I think that cities should be therefore sculpting the law that works for their communities, since they're going to be the ones enforcing it. So I just wanted to, again, thank the Senator for taking on what is my constituents like. Constituents throughout the state are deeply angry and frustrated with what's happening on our streets. It's a humanitarian disaster, and it is not good for the people who are in those encampments. It's not good for the surrounding neighborhood. It's a huge problem.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
But I just don't think that this is the right approach for the entire state, and so I won't be supporting it today.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Any other Senators like to comment on this? All right, Senator, would please close.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you. I'll just real quickly address one thing that Senator Wiener mentioned, and that's the statewide approach.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
What we're finding in some of these locals, as they're passing these ordinances at a local level, they're forgetting the compassionate side of it, which is giving the warning to the encampments and including either a 24 Hours4872 whatever number they want to pick, but also requiring that whatever agency is coming in to sweep and clean up the encampments is including the information that they need for services, housing, whatever.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
So that's the one thing that my Bill would do that some of the locals are leaving out of there. Thank you, Madam Chairwoman and Members. And I want to thank my witnesses for coming up. Mayor Kevin Faulconer for making the trip up. Brett Bowman, who's just a resilient advocate for the homeless here in California, and I appreciate him continuously willing to share his story with us.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
SB 31 strikes, I believe, the appropriate balance between accountability and compassion in helping tackle the homeless crisis, while putting public health and public safety as the top priorities. I've talked to people, just as Senator Wiener just mentioned. We've talked to people up and down the state, representing all sides of the ideological spectrum. And it actually surprises me how universally Californians agree that the homeless crisis has gotten out of hand and the encampments have been allowed to get too far out of control.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
No matter how liberal or conservative people are, or agnostic or non political or very political, Californians are infuriated by the encampments that they see in their communities every day. We need to do more. The reason the encampments bother people is because they can see them. You can't ignore the problem when it's now taking up a lane of the street on your drive home from work, or, in the case of SB 31, on your way to your kids school, park, library, or daycare center.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
So what do we do? We drive by in disgust and frustration and complain about it, but SB 31 does something about it. This Bill cleans up those encampments that are directly causing potential safety issues for our children, and in so doing, touches the homeless individual one more time. One time closer to saying yes to accepting that service. One time closer to saying yes to staying in the shelter for that night. One time closer to letting someone help them pull their life back together.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
And this Bill isn't going to solve everything. We know that. But we need to start adding tools to our tool chest. Californians need to adopt the improv mentality of yes. And yes is trying every potential solution and add to it what we're already doing. I'm not okay with California continuing to ignore the problem, and this Bill does something measurable to fix it. This is a bipartisan Bill, and I respectfully ask for your AYe vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. Do we have a motion on this Bill?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So moved.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
So. Senate Bill 31 has been moved by Senator Ochoa Bog. Can we call roll, please?
- Sarah Loftin
Person
SB 31 [roll call]
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Vote is one to one and has failed. Would you like to have a reconsideration?
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. So, unanimous consent for reconsideration. All right. Thank you. No opposition, so you are granted a reconsideration.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Yes, please. Thank you.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. I appreciate that.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
So, we have Senate Bill 236. Jones creates a grant program for District Attorney offices who use a vertical prosecution methodology for human trafficking crimes. Senator, you have the floor.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. Madam Chair, I appreciate it. I would like to start by accepting Committee amendments to remove the appropriation from the Bill. I'm not sure if those are actually in writing or not, but we've had discussions to that end. Okay. SB 236 is an effort to confront the scourge of human trafficking that your Committee's analysis aptly points out is among the world's fastest growing criminal enterprises. This is not a problem of a political party or geography.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
This is a problem that impacts all of us across California and the United States, and we must work together to resolve it. Human trafficking is a form of modern day slavery. Simply put, it is criminals preying on those who are most vulnerable in our society in the cruelest way imaginable. SB 236 expands a concept of vertical prosecution that is working successfully in several California counties and is a methodology often used in complex cases like homicide, gangs, child abuse, and domestic violence.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
Vertical prosecution is a system that allows a single prosecutor to take the case from the beginning stages all the way to the prosecution and sentencing. Vertical prosecution allows the prosecutor to build rapport with the victim and develop greater community in the case. Continuity in the case. This Bill creates a grant program subject to funding within the governor's Office of Emergency Services to provide funding for district attorneys statewide to take advantage of the vertical funding methodology.
- Brian Jones
Legislator
We have made progress in the battle against human trafficking in California, but not nearly enough. This Bill will take traffickers off the street, thus saving future victims. Madam Chair, I have a witness here today, Matthew Greco from the California District Attorney's Office Association.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Witness, you have two minutes.
- Matthew Greco
Person
Good morning, Madam Chair and Members of the Committee. I am Matthew Greco, a 26 year career prosecutor here on behalf of the California District Attorneys Association in support of this fundamental, very important Bill. Senate Bill 236, which would create grant funds to be distributed amongst 11 counties to supplement funding for vertical prosecution. Human trafficking remains a lucrative criminal enterprise.
- Matthew Greco
Person
It is the selling of flesh, the human body, and it is the selling of that multiple times that really distinguishes it from other types of contraband of weapons, narcotics. Those who traffic in human flesh know very well that they can inflict physical and mental terror upon their victims, making the crime difficult to prosecute. The traffickers also move their enterprise from place to place, from state to state, from city to city. The best way to attack these traffickers is through vertical prosecution units supported by victim advocates.
- Matthew Greco
Person
Vertical units can better coordinate with other jurisdictions to track, apprehend and prosecute offenders. Specially trained prosecution staff can focus on preventing and overcoming the physical and mental manipulations of trafficking victims that truly are the major impediment in ensuring that victims of human trafficking receive the services and the justice that they deserve. San Diego County has a human trafficking task force, spearheaded by the San Diego Police Department, that leverages both local agencies as well as federal agencies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Homeland Security.
- Matthew Greco
Person
The primary goal of this task force is rescuing those forced into human trafficking. In fact, in a recent coordinated operation in February, there were over 30 individuals of victims of human trafficking that were rescued, including nine minors, one as young as 13 years old. By creating grant funds to supplement existing vertical prosecution units, SB 236 encourages the continued use of vertical prosecution model and helps to hold offenders accountable while also providing valuable victim services to the vulnerable victims of human trafficking. For those reasons, we would respectfully ask for your yes vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Matthew Greco
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Do we have any other lead witnesses? All right, seeing none, can we have any of the witnesses that are here in this room? Please state your name, your organization and your support.
- Randy Perry
Person
Madam Chair Members Randy Perry with Aaron Read & Associates on behalf of PORAC in support.
- Gail Stewart-Brockman
Person
Madam Chair and Committee Members Gail Stewart on behalf of San Diego County District Attorney Summer Stephan.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Do we have any other witnesses in support? Seeing none, we'll now move on to witnesses in opposition, seeing none. We're going to ask if there's any witnesses in the room in opposition, seeing none, we will move on. Thank you to the witnesses that have testified so far. We'll move on to the witnesses waiting to testify via teleconference service. Please just state your name, organization and position. Moderator if you would, please prompt the individuals waiting to testify in support or opposition of this Bill, we will begin it.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Thank you. Any of you would wish to testify in support or opposition to this Bill, please press one, then zero at this time. And we'll go to line 20. Please go ahead.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, State Policy Director of the San Francisco Public Defender's Office, in opposition.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Madam Chair, just a moment while we provide the line number for one more.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
No worries.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And thank you for that, Madam Chair. We'll go to line 86, please. Go ahead.
- Marlene Villa
Person
Support it. Yeah.
- Marlene Villa
Person
Hi, my name is Marlene Villa. My brother passed away from fentanyl poisoning.
- Marlene Villa
Person
Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Can we just have. Whether you support this Bill or not.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Madam Chair. We have no one else in queue at this time.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you to all our support and opposition witnesses. We'll now bring the discussion back to the Members. Members, do we have any questions, comments or thoughts? Senator Wiener has moved the Bill. Senator, would you like to close?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, ma'am. Chair. Senators. Thank you. This Bill will help bring justice to those who have fallen prey to the heinous crime of human trafficking and help stop the exploitation of innocent individuals by putting predators behind bars. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. The Bill has been moved by Senator Wiener. The motion is do pass appropriations, as amended. Can we call roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 236. Do pass, as amended, to Approps. [Roll Call].
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Five to zero that Bill is out. Thank you.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Senators. Have a great rest of the day.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
All right, we have. Senator.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
So, Senator Umberg is presenting SB 44. Senator, you have the floor.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you. Madam Chairman, if I might present SB 64 first and then SB 44.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Sure.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
All right, let me begin by thanking you, Madam Chair, and your staff, in particular, Mary Kennedy, for their hard work on this Bill. What this Bill does is this permits a search warrant to be issued in alleged crimes. Hate crimes. It's especially important right now, given the rise of hate crimes, whether it was a consequence of the pandemic or it is consequence of other societal issues. Hate crimes have risen exponentially here in the last few years.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
And with respect to antiasian hate crimes, for example, they've increased 339% over the last couple of years. And I expect that other vulnerable communities, other targeted communities, hate crimes have increased there as well. And so currently, a search warrant cannot be issued for most misdemeanors, including misdemeanors alleging a hate crime. And I'll just draw my own personal experience as to why that's particularly important. Many years ago, when I was a prosecutor, I think Abraham Lincoln was a prosecutor at the same time.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Many years ago, there were no hate crimes laws on the books. And in my own county in Westminster, some skinheads tried to drive an African American family out of their neighborhood. They had lived there for over 30 years, and they burned a cross on their lawn. Their defense was this was simply a neighborhood dispute and this was a prank. Well, we did not believe it was a prank, but it was a misdemeanor at the time.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
But for the fact that we basically combined it with a conspiracy allegation, it would not have been a felony, we would not have been able to execute a search warrant. And the search warrant was determinative in that prosecution because we had to demonstrate not just the act, but also racial animus. And by virtue of the search warrant we found, I'd be happy to tell folks offline what we found, but some very noxious material and evidence of a broader conspiracy.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
There was a conviction, thankfully, in any event. So that's what this is about. This is about allowing prosecutors to be able to seek a search warrant. It has to be just like other search warrants, has to be authorized by a judge after a signed affidavit under penalty of perjury. I have with me as witnesses the San Francisco District Attorney, Ms. Brooke Jenkins, as well as Lori Frugoli from the California District Attorneys Association. Ms. Jenkins, if you don't mind, Madam Chair.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Definitely. You have two minutes. Welcome. Yes.
- Brooke Jenkins
Person
Hi. Good afternoon, Madam Chair and Members. I am proud to join Senator Umberg and others here today in strong support of SB 64. I am the District Attorney for the City and County of San Francisco, a city that prides itself on our diversity. But like everywhere else in America, San Francisco has proven not to be immune from bias, hate, and bigotry.
- Brooke Jenkins
Person
Between 2020 and 2021, hate crimes in San Francisco spiked, particularly against Asian Americans, where we saw record spike of 567% increase in hate crimes against the Asian American community. We have also continued to see an upward trend in hate crimes against the black, LGBTQ, and Jewish communities in the past several years. Prior to becoming the District Attorney, I served as the designated hate crimes prosecutor in San Francisco. During a portion of the Trump Administration, I saw hate crimes and hate incidents rise dramatically.
- Brooke Jenkins
Person
Hate crimes are one of the only crimes in the State of California that require prosecutors to prove motive. We have to prove that a defendant's actions were motivated by hate, bias or animus towards a victim for their protected class or characteristic. Law enforcement needs all the tools available in these cases to prove what motivated these crimes. We also need all of the tools available to be able to identify who suspects and perpetrators are in crimes that are clearly motivated by hate.
- Brooke Jenkins
Person
By authorizing courts to issue search warrants to enable law enforcement to gather additional evidence of hateful intent, prosecutors can collect the crucial evidence necessary to hold all offenders who commit these acts accountable. One example to offer is just three weeks ago, a victim was riding a bus in San Francisco when another passenger looked at her and said, I don't like China. As the victim tried to ignore the suspect, the suspect forcibly spat at the victim and repeated their statement.
- Brooke Jenkins
Person
The suspect spat on the victim several more times before getting off of that bus. SB 64 would authorize officers to potentially obtain search warrants to secure video surveillance, transit card data, and other social media data that could have potentially led to identifying who this perpetrator is, as well as uncover further evidence of the animus harbor. Nothing is more personal than being targeted because of who you are. Law enforcement needs every single tool available to solve these crimes and to provide justice to our victims. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other lead witnesses? Thank you. You have the floor in two minutes.
- Lori Frugoli
Person
Thank you. Good morning. I'm Lori Frugoli, the District Attorney of Marin County, and I'm honored here to speak on behalf of the California District Attorneys Association, on behalf in support of Prop. Excuse me, SB 64. And I want to thank Senator Umberg for recognizing that we all need to do collectively what we can to stop hate. Some of you might be thinking at this moment in time, with a moment and a call for criminal justice reform, which we all know is needed.
- Lori Frugoli
Person
Why is a District Attorney here requesting additional legislation? But I submit to you, SB 64 is sorely needed. We can't deny that hate crimes are on the rise. As was noted by DA Jenkins, and as it is now, when a hate crime is committed, we don't have the tools we need to properly investigate these crimes. Often, investigators find some evidence a crime was committed by hate, but we have to prove they did it because of the hatred of a particular group.
- Lori Frugoli
Person
Jurors and the triers of fact ask for more. Why didn't you search his phone, his computer? Did he text his intent before he committed this crime? Does he belong to racist groups? These are things that people ask us when we are filing these crimes, considering filing them, and also when we attempt to prosecute them.
- Lori Frugoli
Person
Once a misdemeanor crime is committed, in this case with SB 64 and an officer believes it was committed because of hatred of identified group, this Bill would allow us to conduct additional investigation based upon articulated facts in an affidavit presented to a judge. In Marin County, these affidavits are presented to my office first and reviewed by my office. So in most cases, with most DA's office, we're talking about three different levels of scrutiny. A police officer on the street, a DA's office, and a judge.
- Lori Frugoli
Person
Before any action is taken and any search is conducted, cases such as were mentioned earlier in Marin, we had a case where a Muslim security guard returned to her car to find it vandalized with pig blood and other pork products strewn about her vehicle. Or the Muslim woman in Santa Clara who was attacked at a Starbucks by a person who ripped off her hijab and choked her with it.
- Lori Frugoli
Person
Or threatening racist phone calls, which we've had in my county intentionally worded to skirt the felony threats law. Warrants in cases like these will help us determine what was the person's intent. Did they text someone or phone someone before they committed this crime? Are they learning online how to commit these crimes and escape accountability? So as we welcome newcomers and diversity to our communities, those who we welcome and who are already here are already targets of hate crimes, as was noted.
- Lori Frugoli
Person
Maybe it's because of their race, their sex, their religious beliefs, whether they're immigrants, Members of the AAPI community, transgender, Muslim, Jewish, gay. The reality is hate knows no boundaries, and we live and see that every day. We ask for hate crimes to be added to the list, which currently includes misdemeanor crimes of child pornography, DUI refusal investigations, even fish and game investigations. As hate crimes and the sophistication to commit these crimes and escape accountability rises. We ask you help by providing us with this tool so that we can stand up and rise against hate.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Lori Frugoli
Person
Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Do we have any other witnesses in support in this room? State your name, your organization, and your support.
- Paul Yoder
Person
Madam Chair of the Members Paul Yoder, on behalf of San Francisco, Maryland, and..., also in support I urge an aye vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Brandon Epp
Person
Madam Chair and Members Brandon Up, on behalf of Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna, in support. Thank you.
- Randy Perry
Person
Madam Chair. Members Randy Perry with PORAC in support. Thank you.
- Matthew Greco
Person
Madam Chair. Matthew Greco, on behalf of the San Diego Deputy District Attorneys Association and the San Diegans Against Crime.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other Members in the room in support? Seeing none, will move to opposition lead witnesses. Do we have any lead opposition witnesses, seeing none, will ask for opposition witnesses in the room? Seeing none, we will move on to witnesses waiting to testify via the teleconference service. Please state your name, your organization and position moderator. If you would, please prompt the individuals waiting to testify in support or opposition of this Bill, we will begin. Thank you thank you.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And if you wish to testify in support or opposition of Bill, please press one, then zero at this time. We'll start with line 94. Please go ahead.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Line 94, your line is open.
- Danielle Colette
Person
Danielle Collette. I support the Bill.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And move to line 20, please. Go ahead.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, State Policy Director at the San Francisco Public Defender's Office, in opposition.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And in line 85, please go ahead.
- Brian Levin
Person
Brian Levin, Director, Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism, California State University, San Bernardino, only in support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And Madam Chair, we have no one else in queue at this time.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you, and thank you to all our witnesses. We'll now bring the discussion back to the Members. Do any of our Members have questions or comments? Senator Skinner, please.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
I move the Bill.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other, Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I just need a clarification on the process and the procedure. There was a comment here that I read that says a search warrant procedure to apply to potential hate field crimes that are ultimately charged as misdemeanors. So would the search warrants be, and I'm not sure if it's you Senator Umberg, would the search warrants be issued for potential crimes or actual crimes occurring or that have occurred?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Well, my belief is that the search warrant will be issued for contraband or evidence of the crime. So, for example, to use the example provided of desecration of a vehicle with pork products, that the officer who was investigating would fill out an affidavit, say, we think we can find evidence of, for example, racial animus or religious animus in this case, in someone's computer. And so they specify a particular area to be searched and how it would be searched.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
They fill out that affidavit and why they think that evidence would be there. They then, as was explained by the Marin District Attorney, would submit it to the DA, as is often done, and then it's submitted to a judge, determine whether there's probable cause to believe that a search warrant should be issued. So that would be the typical process. But what you're looking for is you're looking typically, for evidence.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And just for clarifications for crimes that have been committed or are being committed at the time.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Crimes that are suspected to have been committed.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Yes. Sorry. Apologize. Yes. So not the potential of committing a crime, but that have occurred or are occurring. Have occurred.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Well, for example, if there's a conspiracy, so that you believe that there's one, you're the officer, you believe there's been a crime committed. Right. And in terms of hate crimes, often there's a conspiracy to commit additional crimes. So you're looking for evidence of that. And if you believe that there's also a conspiracy, you're looking for evidence of the conspiracy as well, so the conspiracy suggests that there'd be even future crimes.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
But the crime you're looking at in terms of the search warrant affidavit is whatever happened, here's what we saw. We saw the following. We believe that the following was generated by racial animus. The reason we believe it is because we believe that, with respect to Muslims, that pork products have a special abhorrence, and it was meant to send a message to that community. And thus we would like to search. I'll use the computer as example.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
All right, seeing no further questions. Senator, would you like to close?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much. Hate crimes are a unique breed. I actually, in my legislative career, I served here before hate crimes were on the books. But hate crimes are not just targeted at the individual victim. Hate crimes are targeted at a community to send a message to an entire community. They're in a league of their own. And I think that this is a tool that would be most important in basically identifying those who are responsible in preventing further crime. I urge your aye vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. So, the Bill has been moved by Senator Skinner. The motion is do pass to appropriations. Can we have a roll call vote, please?
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call].
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. The vote is five to zero. The Bill is out. I will do a quick request that we do the items that have already been so lifting roll call.
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 2, motion was due, passed to appropriations. Current vote is three to one. Wiener. Wiener, aye.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Four to one, that Bill is out. That's SB 2.
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 368, motion is do pass to appropriations. Current vote is three to zero. Ochoa Bogh. Wiener. Wiener, aye.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
That vote is four to zero. That's SB 368. Bill is out.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
SB 230. Oh, sorry. That one's done. Consent calendar for four to zero. Wiener, consent, yes.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Five to zero. Consent calendar is out. Thank you. We'll move on to SB 44. Again, Senator Umberg, the floor is yours.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you very much, Madam Chair. And I know I've said this before, but let me underline it that you, Madam Chair, the Committee and the Committee staff have devoted tremendous amount of time and attention to this matter. And as is appropriate, fentanyl is causing an unbelievable number of deaths, and the trajectory is unfortunately headed in the wrong direction. Just in the last year, there have been 107,500 individuals who have died as a consequence of overdose. Many of those folks.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Many of those folks, many, maybe two thirds or more, actually, did not know at the time that they purchased or received a particular compound, a particular drug, that that was laced with something like fentanyl. So, for example, if you're thinking you're getting Xanax because you want to calm your nerves before you get on a flight and you buy Xanax from another source, not a pharmacy, another source, turns out it's laced with fentanyl, you die.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
There are a number of circumstances where folks have purchased what they believe to be a different compound, oxycodone, whatever, and it turns out it's laced with fentanyl. This is called Alexandra's Law. That's exactly the circumstance. As with respect to Alexandra, who believed that she was purchasing something different, and as a consequence, that was laced, the oxycodone was laced with fentanyl, and she died.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Now, the number of deaths in the epidemic that's impacting us, it's greater than the number of those killed in Vietnam, Korea, Afghanistan and Iraq. That's the magnitude of the crisis, and it, again, is increasing exponentially. In this case, it's not just those who, for example, are addicted to heroin and you accidentally overdose. Many, if not most of the victims did not know at the time that they were actually ingesting fentanyl. This is just one tool. There are a number of tools.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
This is not a panacea for the fentanyl epidemic. I've spent a good chunk of my life. Sometimes I say doing drugs. What I really mean is being involved in drug policy issues, whether as a prosecutor or being the Deputy Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy. It's obvious to me, and I think obvious to most, that multiple tools need to be engaged with respect to drug addiction, drug policy. I used to work for a fellow named General Barry McCaffrey.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
He used to say, the most effective tool in terms of substance abuse is a conversation between a parent and a child at a kitchen table. Well, that probably is the most effective tool, but that's not available, and that's not to all. And that's not the only tool. That's not the only tool. Clearly, treatment is an important component. Clearly, education is a critical component.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Clearly, making sure that those who, for example, sell drugs that are laced with something that is fatal, like fentanyl, that dealing with those folks, particularly on their second offense, is critical. Now, this Bill, you've seen other versions of this Bill before. This is different. This is different than the earlier versions you've seen to deal with the supply reduction in terms of fentanyl.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
What this Bill does is this Bill says if somebody is convicted of an offense where they have distributed, sold a compound with fentanyl, if they've pleaded guilty, or if they've been convicted, and now they know that what they've distributed, irrespective of what their state of mind was in distribution, they know it contains fentanyl.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
If they sell it again and they kill somebody, and they kill somebody and that substance contains fentanyl, then evidence can be introduced that demonstrates that they, on a prior occasion, had sold a compound with fentanyl. And they're on notice. They're on notice that this is a circumstance that is actually fairly common. It is not a conclusive presumption. It doesn't automatically mean that there's a conviction. It is simply evidence of state of mind. We have limited this in many different ways.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
We have limited this to make sure that it's not just a user. We've limited to make sure it's not just somebody who's, for example, at a party, providing somebody else at the party with a pill. This is focused upon those who are selling, those who are trading fentanyl for value. Now, this is a topic that has captured all of our interests. And I know that everyone in this room is concerned. I know that everyone in this room is concerned about what I've described as the epidemic.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
There are different ways to deal with it. I've described some different strategies. I think they all must be employed. In this case, on this Bill, it's unusual in terms of the legislative process that we have 20 co-authors and authors from the Senate and about 40 overall. I think the need is apparent and the body politic is crying out for action on our part. I'm pleased today to have two witnesses who deal with this epidemic on a daily basis.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
First, San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria is here as our first witness. And our second witness is San Francisco District Attorney, Ms. Brooke Jenkins. Mr. Mayor, Madam Chair.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Todd Gloria
Person
Thank you, Senator. Thank you. Chair and Members of the Committee, I'm San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria. I'm proud to be a sponsor of Senate Bill 44, which create a fentanyl admonishment. I want to start by thanking the Capelouto family and the other families who are in the hallway, who are family Members who had overdosed on fentanyl. Their presence here today is, I think, particularly meaningful. I appreciate their willingness to share extremely painful stories about loved ones who've been killed by fentanyl in order to save lives.
- Todd Gloria
Person
There are far too many of their stories across California, far too many tragedies, far too many parents who've had to bury their children. Senate Bill 44, as was mentioned, is known as Alexandra's Law. It's named after the daughter of Matt and Christine Capelouto from Temecula, who lost their daughter Alexandra in 2019, just two days before Christmas. Alexandra had taken half a pill of what she thought was Percocet and she purchased via social media.
- Todd Gloria
Person
The pill she bought was actually laced with fentanyl, and that half a pill caused her to overdose and to die. Alexandra died alone. There was no one around to administer Narcan. Her mom found her slumped over in her bed in front of her makeup mirror. As it is said in our public service announcements, one pill can kill. And that's why I'm here today. Illicit fentanyl is not just like any other drug. This is a poison that is killing 6,000 Californians a year.
- Todd Gloria
Person
And it is supercharging our homelessness crisis. In San Diego County just five years ago, we saw a few dozen of these overdoses. This last year, over 800 in 2021. Illicit fentanyl is the number one killer of unsheltered San Diegans in the City of San Diego. Number one. And as mayor, I see the impacts every single day amongst those who are still with us. And what I see is absolutely disgusting.
- Todd Gloria
Person
The behavior around encampments are more erratic, and I have no doubt in my mind that fentanyl is making it harder for us to engage the most vulnerable amongst our residents. And our whole city is suffering because of the increased level of street homelessness. Senate Bill 44 is a modest but necessary effort to address the proliferation of illicit fentanyl and to hold dealers accountable. I want to be very clear. This Bill is not focused on users.
- Todd Gloria
Person
It's focused on drug dealers, on traffickers, and on repeat offenders who keep dealing this poison and get people to come back again and again and again until they kill them. The admonishment makes these dealers aware that their behavior, if it continues, can lead to death. And if they ignore that, then the fact of the matter is that they'll have to face those consequences. In closing, it's important to be here today to make sure the Committee Members are aware that this drug is ravaging our cities.
- Todd Gloria
Person
And that is why the League of California Cities, as well as 10 of the largest cities in the State of California, cities as diverse as San Francisco, San Jose, Fresno, and of course, the City of San Diego, are all standing in support of Senate Bill 44. I agree that we need to tackle this as a healthcare crisis. It surely is. We need to make naloxone more prevalent and available. We need to expand educational health resources to help save lives.
- Todd Gloria
Person
But that can't be all that we do. We cannot ignore the public safety side of this particular problem, and we can send a direct message to hold those who steal this deadly poison accountable. And so it's with that in mind and with the memory of Alexandra and so many of the families that you'll hear from today, the victims and the Members of our community, that I respectfully ask for your Yes vote on Senate Bill 44. Thank you, Madam Chair.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. DA Jenkins.
- Brooke Jenkins
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair and Committee. The level of death and misery on the San Francisco streets as a result of fentanyl is staggering and unacceptable. In the last three years, 75% of the 1,400 overdose deaths that occurred in San Francisco involved fentanyl. And in this January alone, we had 78 overdose deaths. What is left out of the statistics is that a majority of the people that are dying of overdose are people of color, are Black people. This is a problem of epidemic proportions.
- Brooke Jenkins
Person
And as our county's Chief Law Enforcement Officer, I feel an obligation to stand before you and ask that you support this Bill. I have an obligation to protect lives and to fight to save the lives that are on the street right now.
- Brooke Jenkins
Person
When I took office in July of this past year, I took a bold step and instructed our assistant district attorneys to go into court and when they were dealing with fentanyl drug dealing cases, to give an admonishment to our defendants at the time of a plea that fentanyl was a dangerous and deadly drug and that it could kill. We have seen pushback from our Public Defenders Office asking judges not to allow us to give that admonition.
- Brooke Jenkins
Person
And we need this Bill in order to have that right in our courtrooms. Not only are we seeing people who are addicted to fentanyl die, but as you've just heard, there are people that believe they are buying other things and instead are being handed lethal poison without their knowledge, and they are dying.
- Brooke Jenkins
Person
If we went into a bar and ordered a martini and the bartender put something toxic or lethal in that drink that was handed to us, we would expect that person to be prosecuted for that poisoning. If a doctor over-administered recklessly, any type of opioid like fentanyl, we would expect that doctor to be prosecuted. We impute the knowledge of what they did and the intentionality of their conduct and say that they should be held accountable. This is no different.
- Brooke Jenkins
Person
I have heard stories of cops watching drug dealers tell fentanyl users when they sell them that poison and watch them use it. Don't die. Make sure you don't die. They understand that it is poison, and they need to be told in a more formal way so that it can be documented that when they do it again and somebody dies, that there can be a second level of accountability for those deaths.
- Brooke Jenkins
Person
And so as the Chief Law Enforcement Officer of the City and County of San Francisco, I know that that's what the public wants. I know that that's what these people need so that we can stop watching lives be lost. And so it is for that reason that I ask for you to support this Bill.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other witnesses in support of this Bill? Please state your name, your organization and that you support this Bill.
- Paul Yoder
Person
Madam Chair and other Members, Paul Yoder, again, on behalf of San. Francisco, Mayor London Breed, in support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Scott Wilk
Person
Senator Scott Wilk, 21st district, in strong support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
Kim Stone, Stone Advocacy, on behalf of the California District Attorneys Association, in support.
- Nedrich Jenkins
Person
Nedrich Jenkins, Drug-Induced Homicide, strong support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Kay Shulz
Person
Kay Shulz, emergency room nurse from Riverside County, strong support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Chris Didier
Person
Chris Didier with my son Zach Didier from Placer County, in strong support and respectfully ask for your Aye vote. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Laura Didier
Person
Laura Didier, representing my son Zach, 17, killed by fentanyl in 2020, in strong support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Again, just name, organization, and support, and let's move a little bit faster, too. Thank you.
- Carolyn Vasquez
Person
Carolyn Vasquez from Gilroy, mother of Jacob, in strong support.
- Kathy Miranda
Person
Kathy Miranda from Alameda County, with my son Garrett Miranda, in strong support.
- Perla Mendoza
Person
Perla Mendoza with Project Eli, with in strong support.
- Matthew Greco
Person
Matthew Greco, on behalf of the San Diego Deputy District Attorneys Association and the San Diegans Against Crime, in strong support.
- Gail Stewart-Brockman
Person
Gail Stewart, on behalf of San Diego District Attorney Summer Stephan, in strong support.
- Nadia Binderup
Person
Good afternoon. Nadia Musharian Benderup, on behalf of Sheriff Kelly Martinez, San Diego County Sheriff's Department, in support.
- Lori Frigoli
Person
Lori Frigoli, Marin County District Attorney. I support this Bill.
- Christine Capelouto
Person
Christine Capelouto, mother of Alexandra, who this law is named after, in strong support.
- Matt Capelouto
Person
Matt Capelouto, father of Alexandra Capoludo, and on behalf of all fentanyl poisoning victims, strong support.
- Lisa Marquez
Person
Lisa Marquez, and in strong support. I lost my only son.
- Maya Rios
Person
Maya Rios, on behalf of Fernando Sanchez, in strong support.
- Colette Rhodes
Person
Colette Rhodes for Dalton Finlisson, in very strong support.
- Lisa Izel
Person
My name is Lisa Izel. I'm from Garden Valley, California, and I highly support this Bill.
- Megan Zimmer
Person
Megan Zimmer, Sacramento, California, in strong support.
- Christy Hoffman
Person
Christy Hoffman, mother of Connor, strong support.
- John Hoffman
Person
John Hoffman, Stanislaus County, strong support. Son died, fentanyl overdose.
- Tina Burke
Person
Tina Burke, mother of Christian Taylor murdered July 19, 2020. I'm in full support of SB 44.
- Alicia Solario
Person
Alicia Solario with One Pill Can Kill Sac. and I'm in full support of this Bill.
- Victoria Williams
Person
Victoria Williams, mother of Michael Torado. I'm in full support.
- Donna Perez
Person
Hi, Dr. Donna Slusher Perez, Drug-Induced Homicide. I'm in strong support.
- Julio De Leon
Person
Lieutenant Julio De Leon with the Riverside Sheriff's Office on behalf of the Sheriff's Office and Sheriff Chad Bianco in support.
- Maria Ortega
Person
I'm Maria Ortega, mother of Adrian De Jesus, who was poisoned by fentanyl in February of 2020. I am in strong support and I ask that you are in strong support, too. Thank you.
- Graciela Valles
Person
Graciela Valles I lost my son in 2020. I strong support SB 44.
- Audrey Ratajczak
Person
Audrey Ratajczak, on behalf of the Orange County District Attorney in support.
- Melinda Scott
Person
Melinda Scott from Sacramento I support my brother, Jacob Ramirez.
- Michelle Leopold
Person
Michelle Leopold, Marin County. My son Trevor died in 2019, and we need this public safety, strong support. Thank you.
- Patricia Calazans
Person
Patricia Calazans Daniel survived fentanyl poison and died of suicide using fentanyl. I support SB 44.
- Hugh Sharkey
Person
Hugh Sharkey, San Francisco my stepson Daniel died two years ago and I support SB 44 strongly.
- Larisa Cespedes
Person
Larissa Sespidez here on behalf of Govern for California, in support.
- Duncan Finlisson
Person
My name is Duncan Finlisson, El Dorado Hills, California. My son is Dalton Finlisson and I'm in strong support.
- Jonathan Feldman
Person
Chair and Members, Jonathan Feldman, on behalf of the California Police Chiefs Association, in support.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Chair and Members, Ryan Sherman with the Riverside Sheriffs' Association, in support. Also in support on behalf of the police officer associations of Claremont, Corona, Pomona, Palos Verdes, Newport Beach, Upland, Santa Ana, Burbank, Marietta, Arcadia, Riverside, Fullerton, Culver City, the Monterey County Deputy Sheriff's Association and Placer County Deputy Sheriff's Association, all in support. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Brandon Epp
Person
Brandon Epp on behalf of Sheriff Luna, in support, Los Angeles County. Thank you.
- Eric Kittendorf
Person
My name is Eric Kittendorf, representing Alyssa, my daughter. and I strongly support.
- Donna McLaughlin
Person
My name is Donna McLaughlin. I lost my son Jacob, in strong support.
- Dana Ogden
Person
Dana Ogden, in strong support for my son, Austin Ogden, who died on June 5, 2021.
- Jerry Ogden
Person
I'm Jerry Ogden. I'm Austin's father and I'm in strong support of this Bill. We thank you.
- Jennifer Marsh
Person
Jennifer Marsh from Modesto and in support of SB 44.
- Marcella Berber
Person
MarcellaBerber from Modesto. I support SB 44.
- Bo Biller
Person
Madam Chair and Members Bo Biller, on behalf of UPS and Bruce "Double D" Mac Rae, ask for your Aye vote.
- Merika Cole
Person
My name is Merika Cole on behalf of my son Merick, who is autistic and I was a conservator. I support SB 44. And please, I'm begging for your Aye vote. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Seeing no other witnesses here in this room. Oh, sorry.
- Randy Perry
Person
Madam Chair. Randy Perry. On behalf of PORAC, in support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. We'll conclude. Do we have any witnesses in opposition? You have the floor.
- Amy Dunkel
Person
Good morning. My name is Amy Dunkel. I'm the founder of the Solace Foundation of Orange County. I'm also on the board of Broken No More. Currently, we have 4,600 Members, mostly parents, who have lost a child like myself. First, I'd like to acknowledge the immense pain in the room. We may not be united in policy, but we are united in unimaginable pain. In 2012, we lost our 20-year-old son to an overdose.
- Amy Dunkel
Person
At the time, Ben was with three friends three minutes from a fire station. One of the friends was in a drug diversion program. Afraid of being sanctioned and returned to jail, he would not allow the other two to call 911. As they removed Ben's body from the car, his heart stopped. By the time I got to the critical care unit, he was on life support. When Ben heard my voice, tears would roll down his face. He was suffering from a condition described as locked-in syndrome.
- Amy Dunkel
Person
Eight days later, as Ben's condition deteriorated, we were advised by physicians that the kindest thing we could do was to take our son off life support. Our 17-year-old son held his brother for 6 hours as he slowly died. Shortly after Ben's death, the 911 Good Samaritan Law was enacted, an acknowledgment that people were dying because their friends were not calling 911. Ben's death was initially investigated as a homicide. After autopsy, we were advised by law enforcement that his death was deemed accidental.
- Amy Dunkel
Person
The three people he was with had no intent to kill our son. He was not murdered. Their decision making was clouded by fear, fear of incarceration. Had one of those three people carried naloxone, the outcome would have been entirely different. I therefore created the Solace Foundation. To date, I have distributed 46,000 doses of naloxone and recorded over 2,500 overdose reversals. It was not heroin that killed Ben that night. It was fear. Fear of calling 911, fear of incarceration.
- Amy Dunkel
Person
The very threat that SB 44 wants to make more real. Thank you so much.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have another lead witness in opposition? Thank you.
- Diane Goldstein
Person
Good morning. My name is Diane Goldstein. I served for 22 years as a police officer, including 18 months as a narcotic sergeant supervising a multi-agency task force. I want to express my sincere condolences to all the families here. I'm also the Executive Director of the Law Enforcement Action Partnership. We are a nonprofit group of professionals who speak from firsthand experience serving in the justice system. Our mission is to make communities safer by focusing police resources on the greatest threats to public safety.
- Diane Goldstein
Person
But I speak both from personal and professional experience, having lost my brother to a drug overdose. And though I understand why legislators may be attracted to more punishment, our analysis throughout the years reflects that overdose deaths have increased, not decreased. Despite over a half-century of the modern drug war that continues to focus on deterrence to solve a public health crisis, we see how destructive outdated drug laws can be to individuals and communities.
- Diane Goldstein
Person
Policing proponents claim that sending a person to jail or prison through drug induced homicide laws will deter drug sales and save lives. But we know today, based on the loss of over 100,000 Americans, that it does not. SB 44 will push drug users further underground while making drugs more dangerous and increasing violence in our communities. Policing professionals here and abroad have recognized we can no longer rely on arrest as a means to address the public health issue.
- Diane Goldstein
Person
Saving lives and reducing crime and disorder caused by underlying problematic drug use are not mutually exclusive. A response that will achieve both ends requires a paradigm shift towards evidence-based practices that closely link health and policing strategies with their most important outcomes, which is saving lives. Rather than focus on failed enforcement policies that have resulted in non-regulated drugs that today are cheaper, widely available, and more potent.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Ma'am, if you can wrap it up, we're on a time crunch. Thank you.
- Diane Goldstein
Person
If we are to reduce overdoses, we need to design and implement 21st century drug policies. This requires laws that support innovative public health and justice strategies rather than relying on harsher penalties to deter drug use or to send a message thinking this will reduce morbidity and mortality, let's recognize that consensus that this is first a public health crisis and not a policing crisis.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Diane Goldstein
Person
Thank you for your time.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Do we have any opposing witnesses in the room? If so, please state your name, your organization, and that you oppose.
- Edgar Ibarra
Person
Hello, my name is Edgar Ibara, and I would oppose this Bill.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Margo George
Person
Margot George on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association, in opposition. Thank you.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Glenn Bacchus, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, in strong opposition.
- Juan Gomez
Person
My name is Juan Gomez. I'm in strong opposition of this Bill as a Native American, even the use of the word peyote in there infringes on our religious practices. That's a holy sacrament. It's in that language. I ask that it be stricken. We should be going after the manufacturers. We should not just be going after freaking people. Right. People need supports. They need services. Right. We need to think about safety happening outside of the police station. We need to think about safety happening in school.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Sir. Just support or opposition.
- Juan Gomez
Person
I'm opposing, but this is my right. The same ways that everyone.
- Juan Gomez
Person
Thank you. I appreciate it. I'm just throwing it out there.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Next.
- James King
Person
James King, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, in strong opposition.
- Ignacio Hernandez
Person
Ignacio Hernandez, on behalf of the California Attorneys for Criminal Justice, in opposition.
- Lindsey Vogue
Person
Lindsay Vogue. I'm from UC Berkeley and I'm working at the Ella Baker Center, and I strongly oppose this.
- Jose Casada
Person
Jose Casada on behalf of ACLU California Action, in opposition.
- Alicia Lewis
Person
Alicia Benavides Lewis here in opposition in behalf of Drug Policy Alliance, San Francisco Public Defender's Office, Initiate Justice, CareForce California, Sister Warriors Freedom Coalition, and Friends Committee on Legislation of California. Thank you.
- Tina Carriel
Person
My name is Tina, excuse me, Tina Marie Carriel, daughter of Gonzalo Juan Carriell and Eleanor Cecilia Carriell, and I'm in strong opposition to this bill.
- Nancy Juarez
Person
Good afternoon. My name is Nancy Juarez. I'm with the Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice, and I'm in strong opposition. Peyote is religious freedom. Thank you.
- Sergio Annhassa
Person
Sergio Annhassa Jr.. I'm in strong opposition.
- Seraphine Andrade
Person
My name is Seraphine Andrade and I'm in strong opposition.
- Sergio Annhassa
Person
My name is Anthony Kimberly, Underground GRIT in Orange County and Anti-Recidivism Coalition. I am in strong opposition.
- Carlos Hernandez
Person
My name is Carlos Hernandez. I'm formerly incarcerated and a member of Yolo County community, and I strongly in opposition.
- Ruben Lucero
Person
My name is Ruben Lucero from Fresno County. I'm in strong opposition.
- Byron Castillo
Person
My name is Byron Castillo from San Francisco county. I'm in strong opposition.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. If we have no other opposition witnesses here in this room, we're going to move on to witnesses waiting to testify via teleconference service. Please just state your name, organization, and position. Moderator, if you would, please prompt the individuals waiting to testify in support or opposition of SB 44, we will begin. Thank you.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And if you wish to testify and support opposition of SB 44, please press one and zero at this time. We'll go to line 47, please go ahead.
- Carl London Ii
Person
And Madam Chair, Members, Carl London here on behalf of Crime Victims United, in support of SB 44.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And we'll go to line 90. Please go ahead.
- Ray Grangoff
Person
Ray Grangoff on behalf of the Orange County Sheriff's Department, in support.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 71, please go ahead.
- Mary Creasy
Person
Mary Creasy on behalf of Orange County, in support.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 33, please go ahead.
- Silvia Shaw
Person
Madam Chair and Member Silvia Solis Shaw here on behalf of the City of West Hollywood and the City of Beverly Hills, in support. Thank you.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 98, please go ahead.
- Tom Wolf
Person
Hi, this is Tom Wolf, recovery advocate from San Francisco and I strongly support SB 44. Enough is enough. Thank you.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 94, please go ahead. Okay, they dropped out of queue. We'll go to line 84, please go ahead.
- Lisa Jimenez
Person
My name is Lisa Jimenez, and strong support of SB 44 in honor of my son, Jake Jimenez.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And we'll go to line 91, please go ahead.
- Elisa Arcidiocono
Person
Chair and Members, Elisa Arcidiocono with the League of California Cities, in strong support.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 113, please go ahead.
- Taina Vargas-Edmond
Person
Taina Vargas, with Initiate Justice Action, in opposition.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 104, please go ahead.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, State Policy Director at the San Francisco Public Defender's Office, in opposition.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 26, please go ahead.
- Sam Snodgrass
Person
Dr. Sam Snodgrass with Broken No More, strongly opposed.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And line 75, please go ahead.
- Desiree Tellup
Person
This is Desiree Tellup. I'm an attorney from Los Alamitos, California, and I am strong support on behalf of my brother, Dominic DeRosa.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 18, please go ahead.
- Amber Salazar
Person
Hi, I'm Amber Salazar, in memory of my son, Dresden Alizaldi, and I strongly support SB 44.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 87, please go ahead.
- Edith Gonzalez
Person
Hi, my name is Edith Gonzalez. I'm in strong support in honor of Adrian De Jesus.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 112, please go ahead.
- Denise Collin
Person
My name is Denise Collin. I'm with GRASP, Grief Recovery After a Substance Passing, and Broken No More, and I strongly oppose this Bill.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 99, please go ahead.
- Dawn Jordan
Person
Hi, yes, my name is Dawn Jordan. I am strong in strong support in memory of my brother, Dominic DeRosa.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 111, please go ahead.
- Joanna Ortega
Person
My name is Joanna Ortega, and I strongly support SB 44 in honoring of my cousin, Adrian De Jesus.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 103, please go ahead.
- Lupe Garcia
Person
Hi, yes, my name is Lupe Garcia. Arnold Bias's aunt lost him over fentanyl poisoned, in great support of SB 44.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 107, please go ahead.
- Teresa Almanza
Person
My name is Teresa Almanza, 28-year veteran of the Chicago Police Department, in memory of my daughter, Sydney Sherrigan. I am in strong support of SB 44. Thank you.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 100, please go ahead.
- Jaime Puerta
Person
My name is Jaime Puerta. I'm the President of VOID Victims of Illicit Drugs, and I am in strong support.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 12, please go ahead.
- James Gone
Person
James Gone, Hemet, California, father of the late Mateo Gone. I'm in full support.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 110, please go ahead.
- Natalie Legaretta
Person
My name is Natalie Legaretta from Modesto, California, and I'm in support of SB 44.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 109, please go ahead.
- Ruben Rodriguez
Person
Hello, my name is Ruben Rodriguez. In the memory of my nephew, Arnold Sevallos, I strongly support SB 44.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 106, please go ahead.
- Melissa Guzman
Person
My name is Melissa Guzman. In strong support of SB 44 in honor of my brother, Adrian De Jesus.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 118, please go ahead.
- Marlene Villa
Person
My name is Marlene Villa, and I'm in strong support of SB 444 for my brother, Adrian De Jesus.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 94, please. Go ahead.
- Danielle Coet
Person
This is Danielle Coet, and I'm in Orange County, and I strongly support the Bill for my brother, Dominic DeRosa.
- Committee Secretary
Person
And Madam Chair, we have no one else in queue at this time.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you to all our witnesses. We'll now bring the discussion back to Members. Members, do we have any questions, comments, thoughts? Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair and Members, I have a statement and a couple of questions for the record.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
And I was remiss in not acknowledging Senator Ochoa Bogh as the joint author who's devoted tremendous amount of time, energy and passion to this issue.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you. So, statement first and then two comments. In 2021, 408 of the almost 500 opioid deaths in Riverside County were fentanyl related. I represent Riverside in San Marino counties along with small portion of LA County. That's over 80% in San Marino county. In the same year, almost 90% of our opioid deaths were fentanyl related. 314 out of 354. This is not just the crisis, it's thousands of individual strategies. Each statistic we share is a culmination of thousands of grieving families pain and suffering.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
It is clear we need to do more to protect our loved ones, which is why I partner with Senator Umberg to author SB 44, Alexandra's Law, which would require. Sorry. That an advisement be read to those convicted of specific fentanyl related offenses, stating that their actions pose a threat to the safety of our communities. An advisement. Advisement. This measure also seeks to educate offenders regarding the consequences that future offenses may have on their own lives.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
It is hard to argue that fentanyl dealers do not know that fentanyl is dangerous. What they may not know is that the district attorneys across California are already convicting individuals of manslaughter or murder for dealing drugs that result in the death of an individual. With or without Alexandra's Law, this is happening. With Alexandra's Law, we can ensure that offenders have full knowledge of what risks their actions carry. Let me be clear. This is not the same Bill this Committee has heard in previous years.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
With your input, we have narrowed SB 44 to address very specific fentanyl related offenses. Our youth will be read the advisement so they understand the seriousness of the crimes they've committed, but the advisement will not be used against them. I urge my colleagues to take the necessary steps to provide as many tools to public safety and public health officials as possible so we can begin to address this strategy in earnest.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
SB 44 alone will not solve the fentanyl poisoning epidemic, but along with increased naloxone distribution, improved data collection and sharing, and evidence based educational campaigns. SB 44 will make a difference. At the time, I will ask for specific, for an aye vote. But with that, I also now, with my statement, would like to have specific questions for the author for the record. With that in mind, I would like to begin with, I understand we had several witnesses today under the impression that this Bill includes peyote.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Would you care to address the concerns that people had with regards to peyote being in this Bill?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thank you for that question, Senator Ochoa Bogh. Amendments have eliminated peyote.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
But to be clear, amendments have eliminated peyote. This Bill doesn't deal with other opioids. This Bill deals with fentanyl.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Specific, narrowed. The other question that we need to address, to address the concerns for many of our witnesses. Will this Bill authorize murder or manslaughter prosecutions for specific drug related offenses?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
The Bill doesn't authorize any sort of prosecution. That's up to the District Attorney or the prosecuting authority. What this Bill does is the Bill provides evidence of a particular State of mind, whether it's recklessness or some other State of mind in a subsequent conviction, for example, the sale of fentanyl.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you, Senator Umberg. The other question we have for you is, why would someone be charged with murder or manslaughter when an individual chose to take the drugs that resulted in their own deaths?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Well, that's a good question. The question for us as a societal value is do we want to, in essence, warn people of the dangers of fentanyl? Number one, to prevent them from selling or distributing fentanyl again. And then, number two, if the person who is profiting, benefiting from the sale of fentanyl, if they tell that person, look at you're taking fentanyl, I would expect that they wouldn't actually commit suicide by doing that. But again, this is not a conclusory presumption.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
It still requires demonstration of an intent. And if, for example, the buyer says, I'd really like to buy fentanyl to commit suicide, that's also evidence as to whether or not the person intended, the seller intended to kill that person.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And my last question for the record, will this Bill disproportionately impact black and brown communities?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I don't know the answer to that question. I think that there's 107,500 deaths in the course of the last year. I would expect that there's proportionality among the various demographics, but clearly that's not the intent.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
So we're actually going to move on to the next. Is there any other Senator that would like to comment on this? Senator Bradford.
- Steven Bradford
Person
I want to thank the Senator for this measure. And I first want to extend the sympathy to all the folks who testified here today who lost a family Member or friend to this insidious drug, fentanyl. But simply making it easier to prosecute someone for murder will not address or solve this problem. It won't stop fentanyl from coming across the border as we sit here right now. It won't stop the demand for drugs that are unknowingly laced with fentanyl.
- Steven Bradford
Person
And the focus should be on causation, prevention and treatment. That should be our focus. But focusing solely on incarceration will not solve this problem. We've seen this movie before in the 80s, 90s. Mass incarceration, zero tolerant on the war on drugs. And there are thousands of black and brown people doing life in prison for selling an ounce of cocaine where no one lost their lives. Members of this Committee have proposed amendments that maintain the intent of this Bill that preserves admonishment. And that's what we said.
- Steven Bradford
Person
And that's what we said this Bill is about, admonishment. The amendments that have been proposed will maintain that I, as chair last year, dealt with a previous author, and we offered up the same type of amendments that provided to admonishment and to focus on what this Bill is really about. And that's the drug dealers who knowingly know they are selling drugs that are laced with fentanyl and mislead their clientele, that they're not.
- Steven Bradford
Person
That's the real crime, because I don't think anyone in this criminal aspect will knowingly if they had a regular clientele or would want to kill somebody that they're providing drugs with on a regular basis, whether it's Marijuana, cocaine, whatever the case may, I think with the amendments that we're offering up, I think it helps address, it maintains the integrity of what you're trying to do, which we all agree on.
- Steven Bradford
Person
This Committee needs to be addressed because it is killing hundreds, if not thousands of people, not only in California, but across this country. And we want to eradicate it. We want to end it. But I think the amendments will help us address that, like I say, and it maintains the admonishment portion of this Bill.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you, Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. I think the reason that this Bill and the subject matter of this Bill is so painful is that we have a catastrophe on our hands with what fentanyl and car fentanyl and the other fentanyl analogues have brought down on this country. It is absolutely devastating. We know that in San Francisco, and I want to thank my District Attorney for focusing on these issues so intensively.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We are seeing so many people dying, and I think a lot of times the perception is that this is on our streets. We know from all the parents who have been here today and in the past that it's not just on our streets. There are people ordering on social media. In San Francisco around Christmas last year, there were guys who got bumps of cocaine that were laced with fentanyl, and a few of them died. This is happening in a broad swath of our community.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And even though there are a lot of stereotypes about who is using fentanyl, who is inadvertently using it, even though they didn't intend to purchase it, and who is dying, this is affecting so many aspects of society, and the drug supply is so contaminated in a very diverse way, not just heroin or meth, cocaine and so on and so forth, fake percocet pills. This is a problem that is growing, and we need a lot of different strategies to deal with it.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And I don't know that anyone knows the exact answer, because this is so new and the explosiveness of it, especially in the last few years, I'll be honest with you, this is the kind of Bill that normally I would never even consider supporting. As Senator Bradford stated, the war on drugs has been also a catastrophe.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
If incarceration relating to drugs were a successful strategy in reducing drugs, we would literally have no drug use in this country because, and California helped lead the way on the war on drugs and in terms of extreme levels of incarceration. And we still had people using drugs, and we still had people getting addicted and overdosing and dying. And it's gotten worse. Even without fentanyl, it's gotten worse.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I know so many people personally in my life who've been deeply impacted by meth for decades, not fentanyl, meth, which is also so extremely destructive. And the war on drugs and the threat of incarceration didn't stop people from selling it or buying it or using it or dying.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
When this Bill came up in previous years from Senator Melendez, who was very stubborn about not making any amendments to the Bill, and it was broader than this Bill, we voted down this Bill at least twice that I recall. I want to thank Senator Umberg for at being, having some flexibility and making some narrowing amendments to the Bill. And by the way, I want to note the admonishment in the Bill now is not limited to fentanyl. It covers all drugs. That's what the language says now.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
It's all drugs. And I know that the Senator has committed that if the Bill were to move forward, whether it's today or on reconsideration, that inappropriations of that amendment would be made to make clear that the admonishment can only come into evidence when it related to fentanyl, if it's a fentanyl prosecution.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
But the reason why I cannot support this Bill today is that the conviction that triggers this admonishment, that has real ramifications around a future murder prosecution, is not limited to situations where the person knew or should have known that the substance contains fentanyl. This will someone who is selling whatever they're selling, that has no idea and no reason to know that the substance contains fentanyl, will receive this admonishment even if there was no way for them to know. I think that that is a huge problem.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And the author and I have had numerous conversations, very lengthy. I've spent a lot of time with the author, with Mayor Gloria, with our own community's District Attorney on this Bill, far more than I've probably spent on any other author's Bill this year, because it is so important. And I do believe that there needs to be a requirement that the person knew or should have known.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Otherwise, we are going to see some significant unintended consequences from this Bill that I don't think any of the supporters are intending. And so I would like to be able to vote for this Bill today. And with that amendment, as I've convayed to the author and to the sponsors with that amendment, I would support this Bill today. So far, the author and sponsors have declined to take that.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I would love to see this Bill continued so that we could see if we can work that out so that I can support it. If the Bill does not advance today, then I know the author will seek reconsideration. And I hope that that can be worked out. But I just wanted to explain why in this form today, I won't be able to support SB 44. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Senator, would you be willing to take the amendments of, one, that the individual should know, and, two, it limit it completely to fentanyl alone?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I'm sorry, fentanyl analogy.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Yes. To answer the second question first, yes, we've discussed this at length, and I think it's clear, but I'll make it crystal clear that both the predicate conviction requires fentanyl as a component, and also the second conviction also be for fentanyl or a fentanyl analog. That's clear as to the issue of knew or should have known for the second conviction. What this does is this Bill says you've convicted. Right?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
You're convicted of distributing, selling a substance, maybe even the person died of fentanyl, and you're told and you now know, look it, fentanyl is contained in many substances. And if you sell a substance again and it contains fentanyl and somebody dies, knowing already that you have distributed fentanyl, that that conviction, basically that knowledge then can be introduced into evidence. It is not conclusory. It doesn't mean that it obviates. It eliminates the prosecution's role, prosecution's burden in demonstrating some sort of intent.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I would think it does demonstrate recklessness, if nothing else. But recklessness is not the standard, for example, for murder.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah. I just want to add, and I appreciate that, what I've been told in response. zero, this is a poison pill for the Bill. I don't think it is. We initially asked that there also be an element. This is Senator Skinner and I and Senator Bradford, I think in different contexts, we were individually asking you to consider also requiring that the person purchasing did not intend to purchase fentanyl and did not know.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
You responded, and you were, I think, correct that that would be a poison pill because requiring a prosecutor to prove beyond a reasonable doubt what a deceased person did not know was unreasonable. And so I backed away, and I believe we backed away from asking for that amendment.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
But I think asking a prosecutor to prove that you knew or should have known, prosecutors prove that all the time with so many different crimes, and in fact, for the ultimate murder prosecution here, that's what, presumably a prosecutor would have to prove, knew or should have known for the murder prosecution. And that's what those murder prosecutions are proving. Now, Mayor Breed, in her letter, used the word intentional. District Attorney Jenkins talked about the bartender putting poison in a drink or a Doctor over administering.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
They knew what they were doing. And I fully agree. That's a crime and it should be a severely punished crime. So I don't think it's unreasonable or a poison pill to say that they knew or should have known otherwise. We're going to have situations where some college kid sells what they think is a Percocet and has no idea, has fentanyl for whatever, $510 to their college classmate, and then they're going to get that triggered warning when they had no idea and no reason to know.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Unless we're going to say because you could have fentanyl in anything, we're going to make any sale of drugs, no matter what the context, potentially leading up to a murder charge. If we want to do that, that's what this Bill, I think does. If we don't want to do that, and I don't think that's what you want to do, then I think a knowledge or should have known requirement is a reasonable change.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Madam Chair?
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Yes, Senator? If you could give us a yes or no, if those two amendments that have been kind of raised multiple times, I'm happy to kind of move this along and kind of help, but we'd like an answer a little bit on that.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Well, this is a very complex issue, and it doesn't lend to a yes or no answer. Let me just explain how this plays out if the Bill is enacted. All right, so someone is convicted, and we will make sure the Bill is amended. Someone is convicted for distributing something with fentanyl, that person now knows they have distributed fentanyl. There's a subsequent distribution sale. Person dies, comes to court, person says, look at, I didn't know.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I didn't know that this second sale, this sale also involved fentanyl at that point in time in terms of being able to prove intent. If this Bill were enacted, the prosecution would be able to say, wait a minute, you knew or should have known because you were already informed before that you were selling substance with fentanyl. What the defense is going to say, if this is included, is that a predicate to being able to introduce that previous conviction is that, wait a minute.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
This is a bad act. You can't introduce that until you prove the person knew it. You can't introduce the prior conviction until you prove as an antecedent that the person knew it. And that doesn't come in evidence. And the judge, unless this law is enacted, could easily, and my guess is, will often say that another conviction is not probative beyond it's not basically relevant because of the probative value, doesn't outweigh its prejudice. Section 350. And so, thus, it undermines the Bill.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Thus it won't come into evidence. Thus the person who's killed a person in the second sale basically is treated as though there hadn't been a previous acknowledgement that they were distributing a compound with fentanyl.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Senator Skinner.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Like my colleagues, I can't express the pain that any family who's lost someone to this is feeling. And that pain, I know is it does not go away. This is one of the most difficult, if probably the most difficult Committee to serve on. And we have an obligation to apply the law as best we understand it. I appreciate the author's intent to give that warning, and I would support the issuing of a warning.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
I do not want to have a circumstance where, as the DA from San Francisco indicated, she's being prevented from issuing a warning. However, the warning needs to reflect existing statute. And in order to be convicted of murder, one must have knowledge. Now, putting in the warning that they should know or should have known is not a poison pill, because in that case, author, you know as, because they have received the warning, that alone could potentially provide the should have known.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
But it at least respects what our current statute is to give a warning that would be allowed to be put in evidence that does not reflect our current laws. I cannot do, and so I cannot support the Bill without the amendments. And with the amendments, then there would still be that advisement, and there would still be, as we know other people have already referenced, there's already achieving some prosecutions on this, even without it, which is legitimate.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And potentially this may increase, but at least it would do so in the context of respecting and acknowledging current law.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Senator, do you have any final words.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
To close out responsive to Senator Skinner? And Senator Skinner, I appreciate your interaction on this Bill, your very thoughtful analysis. The challenge is if that is the predicate to the conviction coming in. In other words, the prosecution's got to prove that the person knew or should have known before the previous conviction comes into evidence. It basically undermines it. A warning without any consequence is really not a warning. So let me finish my close, Madam Chair. Thankful you've been very patient.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
Let me associate myself with Senator Bradford's comments. I agree with almost everything Senator Bradford had to say that this challenge, the challenge of dealing with substance abuse, the challenge of dealing with fentanyl, which is not just a substance abuse issue, it is an issue where people don't know they're actually ingesting fentanyl. And prevention and treatment and education, those are all really important, even more important than any other. Ali G will be back with two other tools here. But this is also a tool.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
This is a preventative measure. You've dealt drugs that have fentanyl. Fentanyl can kill somebody. You go out, you sell it again with fentanyl, and you killed somebody. At that point in time, in terms of prevention, we're going to prevent that person from doing it a third time. We're going to, potentially, depending upon how the prosecution acts, prevent that person from selling fentanyl a third time. So, having said that, I know we've kicked this horse quite a bit.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I obviously am going to ask for an aye vote. And I want to also acknowledge the families, the capilato family, using that tragedy, Alexandra's death, to try to benefit all Californians, all the other parents, all the others who have suffered this kind of tragedy that is really unimaginable. It's unimaginable, that kind of pain. And taken that tragedy, that pain, and tried to turn it into something good. Amy Dunkley or Dunkel also suffered the tragedy.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I understand that point, but I do think that this Bill will act as a preventative measure and will save lives. I think we have to act. We can't endure another 107,000 deaths here in the next year without a comprehensive, including this tool way of addressing the fentanyl crisis. Urge an aye vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. And, Senator, just to be clear, you will not be taking the two amendments that were placed on the table today?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I'm not sure exactly what those amendments.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Should have known and limit to fentanyl analog.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I believe Senator Umberg has agreed that if and when the Bill moves forward, the explicit limitation to fentanyl analog, that he's.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
That's correct. Senator Wiener, you're correct that I have agreed that should this Bill move forward, I will limit it to just fentanyl. That's correct.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Okay.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah, but not the other one.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Okay. And not the other one.
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I'm not sure exactly what the other one is, but not the. But the newer should have known in the second conviction. No, I'm not accepting that amendment.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
All right, thank you. Do we have a motion? Could we have a roll call?
- Committee Secretary
Person
Motion is do pass to appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
The vote is one to zero. Would you like reconsideration?
- Thomas Umberg
Legislator
I would. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. It's granted it. All right. We are going to recess till about 1:30. Thank you for your time, and we'll reconvene. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
We will begin where we left off. Senator Nguyen, you have the floor: SB 62.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Thank you. I had good morning, but I'm going to change that to good afternoon. Good afternoon. Thank you, Madam Chair. And Madam Vice Chair, today I'm presenting SB 62 in direct response to the federal crisis. And I know you just heard one bill, but if you can indulge me and hear my side of this type of our views of it. Federal crisis is destroying the lives of Californians of all ages and from all walks of life and impacting our national health and well-being.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
According to the data, and I know it was stated a little early on, some of them; the California Department of Public Health in 2021, there were over 6,842 opid-related deaths, and out of those cases, 5,722 of those overdose deaths can be attributed back to fentanyl. During the same time, there were 224 fentanyl-related deaths among teenagers 15 and 19 in California. Over a 12-month period ending in January 2022, death-related overdoses and poisoning accounted for 107,375 deaths nationally.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Fentanyl is a significant contributing factor to this alarming statistics. The United States Drug Enforcement Administration has launched a public campaign. As stated earlier, one pill can kill in four minutes to raise awareness that these pills are deadly. Between the years 2016 to 2020, just in Orange County, where I represent, where 90% of my districts is, there's been an increase of over 1,600% from 239 deaths to 3857. Many of these are the results of drug dealers selling counterfeit pills containing fentanyl.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
The person consuming is unaware of it. The rising deaths of fentanyl victims leaves many family, including the families of the victims, asking who should be held responsible. How should we show that, as a society, we would not tolerate one more person being sold fentanyl and dying in this state? How do we send that message, as parents, as friends, and as neighbors, as leaders, that we would no longer stand by as this crisis persists?
- Janet Nguyen
Person
This bill, SB 62, will align the penalties for the possession of fentanyl with the intent to sell with the same punishment of cocaine and heroin. Currently, if someone is in possession with intent to sell a kilo of cocaine or heroin, the minimum they can receive is an additional three years. This bill is very specific. The bill will tell you. It's stated on very specific. Where it is one kilo, which is 2.2 pound.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
The next four kilo, which is 4.4 pounds, 10 kilo, 20.40 pounds, or 20 kilo with 44.1 pounds. That's very specific in this bill what those punishment be. Now, I want to show you something. These are smarties. If I start eating them, I'm just a little hungry. Okay. No. So these are actually smarties. This is 2.2 pounds. This is how many fentanyl that someone would have to have in their possession to show, to be actually be prosecuted in this bill.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
The minimum, this amount will kill 500,000 people, half of each of our district. There's no way you can mistaken a user versus a dealer. If you allowed us to include fentanyl in this bill, there's a big difference. And I know there's arguments, and I'm with you. We need to help the families; we need to help the users. I've got a 10-year-old and a 12-year-old.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Do you know how much it broke my heart to have to tell my kids during Halloween and I had to sit down with them and show them Skittles and Smarties that you can't eat these, nor can you take them from your friends, even though you've known them since birth because they don't know where it's coming from. So this bill we're talking about is a representation. That bag, one kilo, 2.5 pounds of what it would look like.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
As you can see, this is too large of a quantity to be mistaken for an everyday average user or victim. You can only see if someone has that amount. They have to be a drug dealer. Those who possesses fentanyl with the intent to sell, the minimum we're talking about is 2.2 pounds. It can go up to 44.1 pounds. Just think about 20 of these bags, that's 44.1 pounds.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
So, I respect and understand the comments of some of the opposition, but I'm asking you again: we're not here to talk about the users, the victims. Even if the user had 1,000 pills, they would not be prosecuted under this at all. Even if they had a few more thousand pills in their pocket, they wouldn't be because it can't be so, because the Bill is so narrow with 2.2 pounds, one kilo of fentanyl. It's actually, the cases itself is extremely rare.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
And we need more advocacy in terms of awareness and education for the victims, for their family, and to help those who wants to get help. And we also need to though hold those who are going to kill half a million people accountable. So I'm asking you today, is the bill again go directly after dealers and traffickers who are in possession of large amount of fentanyl?
- Janet Nguyen
Person
I know that looking at the bag, you and everybody else here in law enforcement cannot mistaken anybody carrying that as a user versus a dealer. We are facing a situation that will continue to spiral out of control until we take a serious look. And you can see in the last seven years that I've been here, there's more and more bills on fentanyl. The crisis is not going away. And there's bipartisan bills, too.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
We have to have every approach, just like Senator Umberg said, it's multiple approaches so that we can stop this pandemic. Because what's important now is that 10-year-olds, like my children, are now dying on fentanyl as well. I don't want that to be me at all. So I'm asking you to please consider this bill and at this time, we have Sergeant Julius McChristian from the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department and also Nedra Jenkins, who will be witnesses. Madam Chair, thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Lead witness, you have the floor. Two minutes only.
- Julius McChristian
Person
Good afternoon, Committee Chair and Members. My name is Julius McCristian. I'm a lieutenant with the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department. For the past several years, California has seen an influx on dangerous new drugs introduced into our communities. Senate Bill 62 would stem the influx of these drugs by adding fentanyl to a category of drugs that provides additional deterrence based on the weight an individual possesses for sale or distribution.
- Julius McChristian
Person
In recent years, fentanyl, a powerful, cheaply produced synthetic narcotic, has flooded the illicit drug market. Due to the strength of fentanyl, determining dose size is notoriously difficult for users, leading to an increase in the likelihood of an overdose. Fentanyl is extremely potent and fast-acting. If inhaled or ingested, a deadly dose of fentanyl can be as little as two milligrams. It is 50 times more powerful than heroin and 100 times more powerful than morphine.
- Julius McChristian
Person
Currently, possession of large-scale amounts from over a kilo to over 80 kilos of cocaine, crack, and heroin are eligible for enhancement punishments under the law, but fentanyl, which is 50 times stronger than heroin, is not eligible for that increased punishment. According to the California Department of Health, statewide, fentanyl deaths increased 2,294% from 239 in 2016 to 5,722 in 2022. Behind each of these statistics is a story of a life lost too soon.
- Julius McChristian
Person
By adding fentanyl as one of the select controlled substances for which possession of excessive amounts is treated more seriously, Senate Bill 62 corrects this outdated oversight and protects California's public in a tangible way. While providing the courts with clarity on this issue. Senate Bill 62 corrects a disparity in the law that treats the trafficking of fentanyl as a lesser offense than trafficking drugs like cocaine and heroin. Also, Senate Bill 62 does not target low-level dealers or those who occasionally furnish the drug.
- Julius McChristian
Person
The bill directly targets large-scale distributors of the deadly substance who possess a kilo or more, which is approximately 10,000 pills and equates to approximately 36,000 to 92,000 dosages. Senate Bill 62 amends Health and Code Safety Section 11370.4 to include fentanyl in the category of drugs like heroin and cocaine that are subject to enhancements by weight. By doing so, this bill targets those distributing, trafficking, and selling mass quantities of fentanyl, not the often unsuspecting end user.
- Julius McChristian
Person
Opponents of this bill often argue that penalties for drug sales represent a failed war on drugs mentality and do nothing to deter such conduct. But the outpouring of fentanyl onto our streets in the past year tells another story. Dealing fentanyl is more profitable than dealing heroin or cocaine, but the punishment for these dealers is lower. By fully holding accountable those that seek to profit from the illicit sale of fentanyl, we can reduce the presence of this drug in our communities.
- Julius McChristian
Person
And for those reasons, I'm pleased to support SB 62, an urgent aye vote. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Next witness.
- Nedra Jenkins
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair and committee members. I want to thank you for giving me the opportunity to speak about my son, Justin. Justin was 30 years old, and today marks two years of the death of our son to fentanyl poisoning. And I want to bring this up because it was to be a celebratory day. Justin was actually going to be taking my husband, his dad, out for a wonderful breakfast. His favorite place, a little place in San Juan Capistrano called Mollies.
- Nedra Jenkins
Person
You know, it didn't happen that way. Justin died, and it was a really, very bad death. And I can tell you as a parent, to listen to a body bag zip up on a day that should have been a wonderful day was not anything any parent, any parent, should ever, ever have to listen to.
- Nedra Jenkins
Person
So I would like to read you a little something that was written by our daughter, who is Justin's sister and only sibling, and she wrote this when he passed; just to know who Justin was. Justin was a son, a brother, uncle, grandson, and friend. A truly special human being that left a trail of belly laughs and bright-eyed smiles in his wake. Justin had a magnetic personality. He was deeply intuitive, empathetic, and funny.
- Nedra Jenkins
Person
He could read the room in a heartbeat and knew exactly how each person felt. Even as a child, he always knew when a loved one was having a bad day, and he knew exactly what to say to make that person feel much better. No matter the age, education, or income level, Justin could make anyone feel comfortable and had an extreme sense of altruism. His million-dollar smile lit up the room in those eyes. His eyes danced like the morning sun.
- Nedra Jenkins
Person
And even in hard times, he knew exactly how to make people laugh in stitches with his jokes and incredible impressions. Most people knew Justin as a gifted athlete, but what was truly special about Justin was how he used his athletic gifts to help children. When he coached children's tennis in high school, he was much more than a coach. And after each lesson, those tiny tennis players would run up to Justin and hug him around his knees. They were simply beaming with confidence and joy.
- Nedra Jenkins
Person
As the years went by, he embraced his entrepreneurship and had dreams to pursue an insurance and real estate career to follow in his parent's footsteps. And in addition, he had extraordinary talents in art, acting, as well as an incredible voice. He loved music and good food, especially sushi. And, of course, anything with cake batter and rainbow sprinkles. Justin may have only had 30 years on this planet, but he had an impact.
- Nedra Jenkins
Person
He never missed an opportunity to express his love to his family and friends, and daily-called everyone to just say he loves you. We will miss you. Jesse J, which was his little name, we always called him. And I want to just express this to you more than anything.
- Nedra Jenkins
Person
I was here for SB 44; as you know that this is something that is just not stopping. As a bereaved parent, when this initially happened, I immediately ran to the coroner's office, and I wanted to know that 30 days prior and 30 days after, I wanted to know the stats of fentanyl poisonings within a five-mile radius. And to my unbelievable surprise, there were 147. This is all within a little area of Laguna Niguel, California. And that was two years ago, and it's continued to skyrocket.
- Nedra Jenkins
Person
So I'm here today to support this bill for Senator Ngyuen and to please plead and ask for you to really, really take this very, very seriously because it is truly, truly, truly an epidemic, and it needs to be stopped. So it starts with us. We need to all work together, and we need to make something happen, and we do need a call to action. So, thank you again for the opportunity to speak.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other witnesses in support?
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Madam Chair. Cory Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association, in support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Anybody else?
- Perla Mendoza
Person
Perla Mendoza with Project Eli. In strong support.
- Kay Shaws
Person
Kay Shaws with Drug-Induced Homicide Foundation, strong support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Opposition witnesses, please come forward. Two minutes.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Good afternoon. Glenn Backes is for the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights and respectful opposition. I would suggest that we're in the wrong committee. The solutions for the fentanyl crisis are not in Public Safety Committee. They are in Health Budget Subcommitee, and they're in Health Committee. This bill would apply the same penalties for possession of a kilo or more of cocaine or heroin for any amount of fentanyl found in a kilo of product.
- Glenn Backes
Person
I think any observer of American drug markets and California drug markets would say that the enhancements didn't reduce the availability of cocaine or heroin. So, it does not make sense to build on a failed policy. We also know that the application of laws, though they appear race-neutral in their writing, are overwhelmingly enforced against Black and Latino people in California. So, we shouldn't build on a failed policy that is also racially disparate in its negative impact. The research isn't on the side of this bill either.
- Glenn Backes
Person
The National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine published a 444-page study written by over 20 scholars about the existing research on mass incarceration. What was the findings of 20 years or more of research on long sentences, including specifically drug sentences, which were a major driver of mass incarceration in the United States?
- Glenn Backes
Person
Their findings were that they did very little, if anything, to improve public safety, but they were injurious to families, the families of the incarcerated, and injurious to communities that are over-policed, where most of the Black and Latino family members come from. So that's what the research says. We do more harm than good when we Jack up sentences. Also, I suggest that we need to be in Budget Committee because the cost of sending one person to prison for one year is $150,000. That's for one year.
- Glenn Backes
Person
The cost of methadone for one year is approximately $6,000. 6,500. And the cost of buprenorphine is approximately 6000. So you could send 25 people to methadone treatment or 25 people to buprenorphine treatment, and that would have a positive effect in saving lives and reducing overdose. But this sending one person or many people to prison for more years will not have a positive effect. That's what the research shows us. That's what your own experience has shown us. So, treatment is a smart investment.
- Glenn Backes
Person
We'd ask that you invest in harm reduction and treatment, which saves lives. And I'm sorry: this bill wastes money, it wastes time, and ultimately it wastes.
- Margo George
Person
Margo George. On behalf of the California Public Defenders Association, I want to acknowledge the pain that everyone has around this. I think all of us have lost clients, friends, and family members to overdoses. But I also want to say and echo Mr. Backes' comments: the war on drugs didn't work. What it was, in some respects, was the full employment for lawyers. I was hired over 30 years ago in 1986 with war on drug money, but it didn't end.
- Margo George
Person
It made the harms that Mr. Backes referenced, but it also stole money that could have been used for genuine harm reduction. Mental health, housing, education, real public goods were starved while the prisons were built. And at the end of the day, drugs were cheaper, and demand remained the same. There is another way. According to the Federal Department of Health and Human Services, they have formulated a research-based strategy that they have actually found works. It focuses on improving access to addiction prevention, treatment, and recovery services.
- Margo George
Person
Increasing the.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I'm not sure, but did her volume go down? No.
- Margo George
Person
Can you not hear me?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
It just doesn't sound as loud as it. Would you like it better if I.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Yes.
- Margo George
Person
Okay.
- Margo George
Person
I'm actually almost up against the glass, but happy to do that. So, not only improving access to addiction prevention but increasing the availability of overdose-reversing drugs. And I know that in this session, there are some bills that will come before you that do that. But the other thing that we haven't talked about is supporting cutting-edge research in the treatment of pain, opioid use disorder, and associated conditions. And I want to say that as policymakers, you have a decision to make.
- Margo George
Person
The Journal of American Medical Association says a failure to shift the legislative focus toward evidence-driven policy implementation in the fentanyl era will likely be catastrophic in terms of avoidable overdose deaths. As policymakers, you must decide whether you will go back to the war on drugs or you will follow the science and research and save lives. I respectfully ask for your no vote.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you very much. We will now continue to. Any witnesses in support? Opposite, in opposition here in room 2100. Sorry.
- James Lindburg
Person
Good afternoon. Jim Lindburg, on behalf of the Friends Committee on Legislation of California and opposition.
- Jose Quezada
Person
Jose Quezada, on behalf of ACLU California Action and opposition.
- Adriana Griffith
Person
Good afternoon. Adriana Griffith with Initiate Justice and respectful opposition. Thank you.
- Stephen Munkelt
Person
Good afternoon. Stephen Munkelt, California Attorneys for Criminal Justice in opposition.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Any additional witnesses in opposition to SB 62? Seeing none, we'll now continue to our witnesses waiting to testify via the teleconference service. Please just set your name, organization, and position. Sorry moderator.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Please go ahead.
- Randy Perry
Person
Randy Perry with PORAC in support of the bill - I'm sorry.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 144, go ahead, please.
- Ray Grangoff
Person
Ray Grangoff, on behalf of the Orange County Sheriff's Department in strong support of this bill.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Madam Chair, there are no further callers in queue to address the board.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Moderator, and thank you to all our support and opposition witnesses. We'll now bring the discussion back to our Members.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Do we have any Member discussions? Senator Ochoa Bogh?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I'll have some questions for the author. So it's interesting because we've heard many comments today with regard to the war on drugs not being effective and the fact that this legislature should focus on data-driven policy. On that end, I've only been here. This is only my third year in the Senate, and I've seen the type of policies that have been promoted and passed here.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I would like to hear your thoughts on the notion that this bill would somehow be geared towards one, as a woman, as an immigrant woman, that it impacts disproportionately black and brown communities. And number two, the notion or the understanding that this is aimed at users, people who actually need treatment, and the differentiation between needing treatment and those who are carrying that amount of fentanyl that could kill potentially 500,000 people, half of our districts.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Thank you, Madam Vice Chair. So, Ashley, I forgot to mention that this bag itself is only 300 smarties. And Sergeant McChristian mentioned that one kilo is actually 10,000 pills. So just think of 30 of these bags in front of me instead, is what one kilo would be. The bill itself is not targeted at all to users or to those who are seeking for emergency care and those around them. When you're talking about in possession of 10,000 pills, there's a difference.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Even this one bag, if you were in possession of this one bag and you were say you're your user and you have this one bag, you would not be prosecuted under this bill at all. You would have to be carrying 10 of these bags. You could be carrying 5000 pills, and you won't be prosecuted because the bill itself, again, targets specifically one kilo, which is 2.2 pounds.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
And so the bill itself, you cannot mistaken a user versus a dealer when an officer shows up to the house.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
One last question, ma'am, and that's for the witnesses that spoke in opposition to the bill. I'm kind of curious to know, just to hear your thoughts on the fact that this is not for people who are in need of treatment, but people who are carrying the amount that could literally kill half a million people in our communities with regard to this particular bill. Not in fentanyl as a whole but this particular bill.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Thank you, Senator. I'm a cops kid, and I'm the parent of two young people who I consider precious and at risk because they live in the United States and there's a lot of drugs in the United States. Now, this bill isn't - my testimony was about how you spend public dollars. Do you spend it, as the expert from the public defender said, building prisons and putting people in cells, or do you spend it on treatment? Yes, that's a lot of drugs.
- Glenn Backes
Person
But putting someone away for another three years or ten years, or fifteen years will not reduce the availability of drugs on the street. That's why we support demand reduction by supporting treatment. That's where we want the dollar spent. We don't want it spent on things that don't work. Is that helpful?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Yes. But to her end, to the author's end, she's trying to find accountability for those that are actually dealing with something that potentially could kill that many people. In any other circumstance, it would be considered mass murder killing that many people. We are currently seeing a lot of policies in this committee with regard to limiting the use and the availability of guns because mass murders, and murders are being committed in our country.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And yet this particular bill that is aiming to address individuals that are caring enough to kill potentially half a million people is not something that...
- Glenn Backes
Person
There's two things - there's accountability, which I take to mean punishment. Punishment does not change the availability of fentanyl or cocaine or heroin or methamphetamine on the street. So, we don't support spending things on things that don't work. We support spending on things that will work. And that includes drug treatment. Margo?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
No. And to that point, sir, I completely agree with you. I believe in treatment. I really, really do. But I do believe that sometimes people have to be compelled to be part of a system that allows them to have access to treatment and self-improvement classes. And unless they're for many individuals, unless they're incarcerated, they wouldn't have any other motive or compelling reason to pursue those types of treatments or personal classes.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And the reason I say that is, as a matter of fact, I had an opportunity to visit with several incarcerated people, which I found to be an absolute enlightening and a blessing to have had that opportunity to hear their personal stories. And I asked them; I specifically asked the group of the cohorts that we were speaking to; I specifically asked them if it had not been for the criminal justice system that had brought him to that point.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And mind you, the individuals that we were speaking to were serving life without parole. And I specifically wanted to know. I asked various questions, but one of the questions I asked was, had it not been for, first of all, let me go back.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I asked him specifically, if you had not been incarcerated, had you not been gone through the criminal justice system that brought you to this point, would you have been compelled to take classes on self-improvement, whether it was anger management, furthering their schooling, or taking classes on anything that had to do with self-improvement? And they all said no, that they would have been either doing what they were previously doing, committing the crimes that they were previously doing, or dead.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And so it was the criminal justice system that kind of allowed them to hit basically, quote-unquote, rock bottom, and compelled them through the classes and opportunities to learn and self-improve within that system, to be compelled to take those classes. So, to your point, education is very important, but unless we are held accountable, meaning put in a system where you're going to be compelled to want to have those self-improvements, they're not going to just out of the blue one day go, you know what?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I think I'm going to stop doing this. There's not a compelling reason to propel them to go in that pathway. So, to your point, I do believe in treatment. I really, really do. But I also believe that unless there's a system where we put people in a place where they feel like, "Oh, jeez, you know what? I have hit rock bottom. I'm now going to be compelled to want to take upon myself. These classes are being provided to me within the system that I'm in."
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So that's where I'm going. So I do agree with you. But to your point, how are we going to get these individuals to take these classes on self-improvement or treatment if we don't put them in a system that allows them to go into that process and be compelled to do those?
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. Senator Skinner.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Oh, I didn't get the answer.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Was there a quick -
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
There was a question in there, by the way.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Thank you. In the aggregate, the research says that incarceration does not reduce the availability of drugs in society and that there's a better investment. You're asking how you compel people with good education, good jobs in the community, opportunities to work, mental health care, and treatment in the community. You can't have all those things if you're locking up your budget in incarceration.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Agreed on that point of education because that is another issue that we did agree when we spoke about that. And I would love to have that conversation with you off the records, but to the point that I'm trying to make is that these individuals self-admitted that had not been for this incarcerated system, the criminal justice system that brought them to that point, they wouldn't have been compelled to do the self-improvement. And that's the point that I'm trying to make. Thank you.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. Senator Skinner.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you, Chair. I want to make sure we understand what we're debating. Fentanyl sold in the way that our author is describing is illegal right now. It is illegal. There are both federal laws and California laws. It is an illegal substance. Of course, there is a medical use of fentanyl, and when it is used in that way by medical professionals prescribed to someone, it is not illegal. However, in the circumstance that's being described, it is already illegal.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And there are and felony level and many statutes on the books. What is before us is a question of enhancement. And while it certainly could occur that someone might sell that quantity of fentanyl, pure fentanyl, this is the example you're trying to make. There are already federal laws that govern such a quantity of fentanyl. In most cases, what is sold is these other substances laced with fentanyl.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And if any of those substances are sold laced with fentanyl, they would receive the enhancement that is on the books right now. So, I just wanted to clarify so we understood what was before us.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Senator Wiener.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Yeah, I just want to emphasize that possessing for sale or transporting, et cetera, et cetera, as Senator Skinner noted, and as you acknowledged, Senator, is already illegal. It's punishable, depending on circumstances, between 2 and 5 years in state prison. So we're already talking about crimes that are like multi-year, potentially even five years of incarceration. This is about whether we're going to pile years on, on top of that. In California, we passed, in the 80s, 90s, et cetera, maybe 150 or something enhancements.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And it's really one of the reasons why we got to the point where we were like 160,000 people in our state prison system, 180,000 massive amount of people was ruled to be unconstitutional, spending more on prisons than we spent on the UC system, and CSU system, which was a moral indictment of our state. We've been working so hard to move away from that. We're now under 100,000 people incarcerated.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And I agree that some people who are using drugs may be shaken out of their maybe incarceration does change them. I think that's true for some people, not for, probably not for a majority, but for some people. But if you're putting someone away for 10, 15, 20 years, that's not how you change someone's life. That's how you completely destroy someone's life as a society.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And so if the goal is to try to give someone an opportunity to rehabilitate themselves, you can do that in a lot shorter than some of the enhancement levels and the years of incarceration listed for this bill. So, I appreciate what the author is trying to achieve. I just don't think that this is the way to achieve it. I've not supported this bill in the past, and I won't be able to support it today.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you, Senator Nguyen. Would you like to close?
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair. Again, this bill targets specifics, very specifics. 2.2 pounds. It's not in any way a user would be carrying 10,000 pills. It's not in any way of promoting what has been in the past. The past was about cocaine, heroin, morphine, et cetera. But we have a different crisis today, and that crisis is fentanyl. One pill will kill someone in possession of - one kilo will kill a mass murder. That's what we would consider to them to be half a million people.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
We each here represent a million residents, 40 million. In California, there's 40 of us. Half of my dishwasher will be wiped out. And that's what this bill is all about, is that put these individuals, specifically the drug dealers, who's carrying 10,000 pills. Not 5,000, not 1,000. You can still carry 1,000, and you're not busted for this. This is very specific and very narrow. Very few would actually be prosecuted for this. And you're right. Yes, it is illegal, but it's not going where it needs to be.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
And because it's illegal, they're not prosecuting also that many because of the amount. So I'm asking you today: this is not a war on those who are using. And the victims you saw this morning and today, they're not just black and brown. They're yellow, like me, Asian. They're in communities. Laguna Niguel. Very affluent, very wealthy. They're in Artesia, heavily Latino. In my district, very poor areas and very rich area. It does not discriminate what zip code you live in.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
It does not discriminate what color your skin is. Doesn't discriminate what gender you are, either. Anybody who is in possession of 10,000 pills, that's the minimum. The other one is 20 kilos, 44 pounds. That will kill millions of people. That's why this bill is adding fentanyl. In, like, cocaine and heroin. But if you look at fentanyl specifically, it's very narrow and it's very specific because of the amount of fentanyl, it's so much smaller.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
And so I'm asking for your consideration because we're all in agreement we need more treatment. I'm on Health Committee, and I respectfully disagree. It is not a waste of my time. It is not a waste of my effort. It's not a waste of those who flew up here, flew all across the state to come here and testify, and it's definitely not a waste when we can save 10,000 people, I mean, half a million people. So, no, it's not a waste.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
I'm sorry; all due respect to that comment, you're going to continue to see more and more of these bills. It's not going to stop. It's just going to increase. And there's more and more bipartisan effort. In the past, seven years ago, it's usually only the Republicans who carry these. It's not anymore. We've got a pandemic. And I'm asking you, just look at it more specific in that. Again, going back to the minimum is 10,000 pills. This is only 300 smarties, so 33 of these bags.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
And if I have that, you would know I'm not a user. I'm more than a user. So, I respectfully ask for your support today.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Closing that argument, do we have a motion? All right, can we call the roll?
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 62: Motion is do pass to appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Vote is one to two. Would you like a reconsideration?
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Yes, ma'am.
- Janet Nguyen
Person
Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Senator Niello.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. You are presenting on SB 316. You have the floor.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you very much, madam Chairman. Members appreciate the consideration to present SB 316. I almost said AB certain habits are hard to stop. This Bill is also co authored by Senator Ochoa Bogh and Senators Jones, Nyen and Seyarto and Wilk. This Bill would let voters decide if they would like to restore penalties for serial theft by placing it on the November 2024 ballot.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
It would let voters decide I'm not the first person to bring this issue forward, as I'm sure you know, and I strongly suspect I won't be the last.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
You see in a UC Berkeley study from February of last year, 78% of voters said crime had increased over the past year and 65% said it has worsened in their local area as well as 59%. 59% in that poll supported amending Proposition 47 when voters approved Prop 47 in 2014 to ensure that our criminal justice system focused on violent and serious offenses, I suspect they were really not aware that this change would lead to this increase in retail theft, perhaps influenced by the Proposition's title and summary or title statement of Safe Neighborhoods and Schools act, the current lack of sufficient penalties to deter serial theft has led to an onslaught of repeat offenders committing multiple petty theft violations recently.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Just last week, in fact, I attended a meeting of chambers of commerce in my district and there was a law enforcement panel that consisted of police and sheriffs from Roseville, Folsom, Yuba City, El Dorado county, and they all, all of them reported increases in shoplifting. In shoplifting, Roseville in particular reported an increase in of 94% from 22 to 21, continuing the trends of recent years.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Anecdotally, in my district, employees at a Safeway in Fair Oaks, which is where I live, have turned to reporters to shine light on their story because they fear for their safety. They've claimed recently that they must contact the police or security almost every night. This was in a newspaper article. In one incident where employees asked individuals who were caught stealing to leave, the thieves proceeded to attack and injure the employees.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
At another Safeway, an ardent arcade, the shoppers recount seeing thieves casually and preparedly coming into stores with bags, going back to their car, and repeating the process. Last year, a store Clerk in San Jose, some of you may have read about this, confronted a thief in a liquor aisle. Rather than running, the thief pulled out a gun and killed the Clerk. A life was taken. Family and friends mourn as someone lost their life over a bottle of liquor.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Voters are not blind to this and want to see change. According to a 2023 NFIB poll, 89% of respondents supported a continued effort to repeal Proposition 47. A recent PPIC survey found that nearly three in every four Californians believe retail theft is an issue that needs to be addressed. The same survey found that more than 80% of Latinos and African Americans believe crime is an issue in their community. That percentage was significantly higher than for white and Asian communities.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Actually, it may be that crime numbers are actually greater than that which is reported because of a lack of accountability. If approved by the voters, SB 316 would allow a person who's been convicted three or more times of petty theft, grand theft, or other theft related offenses, and is subsequently convicted of the petty theft to be convicted of a felony. We need actual consequences to defer repeat offenders and save our brick and mortar stores from collapse.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Now, I had two witnesses with me, former sheriff John McGinnis and a local talk show host. But his talk show begins on KFPK in about 20 minutes, so he couldn't stay. But I do have Marcus Gomez, President and CEO of a local small business, California clothing recyclers, to testify on behalf of SB 316.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. And lead witness. You only have two minutes. Okay.
- Marcus Gomez
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair and Members. Again, I am the owner of California Clothing Recyclers. I've been in business for 25 years. I'm also here representing the California Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, which I'm a board Member, and the local Sacramento Hispanic chamber, which I'm a Member. I've had incidents at my warehouse. I've had them break the front door glass, come in and steal office equipment.
- Marcus Gomez
Person
I've got a container in one of my yards that has a steel box where the lock goes underneath, and you can't cut the lock, but somehow they got in there, they picked it, and they got in the container and stole things out of the container. I have. Thieves cut the fence, cut the back fence into my neighbor's yard who's. They built house trusses. They took the forklift and buried it in the mud. And then they just made a mess of everything in their yard.
- Marcus Gomez
Person
Another one of my neighbors, a concrete contractor, they didn't even bother to break the door. They just took the glass out of the door, went into his shop, and they took all the equipment that he had, and he said they could start concrete business the next day with all the equipment that they had. It's become a problem, and it's become a big problem. I was in save Mart a few weeks ago, and I'm checking out, and I see the store clerks, they're looking towards the door.
- Marcus Gomez
Person
And so I asked the guy, I go, what's going on? He says, that guy's getting ready to dart out the door with a grocery cart full of groceries. I go, you're kidding? He goes, no. And then all of a sudden, I see another Clerk run after him. Big guy, wasn't afraid, grabbed the cart and brought it back. It's a big issue that needs to be addressed. I'm getting tired of having to defend my place. I don't park my trucks out outside.
- Marcus Gomez
Person
I park them in, even though the county doesn't like me to. But I'm not going to leave them out there so they can break into them. So with that, I support this Bill, and I hope you all support it also.
- Marcus Gomez
Person
Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other support witnesses in the audience?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Madam Chair? Dave Butler. On behalf of UCAN, the United Chamber Advocacy Network, a coalition of 10 local chambers of commerce across four counties in Northern California, in support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Corey Salzillo. On behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association, in support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Madam Chair. Matthew Greco. On behalf of the California District Attorneys Association, as well as the San Diego Deputy District Attorneys Association, as well as the San Diego's against crime.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
In strong support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Any other speakers? All right, we will be moving to opposition speakers. Any lead? Opposition speakers, you have two minutes.
- Ed Little
Person
Good afternoon, chair and Senators. My name is Ed Little. I'm with Californians for Safety and Justice, and we are in respectful opposition to SB 316. SB 316 gestures towards a continuing failed narrative and push for the destructive, tough on crime policies of the past. SB 316 intends to charge nonviolent Californians with felonies and take us back to a time where punishments were not commensurate with the offense and overly punitive measures were the order of the day.
- Ed Little
Person
We all have witnessed the costly result of believing we can incarcerate our way out of crime. The social problems that undergird these issues we seek to address cannot be solved with a jail or prison cell. Poverty, housing insecurity, lack of adequate mental health services, unemployment, substance use, unemployment due to a prior conviction, extremely high cost of living require us to think critically about solutions that will make us all safe and secure. Prop 47 is an example of a solutions based approach to addressing these issues.
- Ed Little
Person
Over the past eight plus years, Prop 47 has saved the State of California $700 million. These resources have gone towards transforming communities all across the State of California through investments in mental health services, substance treatment programs, youth intervention, reentry services, trauma recovery services, for victims of crime. The success of Prop 47 should be lifted as a national model of the outcomes that are possible when we invest in community well being.
- Ed Little
Person
This results in fewer people in jails and prisons and more services and support, ultimately, more safety, not less. SB 316 is yet another attempt to go down the path that California voters have already, not once but twice, rejected. Significantly reverting misdemeanors back to felonies will once again dramatically increase incarceration rates, leaving the state vulnerable to falling out of compliance with the prison system's population cap mandated by the federal judiciary. For these reasons, we are respectfully opposed to SB 316.
- Ed Little
Person
We urge you to vote no on this Bill. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Next speaker.
- Margo George
Person
See if I get close enough this time. Marco George from the California Public Defenders Association, in respectful opposition, I just want to point out that a lot of the crimes that have been described are not affected by Prop 47. We had a robbery where someone confronted another one as they were leaving the premises with force. That's a robbery. We had break ins into locked or closed facilities where they've gone in and taken equipment or whatever. Those are felonies. They were not affected by Prop 47.
- Margo George
Person
They don't have anything to do with Prop 47. And the example of the sort of organized retail theft where somebody goes in, grabs stuff, and comes back in and goes back and forth, that has actually been addressed by that organized retail theft statute. So many of these examples of crimes don't have anything to do with Prop 47. I do want to say that Prop 47 has helped, as Mr. Little said, and these are just a few more figures to kind of take into consideration.
- Margo George
Person
It's helped eliminate prison overcrowding in California to the point that two prisons are set to close by summer of 2023, saving the state more than 300 million in annual operating cost, as well as 1.3 billion in avoided infrastructure repairs by 2024/2025. There's a possibility, a real possibility, that we may be able to close an additional three prisons, saving the state up to 500 million annually and avoiding additional billions in capital expenses. So this is money that we could take and use to rebuild California.
- Margo George
Person
There are so many things that need to be done in our state, and finally, this money is available and we should use it for social goods.
- Margo George
Person
Thank you.
- Margo George
Person
In opposition. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
All right. So do we have any other opposition in the room? Please state your name, your organization, and that you oppose.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you. Ignacio Hernandez, on behalf of the California Attorneys for Criminal Justice and opposition, Anthony. DiMartino, on behalf of time done in opposition. Good afternoon. Adriana Griffith with initiate justice and respectful opposition. Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Michael Mendoza with the Anti Recidivism coalition, in respectful opposition. Gail Yen with rune rebound, also in respectful opposition. Thanks. Diane Goldstein, Executive Director, law enforcement Action Partnership and respectful opposition.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Jim Lindbergh, Friends Committee on legislation of California, opposed.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. We'll move on to witnesses waiting to testify via the teleconference service. Please just state your name, organization and position. Moderator. If you would, please prompt the individuals waiting to testify in support our opposition, we will begin. Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Thank you. And if you wish to testify in support or opposition, please press one, then zero at this time. We'll start with line 151. Please go ahead,
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Madam Chair Members. Randy Perry with Aaron Reed and associates on behalf of Porak, in support of the Bill. Line 137, please go ahead. Good afternoon. Tim Taylor, on behalf of NFIB, the National Federation of Independent Business, in support. Thank you. Line 140, please go ahead.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good afternoon. This is Andrea Cow with the California Asian Pacific Chamber of Commerce in support of SC 3116. Thank you. Line 152, please go ahead. Hi, my name is Natalie Boust on behalf of the California Business Roundtable, in support. Line 146, please go ahead. Madam Chair, this timing may. I'm a constituent of Senator Neelo's in strong support.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Madam Chair, we have no one else in queue at this time.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. And thank you to all the witnesses. We'll now bring the discussion back to Members. Do any of our Members have questions or comments? Senator Wiener, thank you.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
First of all, I want to say to the author, who I find to be a gentleman and someone who's trying to do the right thing. I completely agree that the theft that we're seeing in our retail establishments is bad, and it is a huge problem. You see it in your district. I see it in my own community. We're at a point where Target in San Francisco now closes at 06:00 every night because their employees do not feel safe in the stores at night.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And I can give more examples like that, and that's harmful to my community when a store like Target closes at 06:00 this is a real issue. I don't agree, however, that the solution to it is to increase the potential amount of time for incarceration, which is what this Bill effectively does. I can tell you in San Francisco, we've seen remarkably little enforcement of existing laws that are more than adequate to address this. That has been changing.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I'm not trying to be critical of our very short staff Police Department. There's been a focus on retail theft, and I think it is having some benefits. And I know our District Attorney is already, and our last District Attorney who was recalled, he was also very focused on prosecuting organized retail theft. And existing laws allow that to happen. There are some of these, as noted, that are already felonies if it's above a certain threshold.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
In addition, if something is a misdemeanor that is punishable by 6 or 12 months, up to a year in county jail, which is not a meaningless punishment. And so this is a matter of consistency of enforcement so that these thieves understand that there will be a consequence, but we can do that consequence without destroying their lives having a consequence that creates deterrence. Prop 47 was passed by the voters, as noted, and the voters resounding, overwhelmingly rejected Prop 20 to dramatically scale it back.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I also just want to say I think there are some misperceptions about Prop 47 in some ways. For example, it raised the threshold for felony shoplifting from $450 to $950 a month. And we hear a lot about how that's the problem. That's the problem. That's the problem. Whereas the State of Texas, hardly a lefty bastion, the threshold for felony shoplifting, I believe, is $2,500, dramatically higher than the higher amount that we raised it to with Prop 47.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So I think sometimes Prop 47 is not looked at in context, and I think it should be. I also just want to say, having served in local government in San Francisco at a time when property crimes in San Francisco were dramatically escalating, we're seeing an escalation, auto break ins, which are a felony, if I recall correctly, but in a number of types of property crimes. And that escalation started before Prop 47 was passed.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So I understand that we tend to look for the reason why we're having certain problems. I don't think Prop 47 is that reason. I do think that we need to have really consistent enforcement and support from authorities for these stores because they don't feel supported. When I talked the small businesses, they frequently will say, I have someone who's shoplifting and the police don't arrive, or it takes them 2 hours to get there. And again, SFPD is down hundreds of officers from where it was before.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
So there are reasons why that happens, but that's a deep frustration. And I think the law is adequate the way it is. And so I won't be supporting this today, but I just want to say all that to let you know I fully agree that this is a real problem for these businesses.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Any other Senators would like to speak or comment on this? Senator Ochoa-Bogh?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Yes. So with regards to the comment in organized retail left, so like my colleague from San Francisco have also been speaking to many of our local businesses within our district and the chambers of commerce. And one of the things that I've been listening to is, or hearing is that because of the heightened or increased amount of costs that the Bill allowed for from 450 to 950 individuals are strategically going in there.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And I'm not referring to retail organized theft, that is a separate subject on that front. And I'm glad that the Governor took action on that front. But with regards to individuals going into stores and basically doing the math on issues I spoke to, I believe it was a representative for either Home Depot or Lowe's who discussed the cost that they were experiencing.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And it was interesting because in one of the forums that I attended, where we had our local businesses speak, it was conveyed to them that it was their responsibility to hire more police officers to enforce the current laws, or they had to install more cameras in their businesses to keep guard into what was going on into their business so that they could enforce the law.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
We focused a lot also in making sure that our businesses knew that there were laws in place that they should be calling. And we also informed our local chambers Members or businesses to start reporting it, because unless if they continue with the notion of, well, nobody cares, they're not going to prosecute, we're not going to call it in. It's a waste of our time. It's a waste of their time.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
We're not going to do it, then we don't have accurate data showing the pitfalls of Prop 47. And I think that's one of the key issues that I've seen thus far, is the fact that we have had a failure of reporting of the issues that many of our local businesses have because they feel that they are not being heard.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And so as we continue forward, we are going to have many of our chambers and our businesses continue to advocate for education, to call in the thefts that are occurring because us saving it on people that are not incarcerating. We're still paying for the pitfalls of theft because the businesses are paying for it with the additional cost that they have to incur for securities or cameras in the products that they're getting stolen.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And ultimately, we, as consumers pay for that cost of that thievery because they're not going to have a bank teller that's going to be printing that money and supplying them the stock again. No, we as consumers are paying it. So we may feel we're saving it in one end, but we're not on the other side. So as we move forward, I co author the Bill because I do believe that Californians need to revisit this.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
But on that same token, we're going to be gathering the data to make sure that our businesses and we look and we assess, if we're not ready yet, we will have the data eventually on the theft that are occurring in our local communities. So thank you for authoring this Bill.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Thank you for co authoring.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do you have any closing remarks?
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Yes. I'd like to address Proposition 47 more broadly and Proposition 20. This is not calling for a repeal of Proposition 47. I might be somewhat critical of it, but I think the most significant unintended consequence of Proposition 47 is the retail theft that we're seeing and the sorts that Senator Ochoa Bogh was pointing out. This is a very narrow modification of the shoplifting portion of it. And it is said by those that pose this Bill that we've already done this. Proposition 20 was overwhelmingly rejected.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
Well, Proposition 20 was a broad reform of Proposition 47, much more so than I'm proposing here. And again, by passing this Bill, you're passing it to the voters to see what the voters think about this specific issue. And I would point out the statistics that I cited from the UC Berkeley poll, the PPIC poll, the NFIB poll, that those polls would not have registered like that three or four years ago.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
But they do now, and they are increasingly, and it is the perception of a lot of people that crime is increasing. And in particular, this sort of petty theft crime is increasing. They believe it's inexcusable. People, quite frankly, are getting upset about it. And you know what happens when voters get really upset about something, whether it's merely perception or reality? You get overreactions of public policy proposals.
- Roger Niello
Legislator
So if the consensus of this Committee is not to accept this Bill, approve this Bill, I just point out that I won't be the last one to propose this. And as time goes on, unless something significant changes, voters are going to continue to get frustrated. And in the final analysis, as my old friend Dave Cox always said, when voters get really upset, you get overreactions. So again, I very much appreciate your aye vote definitely.
- Committee Secretary
Person
I appreciate this. Thank you. Do we have a motion on SB 316, moved by Ochoa Bogh. Can we call roll, please? SB 316, motion is do pass to appropriation. [Roll Call]
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
One to three. Vote is out. Sorry. Bill failed. Sorry. Thank you. Would you like reconsideration, sir? Thank you. Senator Roth presenting SB 349. You have the floor.
- Richard Roth
Person
Thank you Madam Chair and Members. The bill clarifies that a certificate of restoration of mental competence for a defendant shall apply to any pending case against a criminal defendant at the time the defendant was restored to competence. The symbol clarification adopts the Avida decision which expressly rejected the assertion that a defendant may be competent in two cases and incompetent in a third.
- Richard Roth
Person
By having the Certificate of Restoration apply to all pending cases, this bill will reduce unnecessary litigation, conserve judicial and mental health resources, which, as you know, are limited across the state, and could potentially reduce the backlog of approximately 1,800 incompetent to stand trial defendants awaiting restoration at a state hospital. Now, the opposition raised the concern that this bill does not consider that a person who is competent in one case may not be competent in another.
- Richard Roth
Person
And to address those concerns, I'm proposing amendments that state that upon a declaration of doubt in a case, that doubt shall be presumed to exist in all cases pending against that defendant, therefore ensuring that all pending cases in the court are considered by the mental health practitioners and others in the restoration process and, frankly, that if restoration of competency is found, it must be found in all those cases.
- Richard Roth
Person
In addition, these amendments also create a presumption that is rebuttable by a preponderance of the evidence, recognizing that there may be circumstances where a defendant's competence changes dramatically after a restoration, affecting the individual's ability to stand trial. Lastly, the amendments clarify that the court retains jurisdiction of all cases pending against a defendant within the county after a declaration of doubt for the purpose of determining his or her competence to stand trial.
- Richard Roth
Person
With that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote. I do have with me here today to testify in support of the bill, Riverside County Deputy District Attorney Megan Holtman.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Ma'am, you have two minutes.
- Megan Holtman
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon. I will address briefly just a couple of the problems that this bill is intended specifically to combat. Such as scenarios where a defendant who has multiple cases may have multiple attorneys who differ in opinion as to whether or not their client is able to understand the proceedings against them, or scenarios where they may pick up a case while they are already in suspended proceedings.
- Megan Holtman
Person
This bill is designed to keep everything in the same procedural posture so that they can all move uniformly throughout the process while the defendant's competence is being determined. It also codifies some legal presumptions and the different burdens of proof during the different stages of competency proceedings. It also codifies People v. Avila and this common sense notion that if you are competent and able to understand the proceedings against you in one case, you may be in all of your other cases.
- Megan Holtman
Person
What this bill does not do is it doesn't preclude the defense attorneys from arguing that their client may be competent in understanding of the proceedings in one case based on the charge and not in the other. That is what the evidentiary hearing that could be necessary upon a restoration does. So they can make that argument if they feel that it's appropriate, and it doesn't prevent them from later raising an additional doubt as to competence.
- Megan Holtman
Person
If there is a change in their client's mental state, they can raise that a second time and proceedings can reinitiate at that point. SB 349 is a common sense bill. It's designed to make sure that all of the cases stay together, that an incompetent defendant is not brought to trial, but that a competent defendant can move through the process in a more cohesive manner. Our goal is to avoid redundant litigation and to ensure that our already scarce resources are allocated appropriately. So I would respectfully ask for an aye vote. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Any other witnesses?
- Matthew Greco
Person
Madam Chair. Matthew Greco, on behalf of the California District Attorney's Association, as well as the San Diego Deputy District Attorneys Association, as well as the San Diegans Against Crime. All in support of this bill.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Madam Chair. Ryan Sherman with the Riverside Sheriff's Association and also the Deputy Sheriff's Association of Monterey County and Placer County in support. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Coby Pizzotti
Person
Madam Chair and Senators. Coby Pizzotti with the California Association of Psychiatric Technicians and on behalf of our 6,000 members working in state hospitals and prisons, we support the bill.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Do we have any other members of the public that would like to speak in support? If not, we'll go to opposition. Any lead opposition? Thank you.
- Margo Gittin
Person
Margo Georgia Gitton, can you hear me? In respectful opposition. I want to thank the author and the sponsors for taking the Committee's amendments. We are opposed unless amended. We still feel that this does not address our issues and specifically what this does, it upends existing law and puts the horse before the cart. It restores individuals to competency on cases before they have even been found incompetent.
- Margo Gittin
Person
And this is being done in the name of cost savings, where no expert has found them incompetent on the particular case in the first place. And one problem here is this is not codifying Avilla. Avilla is actually a very interesting case because it was a candidate. He was running for the Thousand Oaks City Council and he sent text messages which appeared to be from his opponent that were harassing him. And so both of them lost the election.
- Margo Gittin
Person
He was charged with computer fraud and identity theft. During the course of that representation, first he threatened to kill the district attorney, so they charged him with another case and they brought in the AG. Then he threatened to kill his public defender. So there we were, both allied. And so that resulted in yet a third case. The private conflict counsel that was brought in declared a doubt. Clearly there was something wrong with this gentleman.
- Margo Gittin
Person
And the judge took all three of these felony cases and said, I am going to hold a hearing to see whether he is competent on all of the cases. They didn't say, we're going to just take any case. So they were considering all three of the cases at the front end.
- Margo Gittin
Person
SB 349 applies at the back end because it says if you are considered restored, then it's going to deem that restoration of competency to apply to all your cases. Regardless of when they were filed and whether they're felonies or misdemeanors. And that's the problem. It creates chaos, literally, because it's mixing felonies with misdemeanors. And it's affecting recently enacted legislation that this body has voted for.
- Margo Gittin
Person
SB 317, Stern in 2021 found that incompetent misdemeans would not be sent to state hospital, that they would instead be given misdemeanor mental health diversion or they would go to assisted outpatient treatment.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Time is up.
- Margo Gittin
Person
The bottom line is, and this also will potentially affect the CARE Court Act. So what's going to happen is this is going to result in due process violations and speedy trial violations by mixing felonies and misdemeanors. Which, instead of saving resources, will actually require the courts and defense counsel to litigate to preserve those rights.
- Margo Gittin
Person
So we would be happy to continue working with the author, and we would love to see the misdemeanors totally taken out of this. Thank you very much. We respectfully ask for your no vote.
- Ignacio Hernandez
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair. Ignacio Hernandez, on behalf of the California Attorneys for Criminal Justice. I want to thank the author's office for discussions on our concerns with the bill. Just in consideration of time, we share a lot of the comments that were made by the previous witness. We will continue to engage. We do think that perhaps some flexibility on the front end and perhaps not as much shifting of the burden over to the defense. So we'll continue to have those conversations if the bill moves forward.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other speakers? All right. I'm sorry, sir. Go ahead.
- Eric Harris
Person
Eric Harris with Disability Rights California and respectful opposition.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Any other speakers in the room? Seeing none, we will now move on to witnesses waiting to testify via teleconference service. Please just state your name, organization, and position. Moderator. If you'd please prompt the individuals waiting to testify in support or opposition, we will begin. Thank you.
- Committee Moderator
Person
If you do wish to testify in support or opposition, please press 1 and 0 at this time. And Madam Chair, we have no one in queue at this time.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. I would definitely like to ask our Members to have any discussion on this item. Members, would anybody like to speak on this item? Senator Bradford moves the bills. Senator Roth, would you like to close?
- Richard Roth
Person
I probably should at least address the opposition's concerns. Putting the cart before the horse, restoring competency before a finding of incompetency. I should point out that the amendments that we have proposed that are in print and should be in front of you with regard to that. Remember putting the cart before the horse. Finding competency, return restoration to competency before finding incompetency.
- Richard Roth
Person
The amendment says if the court states a doubt as to the defendant's mental competence in any criminal action or revocation proceeding that doubt, which is how the process starts to determine competency, shall be presumed to exist in all cases pending against the defendant within that county, regardless of the date of filing, until the question of the defendant's competence is resolved according to the provision set forth in this chapter. So, in fact, the horse is in front of the cart. A doubt is raised.
- Richard Roth
Person
A competency determination is made. At some point, if the individual is incompetent and is restored to competence, a certificate of restoration is issued. The point here is to not have these successive doubt questions raised. Successive returns to psychiatrists for determination of competency and succession of certificates of restoration in charges pending against the same defendant in cases pending against the same defendant at the same time. This is simply efficiency of operation while preserving and protecting the due process that defendants are entitled to in the criminal proceedings.
- Richard Roth
Person
As you know, I come from a county where criminal cases are currently being dismissed and civil cases, if they're heard at all. Very few are heard because of congestion in the courts and a shortage of judicial resources. So thank you, Madam Chair and colleagues. I appreciate your patience. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. We have a motion by Senator Bradford. Can we call a roll call, please?
- Committee Secretary
Person
SD 349. The motion is depassed, as amended, to appropriations.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Wiener, aye. We'll hold the roll open. Thank you, Senator. Really appreciate it. Senator Becker. Thank you. You have the floor presenting on SB 474.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair Members, I want to first thank the Committee for the work it's historically done to eliminate some of the financial burdens on the incarcerated that prevent successful reentry. And today I'm here to present SB 474, the Basic Act. It's basic, affordable supplies for incarcerated Californians. SB 474 eliminates the often egregious markups for items sold in prison canteen stores, including food, hygiene products, health supplements and stationery, among other items. Canteen items are marked up an average of 65% above the cost of the vendor.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
However, they can be marked up as much as 200% of the cost to the average consumer. For example, February 2023, price lists from San Quentin show Aquafresh sensitive toothpaste being sold in canteen for $5.50. Yet it sells for $1.83 at Walgreens, a markup of over 200%. These markups make many products inaccessible and economically drain an estimated $30 million each year from predominantly Low income families of color. Given the minimum wage in prisons is about $0.08, or roughly $12 a month.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Markups can take an exorbitant amount of an incarcerated person's income. When you account for restitution, which takes over half of the income, an incarcerated person can be left with as little as $6 a month to purchase these necessities. According to a 2020 report by Impact Justice, 60% of incarcerated People survey said they could not afford canteen purchases, and 75% reported they experienced limited access to food due to their or their family's finances.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Additionally, Ella Baker center reported nearly two in three families with an incarcerated family Member were unable to meet their family's basic needs, including food and housing, due to financial burdens of incarceration. We named this will the Basics act because incarcerated people should not have to choose between the basic necessities of food, hygiene products, or health supplements. The Basics act aims to alleviate the unnecessary cost pressures for incarcerated people and their families. Everyone deserves access to basic necessities.
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Everyone deserves affordable supplies, and everyone deserves to know their loved ones is everything they need to care for themselves. If we want to truly rehabilitate and support incarcerated Californians, we need to make sure that everyone has access to these basic, affordable supplies. With me testify are Sue Kim, the policy manager at Uncommon Law, and Sandra Johnson, the fair Chance community organizer at legal aid at work.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Will our first witness come up? You have two minutes.
- Sue Kim
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair and Members. My name is Sue Kim, and I'm a policy manager at Uncommon Law, here to speak on the importance of Senate Bill 474. For at least a decade, CDCR's canteen markup has remained at about 65%, which is much higher than the average retail grocery markup in the free world. We all have the option to choose between different retailers and search for the best prices.
- Sue Kim
Person
We could go to Costco, where they have about a 13% markup, or Kroger for about 20. But imagine if you had no choice but to buy all of your groceries, hygiene products, and household goods at one single store, and that store applied a 65% markup to all of its products. Imagine the financial impact that would have. Now, on top of that, imagine if your family's breadwinner was incarcerated and making $0.20 an hour, totaling about $30 a month.
- Sue Kim
Person
Well, this is the reality that incarcerated people and their families are facing. Which brings us to the question, why are the most economically disadvantaged people in our state paying the highest markups on these basic goods? This is because CDCR relies on the revenue from canteen sales to pay for some of its own operating expenses, specifically those in the inmate welfare Fund. We recognize that important services and rehabilitative programs are currently funded by these extreme markups.
- Sue Kim
Person
However, it is inappropriate and extremely cruel to force the poorest people in our state to bear the burden of these costs, to force the people at CDCR incarcerates to pay for some of the costs of incarceration. Other states, even those that are pushing to lower canteen prices, have markup rates far below CDCR 65%. For example, the Virginia Department of Corrections currently has a 9% canteen markup.
- Sue Kim
Person
But a recently convened fines and fees working group recommended that the Legislature allocate money in the General Fund to eliminate this markup. They recognize that even a 9% markup places an unacceptable burden on incarcerated people and their families. Instead of punishing the most vulnerable communities in our state with predatory financial practices, we should be investing in their health and economic stability. Eliminating the canteen markup is a step in that direction. I respectfully urge your aye vote and I'm available to answer any questions. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Next speaker, you have two minutes. Good afternoon, Madam and Committee Members. My name is Sandra Johnson, and I work at Legal Aid at Work.
- Sandra Johnson
Person
I am their fair chance community organizer, and I've also been in prison for 15 and I've also spent served 15 years in prison. So I know firsthand how it feels not have to so I know firsthand how it feels to depend on prison canteen for food and basic personal hygiene items that the prison does not supply enough of. I remember nights.
- Sandra Johnson
Person
I remember many nights in prison that I would have gone to bed hungry if it were not for the food that I was able to buy at canteen because of the money that my mother was able to squeeze from her already Low income. And I even had to share some of my food with my roommates because they did not have family Members to help them with canteen so that neither of them would go to bed hungry either.
- Sandra Johnson
Person
They didn't even have a job, so they didn't even make any money in the prison. After my release from prison, while I was trying to get my own life on track, I immediately started financially supporting my brother, my oldest brother, who until just a few months ago was incarcerated, serving 44 years.
- Sandra Johnson
Person
Senate Bill 474 will eliminate the markups at canteen for basic food items, food and hygiene items like toothpaste, deodorant, and soap that most people that have never been in prison thinks that California prison supplies but does not for incarcerated people. I'd like to thank the Committee and the Madam Chair Members for allowing me to speak today about Senate Bill about Senate Bill 474, a Bill that would help so many families that are just barely working.
- Sandra Johnson
Person
They make ends meet and also care for themselves and their loved ones in the California prison. Senate Bill 474 is a common sense Bill, and I ask you to vote yes. Thank you very much.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other comments and support? State your name, your organization, then you support. Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Ed Little with California for safety and justice and support. Thank you. Ivana Gonzalez, for legal services for prisoners. With children and all of us are none. Legal aid at work, uncommon law and Milpa collective in support. Geronimo Gaguilar here on behalf of all of us are none. In strong support. Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Gregory Fidel will initiate justice. Strong support. Thank you. Natasha Minsker, prosecutors Alliance of California and Smart Justice California in strong support. Eric Harris with Disability Rights California, in strong support. Danica Rodarnal, on behalf of the Grip Training Institute, in strong support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Ken Hartman, on behalf of the transformative in prison work group, strong support. Juan Govea, on behalf of co sponsor ElLA Baker, Center for Human Rights, Strong Support. Kimberly long, exonerated person I'm in strong support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Jose Casada, on behalf of the ACLU, California action and support. Ignacio Hernandez, on behalf of the California Attorneys for Criminal Justice and support. Just wanted to report that ARC is also in support. Thank you. Jim Lindbergh, on behalf of the Friends Committee on Legislation of California, in strong support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any lead opposition witnesses? Seeing none. Do we have any opposition witnesses just to speak on the item seeing none. Thank you. We'll move on to witnesses waiting to testify via teleconference service. Please state your name, your organization and position moderator. If you'd please prompt. The individuals waiting to testify in support or opposition of this Bill will begin.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Thank you. And if you wish to testify in support or opposition, please press one, then zero at this time. We'll go to line 155. Please go ahead.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good afternoon. Rebecca Gonzalez of the National Association of. Social Workers, California chapter in support of this Bill. We'll go to line 157. Please go ahead.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Hi, this is Alicia. Hi, my name is Tatiana Lewis with legal services for prisoners with children, as well as all of us are none proud. Co sponsor of SB 474, authored by Senator Becker, in strong support. Thank you. Line 159, please go ahead.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yes, Leslie Rose, on behalf of Indivisible California State, strong in support. And line 158, please go ahead. And.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Please start again.
- John Reed
Person
Hi, my name is John Reed. I'm calling on behalf of Team Justice and representing the other 20 organizations in the County of San Diego to also support this Bill.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 156, please go ahead.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Hi, this is Alissa Moore with Legal Services for Prisoners with Children. All of us are in proud support.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And, Madam Chair, we have no one else in queue at this time.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. We'll now bring the discussion back to Members. I believe nobody wants to speak on the item. We had a motion by Senator Bradford. I do want to say, Senator Becker, I really do appreciate this bill. I think one of the things that we also don't talk about enough is that the options for women in prison are actually far limited to earn any income. So that is also an obstacle that is not discussed enough. The programs are very limited compared to the men in prison.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
I would also like to be added as a co-author. I fully support this effort, and I really do appreciate you and all the witnesses that spoke in favor of this. So would you like to close?
- Josh Becker
Legislator
Yes. Thank you for that, Madam Chair. And respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Motions passed, I mean, moved, by Senator Bradford. Can we have a roll call?
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 474. The motion is due passed to Appropriations. [Roll call]
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. The bill is passed, five to zero. Moved on to Appropriations. Thank you. We now have Senator Menjivar presenting SB 838. The floor is yours. Thank you.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. Good afternoon, Members. It's been a long one for y'all, and I appreciate all your dedication to staying on here and the diocese. First, I want to take a moment to really thank the consultant staff, Committee staff, for working with my team on this very important Bill to returning Members. This Bill might sound familiar to you. I'm here to talk about SB 838, which is looking to remove barriers faced by victims of police violence and getting help from California's victim compensation program.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
SB 838 will improve access to vital resources for victims of police violence as they recover from physical and emotional injuries caused by the excessive, abusive actions of police, or, in the cases of people killed by police, provide support for the necks of kin to be able to bury their loved ones with dignity and respect. There are three key points to this Bill.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
First, this Bill would ensure that, without a doubt, the definitions of crime and victim for purposes of compensation include victims only, victims who are seriously injured or killed by inappropriate use of force by police. Regardless of whether an officer is arrested or charged. Again, this would not require an officer to be charged with wrongdoing.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Applicants will be denied compensation if the person injured by law enforcement is convicted of committing a violent felony as defined in penal code 667.5 at that time and will not receive compensation while such charges are pending. Victims or family Members of deceased victims would also not be eligible if the victim caused serious bodily injury or death to another person at that time. No victim is eligible to receive compensation while in jail or prison or while on probation or parole for a violent offense.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
I want to make clear that this Bill does not have the intent to provide resources to the family of individual who, after committing murder, for example, was shot and killed by responding officers. This Bill excludes violent crimes such as that example that I just gave victims and survivors would only be eligible if the force results in serious bodily injury or death to another, and only if the injured person was not committing any violent crime at this time.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Second, SB 838 would allow survivors of police excessive use of force to use documentation other than a police report to verify that they qualify. Currently, survivors may be denied CalBCB for noncooperation with police or inability to garner a police report, which often is unavailable in cases where serious injury or death was caused by the very same people you need a report from. However, there is current flexibility that is granted to domestic violence victims, sexual assault victims, and human trafficking survivors.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
This provision is asking for that same flexibility in this case. Therefore, it would prohibit denial based solely on the contents of a police report in cases where serious injury or death was caused by police. Third, in cases involving police use of force, SB 838 would bar exclusion based on whether the victim or family cooperated with law enforcement during the crime. The intent of this Bill is straightforward, but if enacted, will make an important impact on the lives of victims of police violence.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
So here with me today, I want to welcome up two witnesses in support, Gabriel Garcia with Youth Alive, one of our Bill sponsors, followed by Vinny Ing, a Member and leader in the Crime Survivors for Safety and Justice community.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you, Senator Manjabar, you have 2 minutes.
- Gabriel Garcia
Person
Good afternoon, chair. Vice Chair, Members, my name is Gabriel Garcia. I'm the policy and advocacy Director for Youth Alive. We're a community based organization in Oakland, California, that serves victims of violent crime. Specifically, our flagship hospital based program serves violently injured patients at their bedside and beyond. And our homicide response program, we reach out to almost every single family in Oakland that loses a loved one to gun violence.
- Gabriel Garcia
Person
One of the most crucial things that we could do for these survivors, these victims is connect them to victim compensation through the victim compensation program, Cal BCB, we can help moms who want to bury their sons with dignity, who have no other means to do so. We are able to connect violently injured patients to cost to cover their medical bills, and we are able to work with other survivors to get them mental health counseling to begin their healing process.
- Gabriel Garcia
Person
Now, I've talked to moms who've lost their children to gun violence and that they tell me that this support is life changing. Unfortunately, as we stand right now, many folks, because of strict eligibility requirements, are blocked out of receiving those healing resources. This is especially true for victims of police violence. Even though from 2013 to 2018, police excessive use of force was a 6th leading cause of death for black men, their families have effectively been locked out of these healing resources.
- Gabriel Garcia
Person
SB 838 would change that. Now, California has been a leader in police accountability and reform. This Bill is not about that. It's not about assigning blame or holding officers accountable. This Bill is strictly about providing healing resources to trauma survivors and those who are the most marginalized in our communities because our system has been designed to accept them from these healing resources.
- Gabriel Garcia
Person
We cannot begin to heal the relationship and the trust between law enforcement and community Members when we are not taking accountability for that harm and recognizing that healing needs to take place. That's why we are proud to co sponsor SB 838, and respectfully, humbly request your support. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Next. Speaker.
- Vinny Ing
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair. I'm Madam Vice Chair, Senators. My name is Vinny Eng. Thank you for your time today. I'm here to speak to the importance of SB 838, fair access to victim assistance. I hope that my perspective as an impacted community Member will help shine a light into how systems is currently designed further harm California residents while they're experiencing unspeakable tragedy.
- Vinny Ing
Person
11 years ago, I received a call that I don't think anyone in this room ever wants to get, informing me that my sister, while experiencing mental crisis at the community clinic where she was receiving care, was shot and killed by four sheriff's deputies. It all happened within a matter of minutes of a non emergency call being placed to dispatch. Of the four responders, one was a field training officer and another was just freshly one week on the job.
- Vinny Ing
Person
That very day, as we were just piecing together the events, a family Member went to the station to inquire into how the situation could have escalated so quickly, indicating the station captain provided very few details indicating that information was being withheld. While they were investigating a potential crime and said with astonishing indifference that sometimes we don't get to choose when it's our time to go.
- Vinny Ing
Person
I reflect often on that statement and how it continues to accurately encapsulate the hostility and difficulties that families marginalized by the experience of state violence face in finding the right pathway, any entry point for care, stabilization and repair. The first injustice occurs with the loss of life. Additional injustices accrue, like interest on debt, information withheld, access to medical records that breached health privacy, and denigration of those killed who can't respond to characterizations by public information officers or media statements.
- Vinny Ing
Person
Where would you direct a constituent if they called your office today to ask for help to pay for cremation of a loved one's body desecrated by gun violence? In this way, California loses nearly 200 residents to police violence annually. The phenomenon is not new. It is not abated despite community pleas. We have a lot of work to do to enact other policy changes to make these killings less frequent. And while that work is happening, we still have families in need of care and support.
- Vinny Ing
Person
This Bill is designed recognizes that at the root of violence is when households and communities are destabilized after a violent event. We have to meet the pain and suffering of the moment with a modicum of humanity with multiple on Ramos for survivors to start their road of repair. Sometimes this may look like seeking care without getting a police report to certify a need for help, we have to interrupt all cycles of violence with interventions rooted in care. Without this resource, there's uneven access to support systems.
- Vinny Ing
Person
Some impacted community Members live in areas blessed with community organizations like Youth Alive, where organizers have become seasoned in patching together wraparound care for families. Others are eventually connected to networks of existing survivors. We provide free and emotionally demanding labor to families overwhelmed by tragedy but in desperate need for a space that is judgment free. So as policymakers, I urge you to support SBA 38 because we have to listen to our youth organizers who are co sponsoring this Bill.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Vinny Ing
Person
Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Appreciate it. Do we have any other speakers in support? Please state your name, your organization and that you support. Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Natasha Minsker on behalf of Prosecutors, alliance of California proud to sponsor SB 838 also in support Smart Justice California good afternoon. Glenn Bacchus for the Yellow Baker Center for Human Rights in Support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good afternoon.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Gregory Fiddao with initiate justice strong support. Cassandra Whetstone, volunteer with moms demand action and support. Rebecca Marcus with Brady campaign and support. Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Jose Cassada on behalf of the ACLU. California Action and support Vnet Yaya with. March for our lives and we support Mary Lou Rosetto moms demand volunteer in. Support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Ed little with California for safety and justice proud co sponsor in support and also on behalf of California Public defenders. Ignacio Hernandez, on behalf of CACJ. In support, Diane Goldstein on behalf of the Law Enforcement Action Partnership in support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Tanish Hollands on behalf of crime survivors. For safety and justice proud co sponsor and Californians for safety and justice in full support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other supporters saying none. Do we have lead opposition? 2 minutes.
- Matthew Greco
Person
Thank you. May I? Please Madam Chair, I am Matthew Greco, here in opposition to SB 838 on behalf of the California District Attorneys Association, the San Diego Against Crime, and the San Diego Deputy District Attorneys Association. SB 838 would revise the definition of crime to include when an individual sustains serious bodily injury or death as a result of a law enforcement's officer's use of force, regardless of whether the law enforcement officer is arrested, charged with, or convicted of committing any crime.
- Matthew Greco
Person
SB 838 would prohibit the California Victims compensation program from denying funds based on the victim's involvement in the crime, the victim's failure to cooperate, or the contents of a police report, or the lack thereof. CALVCP may deny funds only if the victim is convicted of a violent felony that resulted in death or serious bodily injury. If the victim is deceased.
- Matthew Greco
Person
Funds may only be denied if the victim personally inflicted serious bodily injury or death on another person at the time and location of the incident on which the claim of funds is based. SB 838 has the potential to lead to really unintended consequences. For instance, a perpetrator could shoot a person at one location and flee if the killer later shot at law enforcement to avoid arrest at a separate location and was shot.
- Matthew Greco
Person
That killer would be eligible for compensation for an injury inflicted at the time of arrest. The restitution Fund is limited and should be reserved for victims of crime. Persons who are unlawfully injured or unlawfully killed by police should be entitled to compensation, but this Bill allows persons who are lawfully injured or killed while engaging in serious and dangerous crimes to demand compensation unless they fall into one of two very limited exceptions.
- Matthew Greco
Person
We believe the victim's compensation Fund is an important aspect of a crime victim's path to healing. However, the amount of compensation available in the Fund is very limited, and the over breadth of this legislation would severely limit access to funds to truly deserving individuals and therefore would have unintended consequences. For those reasons, we respectfully oppose.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other opposition? Seeing none, we'll move on to witnesses waiting to testify via the teleconference service. Please just state your name, organization, and position moderator. If you'd please prompt. The individuals waiting to testify in support or opposition of this Bill will begin.
- Committee Secretary
Person
And if you'd like to testify in support or opposition, please press one, then zero at this time. We'll go to line 155. Please go ahead.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good afternoon. Rebecca Gonzalez with the National Association of Social Workers, California chapter and support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And line 153, please go ahead, Madam Chair Members Randy Perry with Aaron Region associates on behalf of Porak in opposition.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
And Madam Chair, we have no one else in queue at this time.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you to our witnesses. We'll now bring the discussion back to the Members. I do have a question. When somebody is seeking funds in this manner, is the insurance that's provided for law enforcement engagement, whether it's an officer involved shooting or not, does that play a part in the victim's Fund?
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Yeah, great question. So currently, how the California Victim Compensation Board works is that it's upfront monies. So let's say in this case, the Bill passes and there is an individual that is killed by police violence. And at that time, they may be seeking a settlement with law enforcement, but they need funds right then and there to pay for bureau services. So they get the funds there.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
And then if they get a settlement out of law enforcement, their insurance and so forth, they have to pay the money back to the victim's compensation board. So it's money to utilize in the moment. And if a settlement is provided to cover those funds or those services, they have to give the money back. They were given upfront.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Okay. And then have there been amounts set for this upfront money? Is it a formuLA based on age or impact of the family?
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
As the current California victims compensation board stands, there are caps on several services, and that is going to be applied across. So there are caps. I don't have the specific caps on every single service that's provided because services are for mental health, they're for crime cleanup, they're for funeral services, they're for mental health, medical, anything that the individual does not have coverage under insurance. Even if there's a GoFundMe page that disqualifies the individual to apply for CalvCB?
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
It disqualifies.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
It does disqualify because that shows that you have means of paying for a service that you're asking support for.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
And this covers funeral services as well.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
And this covers funeral services as well.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I supported this Bill last year when Senator Leva actually carried it. I just wanted to, just for the record, confirm whether or not these funds are available once the investigations are completed. So I'm assuming going through trial or at what point are these funds decided upon that the victim was the result of violence and not.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Okay. I do appreciate it. Other Members, would you guys like to comment or have. Senator Ochoa-Bogh,
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
My second part would be whether or not they received these funds if they committed a crime.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Right. Madam Chair, if you allow me to tie in something that the opposing witness mentioned. So right now, individuals who are in jail, probation, parole for a violent offense would not qualify. So if an individual was arrested is in jail currently, they wouldn't be able to apply even if they had a bodily injury. In that sense.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
I also want to note that the example given, and if an individual shoots at one location and then is found at a different location and they were then shot by police officers, they wouldn't be able to claim services under the intent of this Bill because they committed still a crime. So to your first question, if you wouldn't mind asking it one more time, I apologize. Maybe if you could, Madam Chair, if I can turn to my witness.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Yes.
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
Or to a sponsor. Absolutely.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So the Bill specifically says that the person cannot receive assistance while charges are pending. It is only once. The actual. If I, for example, was injured by police and I was charged with a crime, I would not be able to get any assistance until the charges against me had been resolved. If I was convicted, then I would not be eligible. And no one in jail or prison or on parole is ever eligible.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you. All right. Do we have any other questions? Seeing none, would you like to close?
- Caroline Menjivar
Legislator
I appreciate. Senators. Madam Chair. Madam Vice Chair, for engaging in me on this very important Bill. SB 838 is asking Members to provide services for survivors who have been seriously injured and families of those who are killed by inappropriate use of force by police. They need these services to be able to overcome a lot of the barriers that come with obtaining compensation. So ultimately, this Bill will improve access to crucial program for survivors. And I respectfully ask for your, Ivo.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have. Senator Bradford moves the Bill. Can we call a motion? I'm sorry? A vote.
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 838. The motion is deep. Passed to appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
The bill's on call. Thank you, Senator. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
It's still on call, but thank you. All right, we have our very own Senator Bradford, SB 50. Senator, the floor is yours.
- Steven Bradford
Person
You ready, SB 50?
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Yes. The floor is yours.
- Steven Bradford
Person
All right, thank you, Madam Chair. SB 50 will limit law enforcement's ability to stop people for minor, non-safety related traffic infractions unless there is an independent, safety related basis to initiate the stop. It will also provide technical clarification to ensure that cities and counties can explore non law enforcement approaches to traffic safety. In doing so, SB 50 will help protect Californians of color from unnecessary harms and help ensure public dollars dedicated to community safety are used more effectively.
- Steven Bradford
Person
Pretext stops are when an officer stops someone for a minor traffic violation, such as tenant windows or expired registration, or something hanging from your rear view mirror, to investigate a hunch that the individual has committed a more serious crime. These stops, which require no evidence or suspicion of more serious crime, disproportionately impacts communities of color. Data from last year's RIPA report shows that people who were perceived as black were stopped over twice the rate of the people who were perceived as white.
- Steven Bradford
Person
I myself have been stopped for one of these violations. Four years ago, while driving home, leaving a friend's home in Pasadena, I was stopped because my left headlight was not working. When I quickly explained that there's a short and just hit to tap on the light and it might start working, they asked me to get out my car.
- Steven Bradford
Person
I was stopped at no time for reckless driving or weaving or anything like that, and I was subjected to a field sobriety test, which I passed with flying colors. But at the same point, I was stopped for the headlight. At no time did they say they stopped me for the manner in which I was driving to lead to a field sobriety test. And he responded, well, we usually catch guys like you at this time of night at 01:00 a.m. driving drunk.
- Steven Bradford
Person
So anyway, prime example of high pretextual text stops are used. Too many people have been stopped for violations like faulty headlights or expired registration or something hanging from the rear view mirror as stated earlier, and ultimately being harmed or even killed. We've heard plenty of stories of the Daunte Wrights, Philando Castile, Walter Scott, Sandra Bland, and others who were pulled over by law enforcement for low level violations and ultimately lost their lives as a result of these stops. This bill does not legalize these violations.
- Steven Bradford
Person
In fact, we have clarified in the bill that law enforcement has the authority to mail these citations. This bill does not require local governments to move away from law enforcement. It only allows those who choose to to have non police employees enforce these low level violations and the ability to do so. Californians across the state have voiced their concerns about rising crime rates, I should say, especially theft and violent crime, not on people having a broken light or something hanging from their rearview mirror.
- Steven Bradford
Person
Yet law enforcement spends a significant amount of their time and resources policing these violations that put no one in immediate danger. They've stated almost 50% of police officers times are on minor violations like that and not serious violent crime. A national poll conducted by Safer Cities' research found that nearly three in four voters support banning traffic stops for minor offenses.
- Steven Bradford
Person
Again, it was with these, in similar cities such as Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, San Francisco, and the State of Virginia, and now California, who are implementing such programs such as this. SB 50 builds on recommendations from the California Ratio and Identity Profiling Advisory Board to Committee on Revisions of the Penal Code and the Center for Policing Equity, all whom recommend limiting the enforcement of minor traffic offenses that pose little or no public safety. To that end, I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Steven Bradford
Person
Testifying with me today is Diane Goldstein, Executive Director of Law Enforcement Action Partnership. And also joined here for technical assistance is Rick Owen from the Committee on Revision of the Penal Code.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
All right, Senator, would you accept the Committee amendments also?
- Steven Bradford
Person
Yes, we have accepted the Committee amendments that clarify the vehicle light violations over the license plate.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
All right, I do appreciate that. Lead witness number one, you only have 2 minutes.
- Diane Goldstein
Person
Yes, perfect. No problem. Since I've already been introduced, I am the Executive Director of the Law Enforcement Action Partnership, and we believe that SB 50 would improve police effectiveness by strengthening community trusts, focusing scarce resources on serious crime, and protecting police officers and the communities that they serve. SB 50 does not take needed tools away from us. We have and make the discretionary determination every single day as to whether something poses an immediate safety risk on the road based on the totality of the circumstances.
- Diane Goldstein
Person
This legal standard does not change. I would argue, rather, that low risk safety stops undermine the trust needed to solve serious and violent crime. Data analysis by PPIC noted that of the 3.4 million traffic stops conducted in California, officers confiscated only 905 firearms. That's one confiscation every 3700 stops, just 0.2% of stops turned up guns, reflecting that low level stops rarely produce evidence of serious crime.
- Diane Goldstein
Person
Deprioritizing low level stops in other states has enabled officers to focus on more serious public safety issues. In Fayetteville, equipment stops fell by 80% while safety stops went up. Traffic accidents fell as a result, with no increase in violent or property crime. Data from 3.5 million traffic stopped by all of Connecticut's police departments shows that when low level stops were deprioritized, arrests for DUIs increased, suggesting that officers time was being used more effectively.
- Diane Goldstein
Person
There is strong evidence that minor safety stops are not an effective way to decrease serious crime and, in fact, endanger our police and the communities we serve. The burdens and risk of protectional stops also falls most heavily on black people and communities of color. For example, as recently as 2020, black drivers were 20% more likely to be stopped than white drivers. This ongoing disparity erodes trust in already marginalized communities.
- Diane Goldstein
Person
Empirical research reflects that negative police interactions damage police legitimacy, as seen by the recent murder of Tyre Nichols, and have limited effectiveness. There have been multiple studies that has analyzed body worn camera footage, and it's found a subtle but clear pattern. During stops, officers spoke to black men in a less respectful and less friendly tone than they did to white men. This disparity in treatment is real and helps to fuel the mistrust between police and the black community.
- Diane Goldstein
Person
Changing the law to low level stops can decrease these stops while improving public safety for both the police and our constituents, while reducing racial disparity.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Next speaker.
- Rick Owen
Person
Good afternoon. Rick Owen, Senior Staff Counsel for the Committee on Revision of the Penal Code. This bill is based on one of the Committee's recommendations, and I'm here to answer any questions. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other support? Please state your name, your organization and that you support.
- Natasha Minsker
Person
Natasha Minsker, Prosecutors Alliance of California, Smart Justice California, and Voices for Progress, all in strong support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Niccolo De Luca
Person
Niccolo De Luca, here on behalf of the City of Berkeley, in support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
[Unintelligible] for the Greater Sacramento Urban League, in support.
- Tiffany Whiten
Person
Tiffany Whiten, with SEIU California, in support.
- Eric Harris
Person
Eric Harris, with Disability Rights in California, in support.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Glenn Backes, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights in support, and California Public Defenders Association.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights, in support.
- Gregory Fidell
Person
Gregory Fidell with Initiate Justice, strong support.
- Ed Little
Person
Ed Little, Californians for Safety and Justice, in strong support.
- Stephen Munkelt
Person
Stephen Munkelt, California Attorneys for Criminal Justice, in support.
- Jeronimo Aguilar
Person
Jeronimo Cuauhtemoc Aguilar, here, on behalf of Legal Services for Prisoners with Children, in support. Thank you.
- Esteban Nunez
Person
Esteban Nuñez, with the Anti-Recidivism Coalition in strong support. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. If we don't have any other people speaking in support on this bill, we'll go to lead opposition. You have 2 minutes.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair. Corey Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriffs Association, in opposition to the bill. Simply put, we object to the policy of keeping law enforcement from enforcing the law. The low level infractions described by the bill are related to vehicle safety or identification. If they're important enough to be kept on the books, peace officers should not be told they must not enforce them unless there's a separate violation.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Also, traffic stops for violations described by this bill routinely result in enforcement actions for much more serious offenses. In many cases, guns are taken off the street, drugs are seized, and other crimes are uncovered in the process of a traffic stop. This bill will not only impact traffic enforcement, but will make our communities less safe. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Matthew Greco
Person
Madam Chair, thank you. Again, I'm Matthew Greco, on behalf of the California District Attorneys Association, the San Diego Deputy District Attorneys Association, the San Diegans Against Crime. The abilities of peace officers to initiate stops for minor offenses serves a legitimate public safety purpose, and the elimination of this authority will not address the author's concern about the underlying bias of police officers. Why do I say that?
- Matthew Greco
Person
Well, California does in fact have a history of racial disparity in police traffic contacts that proponents of SB 50 point to in support of the need for this bill. Unfortunately, empirical data, if this is a data driven decision, then the data tells us something else. The elimination of traffic contacts for minor infractions does not eliminate racial disparities. For example, the Nashville Police Department had a track record of racial disparities for traffic stops. They embraced SB 50-like policies to address those racial disparities.
- Matthew Greco
Person
Unfortunately, the racial disparities persist to this day. And something else happened in Nashville. Violent crime and vehicle thefts were up after the policy changed. The same thing happened in LA. They instituted this policy last year. What happened? Crime was up, and the racial disparities persisted.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. We'll go to people that would like to oppose this bill. Please state your name, organization, and position.
- Julius McChristian
Person
Julius McChristian with the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department, in opposition. Thank you.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Brian Sherman with the Riverside Sheriff Association in opposition. Also the police officer associations of Claremont, Corona, Pomona, Palos Verdes, Newport Beach, Placer County Deputy Sheriff Association, Upland POA, Santa Ana, Burbank, Murietta, Arcadia, Riverside POA, Culver City POA, Fullerton POA, and Deputy Sheriff Association of Monterey County. All in opposition.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. We will now move on to witnesses waiting to testify via the teleconference. Please just state your name, organization, and position. Moderator if you'd please prompt the individuals waiting to testify in support or opposition of this bill, we'll begin.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And if you wish to testify in support or opposition, please press one then zero at this time. We'll start with line 155, please go ahead.
- Rebecca Gonzales
Person
Good afternoon, Rebecca Gonzales with the National Association of Social Workers, California Chapter, in support of this Bill.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 161, please go ahead.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
[Unintelligible] for Indivisible California StateStrong and Indivisible East Bay in strong support.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 163, please go ahead.
- Matthew Siverling
Person
Madam Chair and Members, Matthew Siverling, on behalf of the Association for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs and the California Peace Office Association, in opposition. Thank you.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 162, please go ahead.
- Leslie Rose
Person
Leslie Rose, on behalf of Indivisible California StateStrong in support.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 160, please go ahead.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
[Unintelligible] from the California Hawaii NAACP, in support.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And line 153, please go ahead.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
This should be the last one.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 153, please go ahead and.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
All right.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Okay. And there is no other questioners in queue at this time.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you to all the witnesses. We'll now bring the discussion back to Members. Members, any comments? Senator Skinner?
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Yes. Serving on the penal code review Committee, the Committee on the Revision of the penal code. We both reviewed lots of data that showed that. Of course, number one, the data we've collected shows there's a disproportionate stops by rate, that the breakdown of stops shows that they are disproportionately people of color, first and foremost, and secondarily, that those stops then also resulted in increased circumstances that led to not great outcomes in terms of the encounters with law enforcement.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
And we also heard lots of testimony around the benefits of lessening these type of stops. So, as was already, we already heard testimony from the Committee staff. This is a priority Bill for or recommended policy by the revision on the Committee on the Revision of the penal code. And so I support it. And with that, I would move the Bill.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. I'd also like to state I co authored this, so I appreciate that. Senator Bradford, would you like to close?
- Steven Bradford
Person
Yes, I want to thank Committee Members. More importantly, the testimony for those folks in support and in opposition, because law enforcement's opposition to this Bill is laughable. One thing that they did say that was true is that the majority of stops are black and brown people, and they say it leads to weapons and drugs being found.
- Steven Bradford
Person
But what they failed to mention is that the majority of folks who are found with guns and drugs in their car are whites, not black and brown people, despite the fact that they clearly stated the majority of the stops are for blacks and brown people that lead to weapon and drug seizures. But they failed to mention that it's not us that have the drug. So I respectfully ask for your iPhone.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Could you call the roll, please?
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 50. The motion is do passed as amended to appropriation. Senator Wahab?
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Wahab, aye. Ochoa Bogh. Ochoa Bogh, no. Bradford, aye. Bradford, aye. Skinner, aye. Skinner, aye. Wiener, aye. Wiener, aye.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Four to one, the Bill is out. I'd also like to specifically lift the call. I think we have all our Members. Call the roll on 349.
- Sarah Loftin
Person
SB 349. Current vote is four to zero. Skinner. Sorry, five. Skinner? Aye.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Bill is out. Five to zero on SB 838?
- Sarah Loftin
Person
Yes. Two passes to appropriations. Current vote, four to zero? Wiener? Wiener, aye.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Five to zero, the Bill is out. Thank you. We will actually move. And Senator Bradford, apologies. We will move to Senator Skinner so she can present her two bills because she has another. It'll be quick.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
I owe him. I owe you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Very else. All right, Senator Skinner, the floor is yours. You are presenting SB 254.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
1St. Thank you. So, is that mic on? Good. Okay. Thank you so much, Madam Chair Members. SB 254. And, of course, I left my talking points here. California used to allow far greater journalists and media, news media access to our prisons. What SB 254 is, is a sunshine measure that restores journalists access to California prisons.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
It would also provide access to our jails because, as we all know, with realignment, many people who previously would have served their terms in state prison now serve their terms in county jails. The Bill also opens access to Members of the Legislature, the governor's office, and other state officials prior to the 1990s. As I mentioned when I opened, we allowed much greater access. Why do we need this if we have nothing to hide?
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Then we would allow such access because it allows for either public officials or journalists to be able to, for example, see conditions in our jails or prisons, see the presence of rehabilitative programs. Perhaps the effectiveness of such programs are what types of health care is offered, including mental health care. And actually, when we look at other states, this would align California with a number of other states who provide much more media and public access, including Florida, Maine, and Rhode Island.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Allow me to have my witnesses and support speak, and then I will in any questions, I can give you specifics if you have questions about that. And I would like to call Michael Bot, who is an investigative journalist for NBC Bay Area and a Member of the journalist from Northern California, and Brittany Barsati, who's General counsel for the California Newspaper Publishers Association.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. 2 minutes only.
- Michael Bott
Person
Sure. Hi. Good afternoon. I'll skip the introduction since Senator Skinner got it. I also do teach a journalism class at San Quentin, so I will add that in. And I'm here to support Senate Bill 254 because of the desperate need to improve transparency and oversight in California's jails and prisons. This is not about sensationalizing or glorifying crime. It's about improving access to governmental institutions.
- Michael Bott
Person
Where California has fallen behind many other states, restoring media access would shine a much needed light into some of the darkest corners of the state, which remain walled off from public scrutiny. Look no further than Santa Clara County, where I work in the sheriff's resignation last fall in the face of a civil corruption trial that was based in part on mismanagement and corruption allegations at the county jail. On a much larger scale, consider the yearslong health care fiasco in our state's prison system.
- Michael Bott
Person
The press's coverage of important stories like these is hamstrung by overly restrictive policies that keep us from speaking with the incarcerated people impacted by these failures. SB 254 would also enable watchdogs to better track the billions of dollars in public money we spend on jails and prisons each year and pull back the curtain for the public to assess the effectiveness of recent criminal justice reform efforts. And it's not just about exposing the bad.
- Michael Bott
Person
Better access means the press can also highlight the positive programs and work being carried out behind prison walls and humanize the people who have turned their lives around during their incarceration. So I urge all of you to support SB 254, because improving transparency and oversight can only lead to safer and more effective institutions. Thank you very much.
- Brittany Barsati
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair, Members of the Committee, as the Senator mentioned, Brittany Barsati with the California News Publishers Association here in strong support of SB 254. I think it's absolutely critical that we restore media access to prisons and jails throughout California. As the Senator mentioned, we haven't had meaningful access since realignment, which was a substantial overhaul of our criminal justice system and current regulations only provide a journalist with the opportunity for three pens, three pencils, and one notepad to conduct interviews.
- Brittany Barsati
Person
And given the evolution of media, it's critical that we be able to include digital storytelling as well. And I will stick around for questions. Respectfully urge your aye vote. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any supporters? Yes. Please state your name, your organization that you support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Natasha Minskar, smart Justice California, in support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. And we're trying to move a little bit faster, everybody.
- James Lindburg
Person
Jim Lindbergh, friends, Committee on Legislation of California, in support.
- Margo George
Person
Margot George, California Public Defenders Association, in support. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Appreciate the hustle. Thank you.
- Eric Harris
Person
Eric Harris, Disability Rights California, in support.
- Esteban Nunez
Person
Esteban Nunez, with the anti recidivism coalition in support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Geronimagilad here on behalf of legal services for prisoners with children, and all of us are none. In strong support. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, on behalf of Grip Training Institute.
- Gregory Fidel
Person
Gregory Fidel with initiate justice. Strong support.
- Mark Powers
Person
Mark Powers, with the California Broadcasters Association. Support along with the Radio and Television Digital News Association, First Amendment Coalition, Media Alliance, National Press Photographers Association, Society of Professional Journalists, and many of the others listed in the Committee analysis. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Hello. Baker center in support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Ed Little
Person
Ed Little, California for safety and justice in support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Jose Kazad, on behalf of ACLU, California action and support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. That was a lot faster. We'll go to opposition now. Lead opposition. 2 minutes, Madam Chairman.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Members Corey Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association in opposition to the Bill. We're concerned that allowing President custodial facilities with limited discretion afforded to those who oversee the facilities could result in certain incarcerated persons being glamorized by the media. This is a concern shared by prior governors who have vetoed similar legislation. The Bill gives no consideration to how media coverage of particular inmates may impact crime victims and their families.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Also, while the Bill acknowledges that institution security and public safety may be the basis for time, place, and manner restrictions on media visits, the efficient operation of the jail is not considered by this Bill. Treatment, rehabilitative, and recreational activities must be contemplated when allowing this level of access, but SB 254 fails to acknowledge the importance of those programs.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Further, allowing government officials to visit county jails, quote, at their pleasure, unquote, ignores any logistical and security considerations that would need to be made in anticipation of such a visit. Respectfully ask for your no vote. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Any other lead opposition witnesses seeing none. Anybody in the chamber seeing none? We'll move now to those waiting to testify via teleconference service. Please just state your name, organization, and position. Moderator if you'd please prompt. Individuals waiting to testify in support or opposition of this Bill will begin.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Thank you. And if you wish to testify in support or opposition, please press one, then zero at this time. We'll go to line 155. Please go ahead.
- Rebecca Gonzales
Person
Rebecca Gonzalez with the National Association of Social Workers, California chapter and support.
- Rebecca Gonzales
Person
Good afternoon.
- Committee Secretary
Person
In line 164. Please go ahead.
- Brandon Epp
Person
Madam Chair Members Brandon Epp. On behalf of the Los Angeles County. Sheriff and opposition.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you to all our witnesses. Go ahead. Do you have another one?
- Committee Secretary
Person
Okay, I apologize. Somebody queued up late. Madam Chair, just one moment and we'll go to line 166. Please go ahead.
- Margie Lee
Person
Margie Lee, on behalf of families against mandatory minimums and strong support.
- Committee Secretary
Person
And Madam Chair, we have no one else in queue at this time.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you, and thank you to all our witnesses. We'll now bring the discussion back to Members. Members, is there any questions, comments or concerns? Seeing none. Senator, would you like to close?
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Thank you. And I wanted to indicate to the opposition, I would be happy to have conversations to see if there. We've not had any suggestion from the sheriffs and we've not heard other opposition. There's other opposition listed on some amendments that might address their concerns. Certainly the intent of this is not to glorify any incarcerated individual, but rather to allow for what good independent journalism can do best, which is provide us information about conditions and whether, if those conditions warrant our action.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Then we have the ability to do so. Given the size of California's incarcerated facilities, the number of prisons we have, the number of county jails, and the number of people held, this type of sunshine is beneficial. And I would close by quoting the Republican Senator in Michigan who authored Michigan's media access law, who said limiting media access only serves to create rumor and suspicion.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
To maintain the full trust of the people, we must protect the ability of the media to investigate all sides and then report it fairly and accurately. And with that, I ask for your. I vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. And do we have a motion?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I will be doing a courtesy motion on behalf of Senator Skinner.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Can we call roll SB 254?
- Committee Secretary
Person
The motion is do pass to appropriations. Senator Wahab?
- Committee Secretary
Person
Wahab aye. Ochoa Bogh. Ochoa Bogh, no. Bradford. Skinner.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Aye.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Aye.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Wiener.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. That vote is on call. Senator Skinner, would you like to move on to SB three seven seven.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Yes. Thank you very much, Madam Chair and Members. So SB 377 corrects some loopholes in our firearm laws. And specifically, it closes a loophole that allows our law enforcement officers to buy what we consider dangerous handguns, so, handguns that are off roster. Secondly, it requires our Department of Justice to develop regulations to ensure that our law enforcement agencies only purchase firearms from businesses who comply with our state and federal firearm laws.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Now, the reason that I've brought this forward is because the federal ATF issued a bulletin to California law enforcement agencies recently warning about a growing trend of law enforcement officers engaging in unlicensed firearm sales. So, in other words, since our laws allow them to purchase these guns that otherwise you and I would not be able to purchase.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
In turn, many of them, not maybe, I don't say many, but there's a growing trend of them then selling those which puts those dangerous or unlawful firearms back in circulation on our streets. This Bill would not impact the portion of California law that enables law enforcement agencies to purchase off roster firearms for official use by officers at work.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
There is a recent report by the Brady United, those formerly Brady United for Gun Prevent Gun Violence that shows that at least 90 California law enforcement agencies have spent over 20 million buying firearms and other weapons from dealers with a history of violating federal firearm laws. And now I would like to introduce my main witness in support, who is Zeenat Yahya from March For our Lives.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. You have 2 minutes. Exact.
- Zeenat Yahya
Person
Thank you, chair and Committee Members, and thank you, Senator Skinner, for bringing this to the forefront. I'm Zeenat. I'm the Director of Policy at March For our Lives, one of the largest youth led gun violence prevention organizations in the country. SB 377 addresses three essential pieces when it comes to strengthening California's landmark firearm protections. The first piece that SB 377 addresses is the current legal loophole where law enforcement can purchase legal firearms for their personal use or resale.
- Zeenat Yahya
Person
We've seen this legal loophole used by law enforcement in the past, including some high profile scandals, such as the one of former San Diego sheriff Captain Marco Gromo. This loophole allows law enforcement to become illegal firearm dealers and straw purchasers. And we know that illegal firearm trafficking and straw purchasing contributes to gun violence, including an increase in gun homicides. Law enforcement cannot buy any other illegal products in the state. There should be no exception regarding firearms.
- Zeenat Yahya
Person
It is also important to note, just like Senator Skinner said, that this Bill would not impact the portion of the California law that enables law enforcement agencies to purchase off roster firearms for official use by officers at work.
- Zeenat Yahya
Person
The second piece that this will address is closing the loophole, which does not require law enforcement officers to wait 10 days like all other Californians, to purchase legal handguns, waiting periods are underutilized and an evidence based strategy for reducing death and injuries, specifically when it also comes to suicide. The final piece SB 377 addresses is the ability of law enforcement agencies to purchase guns from dealers that have a history of violating firearm laws.
- Zeenat Yahya
Person
Just in California, firearm dealers who have violated the law have received millions in taxpayer dollars for the purchase of firearms, and irresponsible gun dealer practices, such as the ones these dealers engage in, contribute to America's gun violence epidemic. Research from Brady has indicated that California law enforcement agencies do not have adequate vetting processes in place for choosing firearm vendors to contract or purchase goods from, and SB 377 would address that. It is for these reasons, March for Our Lives is encouraging the Committee to support SB 377.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other lead witnesses?
- Nancy Skinner
Person
My other lead witness was not able to stay.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
No worries. Thank you. We'll move on to other support witnesses. Please state your name, your organization, and that you support the Bill.
- Gabriel Garcia
Person
Gabriel Garcia, Youth ALIVE and strong support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
All right. Any lead opposition witnesses?
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Maybe worth a try. Madam Chairman, Members Corey Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriffs' Association, respectfully here in opposition to the Bill. The reason the 10 day weight does not apply to individual peace officers is that each of them undergoes rigorous initial and ongoing background checks as a condition of employment. This Bill will create unnecessary administrative burdens for peace officers who acquire firearms, including for use in connection with their employment, despite the bill's language.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Further, the unsafe handgun law has resulted in exceedingly few new firearms being approved for California sale in recent years, despite the fact that the only reason they are deemed unsafe in certain circumstances because they lack certain features the Legislature has seen fit to require. This is not the case that law enforcement officers want to buy off roster handguns because they're small, cheap guns that misfire when you drop them.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Further, the unsafe handgun law has resulted in exceedingly few new firearms being approved for California sale in recent years, despite the fact that the only reason they are deemed unsafe in certain circumstances because they lack certain features the Legislature has seen fit to require. This is not the case that law enforcement officers want to buy off roster handguns because they're small, cheap guns that misfire when you drop them.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
That's the notion of this unsafe handgun list, and I'm not calling that into question. But those guns are on that list, and then also firearms that simply lack a chamber load indicator or other features that, again, have been decided make a gun safe or unsafe may or may not exist. California peace officers should be able to lawfully and efficiently acquire the tools they need without unnecessary interference. If there's a person reselling a firearm illegally, then that's illegal. That's covered. And for consistency's sake, the Bill is unnecessary. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Any other lead? Opposition seeing none. Do we have opposition in the room? If so, state your name, organization, and that you oppose.
- Matthew Easley
Person
That's Matt Easley, representing the California Correctional Peace Officers Association in opposition.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Any other opposition? Seeing none. Thank you. We'll move on to witnesses waiting to testify via the teleconference service. Please just state your name, organization, and position moderator. Please prompt the individuals waiting to testify, and we will begin.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 170, please go ahead.
- Jeff Turner
Person
My name is Jeff Turner. I'm calling from Monterey, California. I strongly oppose this legislation.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And if you wish to testify on this Bill, please press one, then zero at this time. We'll start with line 169, please go ahead.
- Rory Hanley
Person
Name is Rory Hanley from the California Rifle and Pistol Association and Gun Owners of California in strong opposition.
- Committee Moderator
Person
Line 171, please go ahead.
- Committee Moderator
Person
172, please go ahead.
- Mark Rasmussen
Person
Mark Rasmussen, California Rifle and Pistol Association. We strongly oppose this.
- Samira Collier-Watt
Person
My name is Samira Collier Watt. I'm a Member of the California Rifle and Pistol Association, National Rifle Association, Gun Owners of California, and Gun Owners of America, and I strongly oppose SB 377.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Line 168, please go ahead.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Missile Association, the Gun Owners of California and the NRA and I strongly oppose this Bill. Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Line 165, please go ahead. And.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
165, your line is open. Please go ahead.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
My name is Patrick Geary and I recommend--I strongly oppose.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Line 173, please go ahead.
- Dan Scholes
Person
My name is Dan Scholes. I'm a member of California Rifle and Pistol Association, and I strongly oppose 377.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Line 146, please go ahead.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
... I'm the chair of the South Sacramento Chapter of the California Rifle and Pistol Association and NRA member in strong opposition.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Line 167, please go ahead.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
My name is Mike Franco. I'm a licensed small business owner in Irvine. I'm in the firearms industry, a member of the California Rifle and Pistol Association, and I'm in opposition. This bill is unnecessary.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And Madam Chair, I have no one else in queue at this time.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you to our witnesses. We'll now bring the discussion back to Members. Members, do you have any questions, comments? Senator Wiener moves the bill. Senator Skinner, would you like to make closing statements?
- Nancy Skinner
Person
I just wanted to point out that there are 800 handguns available in California that are not considered dangerous or on the roster. Thus, the idea that we are unnecessarily restricting handgun purchase I think is a bit unfair. And this does allow for departments to purchase the off roster guns for lawful use by the department. This is just restricting the personal purchase of the guns that are considered unsafe on the roster. And with that, I ask for your aye vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. We have a motion by Senator Wiener. Can we call a vote?
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 377. The motion is do pass to appropriation. Senator Wahab. Aye. Ochoa Bogh. No. Bradford. Skinner. Aye. Wiener. Aye.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. The vote still on call. Our next presenter is again a little. Senator Bradford dipped out. Senator Ochoa Bogh, would you like to present SB 63? Thank you. The floor is yours.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Good afternoon, Madam Chair and Members in, oh. I apologize, Madam Chair.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
No worries.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So, Madam Chairs and Members, California is experiencing a statewide mental health crisis. Nearly one in six California adults has a mental health need, and one in 20 suffers from serious mental illness that makes it difficult to carry out major life activities. These numbers are even more severe when we look at the state's homeless population, with 78% struggling with mental illness, substance use disorder and or physical disability. Currently, we have growing numbers of incarcerated persons waiting for psychiatric hospital beds, sometimes for months at a time.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
In the past five years, the number of incarcerated persons deemed incompetent to stand trial and order to state hospitals increased by 60%. A few decades ago, fewer than half of state hospital patients came from the criminal justice system. Today, more than 90% do. When people experiencing a mental health crisis land in emergency rooms and jails, it is frequently because they can't get treatment in the community even when they ask for it.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
44 of our 58 counties have mental health courts for adult offenders and 13 counties have homeless courts. These collaborative courts allow individuals with mental illness and those who are homeless to get the resources they need in order to turn their lives around. Numerous review and evaluations have found that mental health courts help ease prison and jail overcrowding while improving the quality of life among those diagnosed with mental illness.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
In fact, in 2017, a study of the Sacramento County Mental Health Ccourt found that roughly 70% of participants who completed their program had a lower rate of rearrest than those graduates, than nongraduates. In addition, they had a 75% lower chance of being hospitalized and a decrease in reoffense rates across genders, racial backgrounds and ages. However, despite these courts being proven as a successful tool for helping our mentally ill population, they are often underfunded and have insufficient programming options for participating defendants.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
This is why I decided to continue working on my bill from last year and reintroduced SB 63. In order to get individuals with mental illness and homeless individuals the care they need and to promote rehabilitation and housing stability, SB 63 creates two grant programs. One grant program to help counties to establish and expand collaborative mental health and homeless courts, and two a grant program for counties to institute a re entry services for jail inmates at risk of becoming homeless upon release.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Joining me in support is Lieutenant Julius McCristian from the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department.
- Julius Mc Christian
Person
Good afternoon.
- Julius Mc Christian
Person
Thank you again for allowing me to address the committee in regarding the Senate Bill 63. Again, my name is Julius McCristian. I'm a lieutenant with the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department. Senate Bill 63 is important to law enforcement agencies throughout California because it establishes a grant program that provides a collaborative effort at combating homelessness among inmates released from custody and addresses crime reduction for those suffering from mental illness in our department's largest correctional facility, it's known as West Valley Detention Centers, located in Ranch Cucamonga.
- Julius Mc Christian
Person
Our population daily population is approximately 2500 inmates. We also have the largest mental health treatment program in the county and that facility. Nearly 15% of that population, suffers from mental health issues. We also track our top 100 frequently arrested individuals. The top three charges for reoffenders include being under the influence of a controlled substance, public intoxication, and trespassing.
- Julius Mc Christian
Person
47 of those 100 individuals do not have an address and are considered homeless. Mental health courts are a type of collaborative court that serves as an alternative to the traditional court system and provides specific services and treatment to defendants suffering from mental illness. The homeless court program process should recognize homeless participants voluntary efforts to improve their lives and move from the streets towards self-sufficiency, including participation in community based treatment or services.
- Julius Mc Christian
Person
As you guys have already heard, today, more than 90% of the state hospital patients come from the criminal justice system. When people in psychiatric crisis land in emergency rooms and jails, most of the time it's because they can't get treatment in the community. Providing community outreach and assistance to homeless individuals with outstanding court cases is a primary focus because these types of cases tend to escalate when homeless defendants fail to appear in court.
- Julius Mc Christian
Person
Many counties have collaborative courts to address the needs of specialized populations of criminal offenders. However, these courts are often underfunded and have insufficient programming options. These programs in courts will also work to ease prison and jail crowding by getting people into treatment instead of placing these individuals in jail, thus reducing the chances of recidivism due to untreated mental illness. With this Committee, support of SB 63 counties throughout California can work to get the homeless and mental ill individuals into treatment instead of being placed in jail.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Julius Mc Christian
Person
Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Any other lead support witnesses? Seeing none. Do we have witnesses in the room in support of this bill? Seeing none, we'll move to lead opposition witnesses, seeing none. We'll move to opposition witnesses in the room, seeing none. Thank you. We'll now move to witnesses waiting to testify via teleconference service. Please just state your name, organization, and position moderator. If you'd please prompt. The individuals waiting to testify in support or opposition of this Bill will begin. Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
And if you wish to speak on this bill, please press one, then zero at this time. We'll go to line 178, please. Go ahead, 178. You're open? Okay.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
All right, then I guess we will end that. Thank you again to all the witnesses. We'll bring the discussion back to Members. Senator Ochoa Bogh, I do appreciate you bringing this bill forward. You have consistently talked about trying to improve mental health and provide more services, so I do appreciate that your bill reflects that. Give us a minute, please.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Texted him. Try and get him back.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Maybe.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I don't think so. He's not. He's not there on his calendar. It. It's.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I'd be happy to share a story of a success in one of these mental health courts here in Sacramento if we have time.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
No worries. I get it. My aye work said to stand up.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I saw you standing up there.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Can we get a motion?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
A motion on Ochoa Bogh.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. We have a motion. Senator Ochoa Bogh, would you like to make a closing comment?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I could have made the closing comments prior to. People often ask, what did you do to sit on public safety? And I remember Senator from San Francisco once mentioned the fact that public safety, nobody wants to be on it, but what a committee where you can make the biggest impact on people's life. And I have to say, this is one of the hardest committees I've ever been on, but one that I've learned so much from.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And it is because of this committee that I learned of the needs that we have in our criminal justice system. And one of the inspirations from me going and researching and trying to ask questions on how do we improve the system that we have right now. And this bill is a product of those conversations and those findings and speaking to those stakeholders are in place. And I wholeheartedly ask for your aye vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Can we.
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 63. The motion is do passed to appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. That vote is on call. We are going to move to Senator Wiener. SB 97. Senator, you have the floor.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Okay. Thank you, Madam Chair. Colleagues, Senate Bill 97, the Righting Wrongful Convictions Act, will streamline and strengthen the process in which those who are wrongly convicted can prove their innocence through habeas corpus. SB 97 aims to eliminate confusion and unnecessary litigation surrounding technical terms and requirements within California's habeas corpus laws to ensure courts are given discretion to scrutinize the integrity of a conviction and grant relief. The bill additionally guarantees that wrongfully convicted individuals are provided the opportunity for continuous counsel in their cases.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
The bill also directs courts to give great weight to a prosecutor's concession that a person has been wrongfully convicted. Currently, courts at times will order that hearings happen even when the District Attorney agrees that the person should be exonerated. This is a waste of taxpayer resources. The bill is an important step in saving time and unnecessary litigation and taxpayer resources and ensuring a fair and just post conviction process.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
We know that our justice system works best when those who are guilty are convicted and those who are innocent are not convicted. When an innocent person is convicted and incarcerated, it undermines everyone's public safety in addition to being a horrible injustice. SB 97 is sponsored by the California Innocence Commission, which consists of four organizations in California that work collectively on legislative efforts aimed at freeing the innocent.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I want to thank the California District Attorneys Association for, once again, we worked with them last year on another innocence project related bill, but I want to thank CDAA for working with us this year. I believe we are closer on the verge of an agreement that I hope will remove the District Attorney's opposition. But I'll let them speak for themselves.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
With me today to testify is Jasmine Harris, the Associate Director of Policy at the California Innocence Project, and Kimberly Long, an exoneree who was wrongfully convicted of murder and spent over seven years in prison for a crime she did not commit. I ask for your aye vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Our first lead witness, please. Two minutes.
- Kimberly Long
Person
Good evening, Public Safety Committee Members and Madam Chair Wahab. My name is Kimberly Long. I spent seven thanksgivings away from my parents, seven christmases away from my children. Seven years of cherished moments, family dinners, my daughter's graduation, my son's first heartbreak, my parents 40th wedding anniversary. Precious moments between a mother and her family that I will never get back.
- Kimberly Long
Person
For seven years and three months, I sat in a prison cell for a crime someone else committed while my family wondered whether they would ever see me home again. This was after six years of enduring two trials, losing jobs because of my wrongful arrest, and being forced to have supervised visitation with my children. On June 10, 2016 the California Innocence Project brought me home. That day, I walked out of the courtroom and into the arms of my family.
- Kimberly Long
Person
My 13 year nightmare should have ended that day. On the day I was exonerated, the prosecutor announced that they would be appealing the decision. That meant I could come home that day, but I could return to prison at any moment if I lost my appeals. For four years while awaiting decisions from the Court of Appeal and then the Supreme Court of California, I tried to rebuild my life and reconnect with my children, who were 5 and 10 years old when all this began, all the while knowing I could return to prison. My daughter graduated high school and college. I barely made it home to see her get married.
- Kimberly Long
Person
I came home just days after my son's graduation from high school. They had already been cheated out of a relationship with their mom. But embarrassingly, I couldn't let myself truly re-acclimate and reconnect for fear that I would hurt them all over again by being taken away. Thankfully, the California Supreme Court felt strongly about my innocence and affirmed the reversal of my conviction in late 2020. I'll end with this.
- Kimberly Long
Person
I share my story today in hopes of emphasizing the need for Senate Bill 97 and bills like it. Perhaps if the good sense measures in Senate Bill 97 were in place while I was fighting to get out, I could have made it home for that high school graduation, that 40th anniversary, or that first heartbreak. I urge you to vote yes on Senate Bill 97 so other innocent people can come home in time for the precious moments I missed. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Next witness. Two minutes.
- Jasmine Harris
Person
Good afternoon. Jasmine Harris with the California Innocence Project, part of the California Innocence Coalition. I had some testimony prepared, but I think Senator Wiener covered all of the aims of the bill, and I think Kim did an eloquent job of speaking about the need for this bill. So I will just be around for any technical legal questions you might have. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any other individuals in support of this bill? Please state your name, organization and that you support it. You know, obviously we're moving fast, so thank you.
- Margo George
Person
Margo George, on behalf of California Public Defenders Association, in support. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Gregory Fidell
Person
Gregory Fidell with Initiate Justice strong support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Melissa O'Connell
Person
Melissa O'Connell from the Northern California Innocence Project on behalf of the LA Innocence Project, the California Innocence Project, the Loyola Project for the Innocent, as well as Smart Justice and the Prosecutors' Alliance in support. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Ed Little
Person
Ed Little on behalf of Californians for Safety and Justice in support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Glenn Backes, Ella Baker Center in support.
- Stephen Munkelt
Person
Stephen Munkelt, California Attorneys for Criminal Justice in support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any opposition witnesses that are lead? Seeing none, we're going to move to opposition witnesses here in this room. Seeing none, we're going to move to those waiting for teleconference. Please state your name, whether or not you support. Moderator, please have the first person prompted. Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And if you wish to speak on this, please press 1, then 0 at this time. And, Madam Chair, we have no one in queue at this time.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Great. Thank you to all our witnesses. We'll now bring this discussion back to Members. Members, do we have any questions or concerns? Seeing none. Senator Wiener, would you like to close?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. Courtesy. Thank you. Can we call a vote?
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 97. The motion is do pass to appropriations. Senator Wahab? Aye. Ochoa Bogh? Aye. Bradford? Skinner? Wiener? Aye.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. That vote will be on call. Senator Wiener, again, the floor is yours for SB 513.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Thank you. Madam Chair, colleagues, SB 513 is the reducing recidivism through Therapy act. It'll ensure that mental health therapy is accessible to all incarcerated individuals regardless of their security. Level, sentence length, or mental health classification. SB 513 will redefine mental health therapy as 50 minutes sessions twice a month with a psychiatrist, psychologist, social worker or therapist. Additionally, SB 513 requires that incarcerated people are provided a confidential mental health appointment within two weeks of requesting care.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Current law stipulates that for an incarcerated individual to receive mental health therapy, they must be assigned to one of four classifications. Under CDCR's mental health service delivery system, those who are not classified do not have access to any mental health care at all. Requiring incarcerated individuals to be classified prior to seeking a mental health therapist poses various problems.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Many incarcerated people who would benefit from therapy will deny having mental health issues in order to avoid a classification, given the stigma surrounding mental health issues in prison and the potential revocation of access to other opportunities such as family visitation. In addition, classification information is often shared with the board of parole who might take someone's classification status as a signal that the person should not be released. This Bill will eliminate this barrier to accessing mental health services.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
SB 513 also serves as a powerful pathway for reducing California's recidivism rate by making mental health treatment more accessible for people in prison so that they can work towards their rehabilitation. Research shows that programs and services provided within prisons can reduce recidivism by helping change incarcerated people's individuals behavior. SB 513 will contribute to the incarcerated individuals rehab and in turn help reduce every citivism rate.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Everyone incarcerated in our state prison system should have access to this vital form of health care and rehabilitation, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote with me today testify are two Bill sponsors, Esteban Nunez, chief strategist at the Anti Recidivism Coalition, and Karen Vicari, the interim public policy Director at Mental Health of America California.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. You have two minutes.
- Karen Vicari
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon. Chair and Committee Members Karen Vicari, on behalf of Mental Health America of California and the California Youth Empowerment Network, proud co sponsors of the Bill, the World Health Organization has named mental health as a basic human right for all people. Mental health conditions are prevalent across our entire population. One in five adults will experience a mental health condition in a year. A person's mental health is scientifically demonstrated to impact their overall health.
- Karen Vicari
Person
For example, an untreated mental health condition like depression, which frequently goes undiagnosed, has been shown to increase the risk of physical health conditions like diabetes, heart disease and stroke. Depression is also linked with weakened immune systems, physical pain and substance use issues. The longer a person goes without mental health services, the greater the likelihood of these co occurring illnesses.
- Karen Vicari
Person
Another common mental health condition, posttraumatic stress disorder, which also often goes undiagnosed and is common both inside and outside of prisons, is demonstrated to increase substance use disorder, depression, and anger issues like depression. PTSD has also been shown to increase health care costs. It's well known that Americans living with a mental health condition die, on average 25 years sooner than those without mental health challenges, and this is because of those co occurring disorders.
- Karen Vicari
Person
In addition to reducing the risk of physical health conditions, mental health care has shown to improve numerous aspects of General functioning, including coping with stress, improving relationships, controlling anger, improving problem solving, and improving well being. Cognitive behavioral therapy has been shown to reduce violence and other criminal behavior across populations and across settings. According to the Washington State Institute for Public Policy, every dollar spent on delivering CBT to adults in the criminal justice system results in a savings of $6.31 in health care and criminal justice costs.
- Karen Vicari
Person
Timely access to mental health care is essential for all people, including those who are incarcerated. Access to care for people in prison will improve their health, their mental health, their daily functioning, and their likelihood of success upon release. For these reasons, we urge your support today for SB 513. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Next witness. Two minutes.
- Esteban Nunez
Person
Madam Chair and Members of the Committee, my name is Espan Nunez and I'm with the Antirecitivism Coalition. This Bill is both rooted in personal experience and the recommendations of those currently incarcerated experiencing flares of hardship when I entered the prison system at 21 years old, I was hit with reality and a different set of rules. I had to face the consequences of my actions, including the harm that I caused to my community and the underlying traumas that contributed to my destructive path.
- Esteban Nunez
Person
Culturally shocked and emotionally humbled, I became depressed. Ultimately, I was classified as CCCMS, a classification under CDCR, which was the only way I was able to gain access to mental health resources such as therapy. When I began to process my traumas in therapy, it became abundantly clear that my childhood traumas intrinsically influenced my negative behaviors. These initial therapy sessions were the first time that I began processing being molested at six years old.
- Esteban Nunez
Person
Working through that trauma helped me understand why I went to such extremes to defend myself and those I love. I felt that by doing so, it would make up for my inability to protect myself as a six year old boy. It does not justify my actions in any way, shape, or form, but it did help inform my journey towards rehabilitation. I also began speaking to those around me and realized such a high percentage of people incarcerated had similar childhood experiences that they had normalized them.
- Esteban Nunez
Person
This Bill seeks to provide necessary therapeutic care to those who do not have a mental health classification but nevertheless need support navigating hardships and traumas like many of us do. Mental health care is incredibly stigmatized in prisons, not only by the incarcerated population but also by the staff. This undoubtedly leads people to avoiding care to avoid the stigmatism.
- Esteban Nunez
Person
ARC's incarcerated rehabilitative program participants have expressed a need for support while also expressing a fear of classifying under CDCR's mental health classifications because of the associated stigmas and denial rates the board of parole gives to those who are classified. Under this Bill people who are currently serving life sentences would be able to seek out care without the fear of it negatively affecting their chances of freedom. Therapy should be afforded to those incarcerated because everybody can use professional guidance on navigating and processing traumas.
- Esteban Nunez
Person
Evidence proves that incarceration exacerbates underlying traumas, and studies have shown that people experience a body of trauma while incarcerated. Some of us don't classify as having a mental health diagnosis, but still want and need help. And if we afford these opportunities to incarcerated people, we are creating a pathway for them to develop healthy coping mechanisms. Consequently, they will know how to do so when they experience hardships upon reentry, if they know how to cope accordingly, as opposed to reverting or regressing back to old ways. I respectfully ask for your support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. For anybody that would like to support this Bill, please state your name, your organization and that you support it. Let's also move quickly.
- Margo George
Person
Marco George on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association in support, thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Glenn Backes
Person
Glen Backes, Baker center in support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Edward Little
Person
Ed Little on behalf of California for Safety and Justice in support.
- Gregory Fidell
Person
Gregory Fidell, on behalf of Initiate Justice, Smart justice and the Prosecutors alliance. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Michael Mendoza
Person
Michael Mendoza, on behalf of the Anti Recidivism Coalition as well as National Association of Social Workers, San Francisco Public Defenders Association, and Disability Rights of. California support.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel, for Transformative Imprison Work Group and the Grip Training Institute.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jeronimo Aguilar
Person
Jeronimo Aguilar here on behalf of Legal Services for Prisoners with Children and all of us are none in support. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. And do we have any lead opposition witnesses? Seeing none. We're asking for this room if anybody would like to speak in opposition seeing none, we'll now move on to witnesses waiting to testify via the teleconference. Please just state your name, organization and position moderator. Please prompt the individuals waiting to testify in support of opposition of his Bill.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair and Members. I'm a mukaddam on behalf of Public Health Advocates in support.
- Committee Moderator
Person
If you wish to speak on this Bill, please press one, then zero at this time, and we'll go to line 149, please. Go ahead.
- Committee Moderator
Person
And Madam Chair, we have no one else in the queue at this time.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. And thank you to all our witnesses. We will now bring the percussion back to Members. Members, would you guys like to comment?
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Just want to thank the author and that I'm very grateful for the behavioral health, as we've had that in common, is a common theme and a concern across the state. Just two questions that it'd be great to address, and that has to do with the funding for the health care, the mental health services to be provided, especially with the CDCR, since we just voted on means by which they limit the profits, which I think was a very good Bill, the funding for it.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And number two, we understand that there's a huge health care provider shortage. So within this Bill, would there be any penalties for the inability to have the required staff to basically provide these services in our system?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
In terms of mental health workforce, we know we have a broad problem inside prison, outside prison, schools, everywhere. We need to ramp up our training for our mental health workforce and to shore up the workforce they have so they don't burn out. We made a big investment, mental health workforce last year. We have to really just keep that momentum going. So I don't want to pretend like there's no issue.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
There is an issue, but this is no different than in other settings where we just need more people. We're not going to come here and say this is going to just fix everything overnight, but this is moving us in the right direction in terms of funding. We also know we're going to have to work with the Administration, work with CDCR, with the Appropriations Committee. We know it's a tough budget year.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
But this is really important as we have been working to sort of right size our prison system. And we also want to make sure that the people who are going to be coming out or may be coming out one day that they are able to reintegrate. And if we don't give them the support they need, that makes it harder, which means recidivism goes up and it's even more expensive. So we know there are some challenges, but we really wanted to call the question on this important issue and have this discussion.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Absolutely. I completely agree with you. I just wanted to make sure that we had it on record that our systems are not going to be penalized or in some way or shape or form because we don't have the workforce. And as long as we're seeing the intent of being able to allocate the funding and the effort of bringing on board the mental health, that there won't be negative consequence to the fact that as of right now, we perhaps don't have the capacity to meet.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Obviously it's incumbent on us to make sure that CDCR to work with them, to make sure that they are able to do this. There's no doubt about that. And of course, departments need to follow the law, but we understand there are some challenges and we're going to have to work in the budget and we have a budget request in to fund this Bill. So we're working in a parallel track.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And the budget is one thing, but I'm just wondering that it's the workforce that I'm concerned about. Because even if we allocate the funding, we just have to make sure that we have mechanisms where we protect, that we don't penalize because we don't have the workforce. The workforce is the only concern that I have at this point because I know we're going to work towards the funding part of it, but it's the workforce that I'm concerned.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
And I also just want to mention that there are other creative ways of delivering this. Through telehealth, for example, folks incarcerated have access to different kinds of technology, so we wouldn't even need to necessarily have all the staff physically in the prison. Some of it could be done remotely, which can be more efficient and can help them. So there are creative ways to do it.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
Even though we do have a mental health workforce shortage, the severity is not so extreme that no one can hire anyone, but it is more challenging than it was a few years ago. And I know we've had this debate in other contexts and the data that I've seen shows that we do have a challenge. If we don't turn it around within like five to 10 years, it's going to get much worse, but we still have time to turn it around.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
I just wanted to say that for the record, we are concerned about the individuals and I will be happy to move the Bill.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you, Senator. I do just want to appreciate you focusing on mental health and specifically when we talk about improving the situation. This is definitely a step forward, especially when we're talking about healing and moving forward. I do have a concern more specifically on just implementation. And this is just for future reference, anybody who's willing to work on this. We visited a prison roughly about a month and a half ago or so. And I did ask about mental health and other treatment services.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
And one of the concerns from a lot of the individuals that were inmates there was that if it is known that an inmate is going to seek mental health or any type of therapy, the individuals that are the other inmates tend to retaliate because they were sharing information and just making sure that information is very private and specifically patient confidentiality there. But maybe we need to go a little bit further on that. So just a thought to share based on that feedback. But other than that, I really do appreciate this Bill. Do you have any closing comments?
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
I appreciate the dialogue, and I respectfully ask for an Aye vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. The motion has been made by Senator Ochoa Bogh. Can we call a roll call?
- Sarah Loftin
Person
SB 513? The motion is do pass to appropriations. [Roll Call]
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. This particular Bill will be on call. We have one Bill left. And a couple on call.
- María Elena Durazo
Legislator
Yeah, I texted Skinner again.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Do we have any on call for Senator Wiener?
- Sarah Loftin
Person
Yeah, just one.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
I have 254.
- Sarah Loftin
Person
You can lift the call.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
You ready, Senator?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Mirror?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yeah.
- Committee Secretary
Person
All right, SB 254, current vote is two to one. [Roll Call]
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
It's going to stay on call.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Someone go grab.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
What?
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
We have Senator Wiener presenting on behalf of Senator Bradford, SB 441. Senator Wiener, the floor is yours.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Did you take it.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
On behalf of Senator Bradford, 441 will require prosecutors in felony cases to disclose specified information to the defendant or their attorney within 72 hours of a preliminary hearing. This will include critical information such as statements made by the defendant, witnesses and physical evidence already collected by the prosecution or law enforcement.
- Scott Wiener
Legislator
By promoting the full disclosure of this key information by prosecutors and law enforcement, SB 441 ensures our criminal justice process is more efficient and effective by giving the accused access to this information early in the legal process, eliminating long and costly legal motions over the disclosure of evidence, and reducing the risk of wrongful arrests and convictions. I respectfully ask for your ayevote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do you have any lead witnesses? Thank you. You only have two minutes. Sorry.
- Stephen Munkelt
Person
Stephen Munkelt, Executive Director of California Attorneys for Criminal Justice, the Statewide Association of Criminal Lawyers. This bill will restore the right to discovery prior to preliminary hearing, which was eliminated by the Teflon crime Proposition 115 in 1990. That ballot measure took away basic rights from the defense, including the right of receiving critical information early in the legal process. Since then, the process has been very difficult to get early and fair resolutions because the parties have unequal access to information.
- Stephen Munkelt
Person
SB 441 will make the prosecution of felony charges both more fair and more efficient. Before 1990, Penal Code Section 859 required the prosecution to make arrest and crime reports available for the defense upon the first appearance of counsel or within two days thereafter. This was in plenty of time to prepare for preliminary examination where that was going to take place. The discovery provisions were eliminated by Prop 115, which also limited the court's power to order discovery.
- Stephen Munkelt
Person
Today, only exculpatory evidence must be disclosed before the preliminary as required by the Constitution. Under Brady versus Maryland, there are at least two significant benefits to requiring discovery to the accused before the preliminary hearing. First, when the prosecution and defense have equal access to the facts of the case from the beginning, it promotes fair settlement before the prelim, saving court time and law enforcement resources.
- Stephen Munkelt
Person
Secondly, if the case does not settle at that stage and goes to prelim, defense counsel has the information needed to meet the constitutional standards of due process, fair hearing and zealous representation, including full cross examination of witnesses based on knowledge of all the facts. This may result in unfounded charges being dismissed at the prelim or may make the case weaker than the prosecution believed it to be or stronger than the defense believed it to be.
- Stephen Munkelt
Person
I can say from personal experience that many clients say "I didn't do it, I didn't do it, I'm not pleading," and then we went to a preliminary hearing, and hearing the evidence changed their posture on the case. In practice today, most prosecutors provide basic reports to the defense before prelim. But since it isn't required, some do not, and some actually play games, withholding certain reports or information from the defense to gain an unfair advantage. That's just plain wrong.
- Stephen Munkelt
Person
But today, there is no remedy for these games. SB 441 is simple and fair. Both sides should have all the facts before going to a critical evidentiary hearing.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Ignacio Hernandez
Person
Good afternoon. Ignacio Hernandez, on behalf of the Exonerated Nation, which is a national nonprofit working with the wrongfully convicted. I'm a board member. I'm speaking in that capacity as one of the witnesses. Let me just say very briefly, the core principle of this bill is that at the first hearing that the judge can take a look at evidence.
- Ignacio Hernandez
Person
We want to make sure that the DAs turn over evidence that they already have in their possession that will help the defense and the judge determine whether or not the charges are accurate. Are they being overly charged or is it the wrong person? Currently, the process is that information won't be given till later on. Somebody's in custody for a long time, or the charges are hanging over their heads for a long time.
- Ignacio Hernandez
Person
A lot of resources, a lot of time is going in simply because the information has not been turned over. The prelim is the one opportunity, the first opportunity, I should say, for the judge and the defense to see the information, view it and understand what is right. The bill simply says if it's in the possession of the DA or in possession of law enforcement, turn it over early and let's get these cases resolved early, or at least get it right from the very beginning.
- Ignacio Hernandez
Person
Make sure we don't get the wrong person. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. If we have any other people that are speaking in support, please state your name, your organization and that you support, and we're going to move quickly.
- Gregory Fidel
Person
Gregory Fidel with Initiate Justice, strong support.
- Edward Little
Person
Ed Little, California for Safety and Justice in support.
- Margo George
Person
Marco George, California Public Defender's Association in strong support.
- Geronimo Aguilar
Person
Geronimo Aguilar, legal services for prisoners or children. All of us or none, in support. Thank you.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any opposition lead witnesses, seeing none. Do we have any opposition witnesses in the room, seeing none. Thank you. We'll move on to witnesses waiting to testify via teleconference. Please just state your name, organization and position. Moderator. If you'd please prompt the individual waiting to testify, we will begin.
- Committee Secretary
Person
And if you wish to speak on this issue, please press one, then zero at this time. Madam Chair, we have no one queuing up at this time.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you, and thank you to our witnesses. We'll bring the discussion back to Members. Members, do you guys have any comments, questions, concerns? Seeing none. Senator Ochoa Bogh.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So in principle, I have no problem with this bill. I think if I were arrested, I would want all this evidence to be readily available. The concern I have with this bill is the expectation of the time frame in which is it expected, because I understand that our system, especially our criminal justice system, is incredibly inundated. Our judicial system is incredible. Everything is inundated with work.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And so the reality of when this information, and I'm thinking of myself as someone who'd be on the victim side, but also on the realistic side of implementing this bill, of requiring. So how did you folks come up with the three days and what the ideal time would be, depending on where the court is and what district they're working on? Because I think that also varies as to the capacity of being able to fulfill the need for this bill.
- Ignacio Hernandez
Person
If I can give it a quick hack. Yeah, I'll give it a quick hack. Thank you. Ignacio Hernandez. Again, so two things. When there's a preliminary hearing, it can be as quickly as within 10 days, or if that time is waived, it could take a lot longer before that hearing is actually scheduled. So we simply took the 72 hours because we knew that it was a kind of short timeline for some cases, get the preliminary hearing within those 10 days.
- Ignacio Hernandez
Person
So we figured, okay, let's do it, 72 hours to give time to be prepared. And again, the critical thing is police have already arrested, the DAs have already decided and looked at evidence to decide which charges to file. And so all we're saying is give us that information that you relied upon to make that decision. They already have it. Now, there may be some information, I know I've had these discussions with a number of folks that maybe is hard to comply with.
- Ignacio Hernandez
Person
That is something we're willing to look at and discuss. But if it's something that is relied upon to file the charges is going to be used at the preliminary hearing, so it's going to be presented at the hearing, then give it to us before then. There shouldn't be an issue with providing it if it's going to be used at the court hearing itself. So that's kind of how we structured it.
- Ignacio Hernandez
Person
But the 72 hours were just when we looked at the 10 day time frame, we figured that would make sense. And if it's beyond that, beyond the 10 days, we give a little bit more flexibility.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
And the language is in the bill that allows for accommodating the impact of the be able to provide this information. Are you folks having those conversations?
- Ignacio Hernandez
Person
Yes. So two things. It says it's already in the possession of the DA, so they don't have to go out and find the information must already be in their possession or already in the possession of law enforcement. So it isn't something they have to go investigate and then bring to the defense. So it's already there. And then the majority of the items that we require, it's information about a witness who was going to be presented at the preliminary hearing.
- Ignacio Hernandez
Person
So the DA is already going to say, hey, Mr. Jones is going to testify. We say, okay, fine, give us the statements that Mr. Jones has made or the background about Mr. Jones, whatever it is. So that's how we kind of did a nexus there to try to make it as narrow as possible. But I've had discussions with consultant and other folks to see if there's an issue in getting that information that maybe we can work on that, and we're happy to.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
Perfect.
- Ignacio Hernandez
Person
Thank you.
- Rosilicie Ochoa Bogh
Legislator
So with that, I'll be happy to move the bill, and I will be supporting the Bill today pending the conversations and the accommodations with the District Attorney's office.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. Senator Bradford, would you like to make any closing?
- Steven Bradford
Person
Thank you. As stated, this is just a straightforward measure of assuring transparency, sunshine, making sure that you have the right individual. So the evidence that has been acquired by law enforcement to lead to an arrest, a possible conviction and charge or charge and conviction, that's all we're saying. Share that with the individual who is being charged for the crime. So it's a straightforward measure, and I simply ask for your aye vote.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
Thank you. We have Senator Ochoa Bogh who has moved the bill. Can we call roll call vote?
- Committee Secretary
Person
441. The motion is, do you pass to appropriations? [Roll Call]
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
All right, thank you. It's left on call. Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
We have some Bradford ones you want to go through.
- Aisha Wahab
Legislator
We're going to lift some of the votes that are on call for Senator Bradford.
- Committee Secretary
Person
All right, let's see. Senator Bradford. We have. SB 63 is currently three to zero. Bradford?
- Steven Bradford
Person
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Bradford, aye. This is the Ochoa Bogh one, SB 63.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Skinner, aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
5-0. The Bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 97, current vote is three to one. Bradford?
- Steven Bradford
Person
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Bradford, aye. Skinner.
- Committee Secretary
Person
It's a Wiener Bill.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Skinner, aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Five to zero. The Bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 377, current vote is three to one. Bradford? That's a Skinner Bill.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Four to one. Four to one. The Bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 254, Skinner. Current vote is three to one. Bradford?
- Steven Bradford
Person
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Bradford, aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Four to one. The Bill is out.
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 441, Bradford. Current vote is four to zero. Skinner?
- Committee Secretary
Person
Skinner, aye.
- Nancy Skinner
Person
Aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Five to zero. The Bill is out. Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
SB 513. Wiener. Current vote is three to zero. Bradford? Bradford, aye. Skinner? Skinner, aye.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Five to zero. The Bill is out. That should be it. Thank you, everybody. The meeting is adjourned.