Assembly Standing Committee on Public Safety
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Good morning. We will call this meeting to order as a Subcommitee. We do not have a quorum just yet, but we will begin with today's business. First, a couple housekeeping items. We have two bills pulled by the authors this morning. AB 1873 Sanchez and AB 2790 Pacheco. We won't do the consent, so we wait for that. Yes. All right, we'll begin again as a Subcommitee, but we'll have a busy agenda today, so we'll start with our authors and our presentations. The first on the list is assemblymember Low, followed by Gabriel and Davies.
- Evan Low
Person
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and colleagues, for allowing me to present Assembly Bill 2814 with respect to package theft. The likelihood is that many of you have had your packages stolen from your doorstep and or had friends and neighbors also had packages stolen from your curtilage of your homes as well too. This bill helps to ensure that prosecutors can help enforce while making sure that we are protecting our communities and not over correcting as well too.
- Evan Low
Person
I know that this is an issue that we've heard from many constituents in our communities, and I hope that you'll support this bill today. With me is Mr. Rubin with the County of Santa Clara District Attorney's Office. Respectfully asked for your aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
You have five minutes. Please begin.
- Jeff Rubin
Person
So there are about 119 million packages stolen a year. I've also seen estimates of over 200 million. It's probably one of the two most underreported crimes next to unlawful attempts to use people's credit cards. How many people here just sitting down have had packages stolen from their porch or from their house? I see at least one. I see at least one individual who has.
- Jeff Rubin
Person
If that's just an accurate percentage of the group here, that's very unusual because about three out of every four Americans have been victims of package theft. And, although we call it package theft, it's often called porch piracy. It's often called a version of burglary. And it's not like most other thefts in three different ways. First, this bill would punish entry onto the curtilage with the intent to commit theft. An entry onto the curtilage invokes much greater feelings of a violation of personal security in much the same way that a burglary invokes outrage and continuing feelings of a breach of personal security.
- Jeff Rubin
Person
It's also much more likely to result in violence, not just violence perpetrated against the person coming on to the home, because when you have someone doing that, it becomes much more likely that the homeowner seeing this person breach their privacy come on to an area that the US Supreme Court has recognized for many, many years as an area of special protection. They go out and they will take the law into their own hands. They will go out and they will fight for their packages.
- Jeff Rubin
Person
You just have to go on YouTube and look at the videos to see how many people will end up doing that. People who see this, especially people who've been repeatedly victimized, it's very frustrating. And that frustration is shown when they see someone coming up to their home and they take action. And then thirdly, because this offense is so common and really the consequences are so de minimis, it encourages both lawlessness and an even greater failure to report.
- Jeff Rubin
Person
The less the enforcement, the less the consequences, the less the likelihood the crime is reported. The less the crime is reported, the more the crimes increase. Moreover, in every way, in every way, this crime disproportionately impacts impoverished neighborhoods, often communities of color. Because unlike in well off neighborhoods where they can potentially have gated communities, where people can afford private security forces, where they can spend money to take other measures to deter this type of crime, impoverished communities don't have that luxury.
- Jeff Rubin
Person
The folks who want to take advantage of the lower costs that they can obtain by using online shopping, they have to arrange for packages, if they want to be sure that those packages get to them, they have to arrange for other measures. They have to go to, like, another store where they probably can pick it up. But that adds costs. That adds cost.
- Jeff Rubin
Person
Even if it's just the cost of having to take public transportation, even if it's just the cost of having to pay for gas to drive to this other location. And that's very disruptive of their lives as well. Plus, package thefts raise the costs for everyone. You know, being able to have packages delivered to your home, whether that's medicine for folks who can't leave the house or other critical products, that's a huge benefit to be able to have it come to your home.
- Jeff Rubin
Person
And when it's taken, who eats the cost of the theft? Sometimes it's the person who is waiting there for the package. But often it is the seller. And the seller will often reimburse the person who has lost the package. But these are not just big corporations. These are hundreds of thousands of small companies that have to eat the costs every time a package is stolen.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Anybody else in support, please come up and state your name, organization, and position only.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members. Cory Salzillo on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association in support of the bill.
- Jolena Voorhis
Person
Mr. Chair and Members, Jolena Voorhis on behalf of the League of California Cities in support.
- Sarah Pollo Moo
Person
Good morning. Sarah Pollo Moo with California Retailers Association in support.
- Megan Holtman
Person
Good morning. Meg Holtman with the California District Attorneys Association in support.
- Stephanie Estrada
Person
Good morning. Stephanie Estrada on behalf of the City of San Jose in support. Thank you.
- Natalie Boust
Person
Hi. Natalie Boust on behalf of the California Business Roundtable in support.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Seeing no more support, do we have opposition? Please come forward. Please begin. You have five minutes to split amongst yourselves.
- Matt Sotorosen
Person
Okay. Good morning. My name is Matt Sotorosen. I'm here on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association. I've been a public defender for 25 years in California. We respectfully oppose the creation of this new crime for several reasons. First, this is an end run around the intent of the voters. California does not need to imprison more people for nonviolent property crimes. It's been demonstrated that we cannot incarcerate our way out of what has been perceived as a concern in our neighborhoods.
- Matt Sotorosen
Person
Proposition 47, the Safe Neighborhoods and Schools Act, was passed a decade ago overwhelmingly by the voters, with 60% of the vote. AB 2814 would undo the healing of scars of mass incarceration. For example, this bill would make stealing of some groceries off of a porch felony. And they need not remind the Members of this Committee that having a felony conviction can have several adverse impacts on a person.
- Matt Sotorosen
Person
Their ability to get a job, to get student loans, to ability to vote, take away their Second Amendment rights. They could lose a professional license or permit. Not to mention the savings from not subjecting Californians to prison or lengthy jail sentences for nonviolent theft offenses allows California to refocus millions of precious tax dollars on much needed services for our communities. Also, other states have tried this with limited success.
- Matt Sotorosen
Person
For example, Texas was one of the first states to pass a similar law in 2019, and this has been the Texas experience. There have been over 100 persons charged in Texas with felonies under this law, and none of them have been reported to be part of an organized crime ring. Many people charged were homeless, said they were looking for money for food.
- Matt Sotorosen
Person
When citizens were asked about this law, they said comments like a lot of the resources that go into finding someone who's stolen a package could be reallocated to better use somewhere else. Finally, making this a nonviolent property crime a felony is not good policy, and making it a wobbler, as it's written, does not mitigate against its harm.
- Matt Sotorosen
Person
My experience of 25 years of appearing with people accused of felonies in California State is that wobblers are often charged as felonies, and a person who's accused of a felony is less likely to get out of jail. And when a person's in custody, the data shows, even for two or more days, they can lose their housing, their employment, their pets, their cars can be towed in their absence.
- Matt Sotorosen
Person
There's an immense amount of pressure placed on someone who's incarcerated and accused of a felony to plead guilty to a crime, even if they're innocent of that crime. And under our current speedy trial rights in California, it can take up to three months to exercise your right to a jury trial. We simply do not need to create another felony for nonviolent property offense in California. We respectfully ask for a no vote on AB 2814. Thank you.
- Mica Doctoroff
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members. My name is Mica Doctoroff. I'm a Senior Staff Attorney at the ACLU of Northern California, here today on behalf of ACLU California Action. While we understand and appreciate the goal of preventing and addressing package theft, this bill will not accomplish that goal. First, we do not believe this bill is necessary. Under existing law, a person can already be prosecuted for entering the curtilage of a home with the intent to commit a theft.
- Mica Doctoroff
Person
Depending on the circumstances, a person could be convicted of trespassing, attempted grand theft, attempted petty theft, or attempted receiving stolen property. Given the availability of existing laws, we do not believe a separate crime is necessary. Second, we are concerned that AB 2814 could be used as a tool to discriminate against houseless people, people with mental illness, and people of color.
- Mica Doctoroff
Person
In particular, we fear that the bill could be used as a pretext for arresting people against whom law enforcement or property owners are explicitly or implicitly biased. It is not difficult to imagine a situation in which homeowners in a predominantly white and wealthy community notice, either through their own observations or their neighbors' posts on a site like Nextdoor, that a small group of black teenagers is walking from house to house and pausing on the porch of each home before moving to the next.
- Mica Doctoroff
Person
The homeowners become suspicious and call the police, who then arrest the teenagers. As it turns out, the teenagers were leaving flyers for a local fundraiser and not intending to steal packages. Likewise, a situation could arise in which police officers arrest and detain a houseless person sitting on the front steps of a home simply because the officers notice a package on the front stoop.
- Mica Doctoroff
Person
Needless to say, had the group of teenagers been white or the houseless person been a businessman dressed in a suit and tie, their presence near the homes would not have garnered the same reaction. While these issues of discrimination and bias already occur today, we fear that the creation of this new crime will only exacerbate these problems. For this reason, we're in respectful opposition. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Thank you. Please line up for further opposition. Before we do that, can we please call the roll? We have a quorum.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay, do have a quorum. So please, state your name, organization, and position only.
- Natasha Minsker
Person
Natasha Minsker, Smart Justice California, strongly opposed.
- Barbara Chavez
Person
Barbara Chavez on behalf of the Ella Baker Center, oppose.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, San Francisco Public Defender's Office, strongly oppose.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alissa Moore, All of Us or None, in strong opposition.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox, LSPC, strong opposition.
- Taina Vargas
Person
Taina Vargas, Initiate Justice Action, in opposition.
- Roxana Gonzalez
Person
Roxana Gonzalez, Initiate Justice Action, strongly opposed.
- Edward Little
Person
Ed Little, Californians for Safety and Justice, in opposition.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Good morning. Carmen-Nicole Cox, ACLU California Action. Ahmaud Arbery and Trayvon Martin are not here today because someone thought they had the intent to do something. Thank you.
- Tiffany Whiten
Person
Tiffany Whiten with SEIU California in opposition. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay, no others? Thank you. Questions or comments from Committee Members? Mr. Lackey.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah, I think that this is long in coming. Very thankful because of this porch pirate situation has become a very serious problem. And I would like to be considered to be a co-author if that's permissible because I think that this is... The public well deserves this approach. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Mr. Zbur.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
So I just want to thank the author of this bill. I do think that this is an issue that needs to be addressed. I am concerned about the bill. I think not having sort of sufficient guardrails around it. I think the penalties are that can be imposed for fairly minor things are too harsh. And so I just wanted to, for me at this point, I think this needs a lot more work to refine it. And because of that, I'm going to stay off the bill today. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Mr. Alanis.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
For the opposition, you mentioned that there's already a crime on the books already where they can be charged with if they enter the home or the curtilage. Could you elaborate on that more?
- Mica Doctoroff
Person
Yes, of course. Under existing law, there are already several crimes that a person could be charged with. Depending on the circumstances, a person could be charged with trespassing, attempted grand theft if they are actually trying to steal a package, attempted petty theft, again, depending on the value of the property, or attempted receiving stolen property.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay. I just haven't seen that charge before. I don't know. It's an area available to the public unless they have "No Trespassing" signs out already. Would you like to comment on that, sir?
- Jeff Rubin
Person
Yes. There are many different variations on trespass, but none of the variations on trespass allow for someone to be punished, either as a misdemeanor or a felon, just because they enter onto the property with the intent to commit package theft or theft. That is incorrect when they say that trespass can cover this situation.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I have no other...
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay, thank you. No further questions? Thank you. Thank you. We have a motion and a second. Mr. Low, would you like to close?
- Evan Low
Person
I respectfully ask for aye vote in recognition that this similar bill has passed this Committee in the past. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay, thank you. We have a motion and a second. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 2814 by Assembly Member Low, the motion is do pass to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Kevin McCarty
Person
That measure passes. Thank you. Next author is Mr. Gabriel. Yes. Before you, before you proceed, just one more bill that was recently pulled, and that was item number 18, AB 2499, Davies. 2406. Please proceed.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mister chair and colleagues. And I want to thank you to the chair and the Committee staff for their thoughtful assistance on this measure. I am pleased today to present AB 2432 which established a permanent source of funding for programs serving crime victims, modeled on the bipartisan federal Victims of Crime act, or VOCA, AB 2432 makes it easier for state and local prosecutors to hold bad actors accountable, support victims, and protect our communities in several important ways.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
First, the enhanced penalties in this Bill will ensure that bad actors cannot evade responsibility when they defraud or exploit vulnerable Californians. They will literally pay for their crimes. Second, ensuring that bad actors are held fully responsible will enhance deterrence and help protect residents across our state.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
And finally, and perhaps most importantly, AB 2432 will provide an essential funding source for programs that provide vital, and in many cases, even life saving services to crime victims in California, including victims of human trafficking, domestic violence, and child abuse. This year, California's crime victim service providers who provide critical support face a reduction of $170 million in federal funding, a cut of approximately 40%. This would be devastating.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
In practice, this means fewer staff, longer wait times, less assistance, and fewer of the vital services provided by domestic violence service providers, rape crisis centers, legal assistance nonprofits, human trafficking nonprofits, and many others.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
I'm proud that AB 2432 is supported by a broad coalition of prosecutors, victim services organizations, and criminal justice groups that include Attorney General Robanta, the California Partnership to end domestic Viola Violence, the coalition to Abolish Slavery and Trafficking, California Women's Law Center, Smart justice, and the Vetura and Santa Clara County district attorneys, among many others. It has no recorded opposition.
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
With me today to testify in support of this measure are May Rico, the Executive Director from Haven, which provide critical services to crime victims in Stanislaus County, and Evan Ackrion, the special assistant to the Attorney General on white collar and corporate prosecutions. Thank you, and I respectfully request your aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. You have five minutes for your panel. Please proceed.
- May Rico
Person
Assemblymember Mccarty and Members of the Committee. My name is May Rico, and I am the Executive Director of Haven in Stanislaw County, which actually includes Assemblymember Alanisa's district. And I'm here today to speak in support of AB 2432 establishing a new revenue stream for crime victims in California. Haven is a private nonprofit providing services to survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, and human trafficking in Stanislas County, including emergency shelter, since 1977. Last year, Haven helped over 2500 survivors of abuse and violence.
- May Rico
Person
Funding for crime victim services in California has not kept up with increased demand. As we come out of the pandemic, more people are seeking help while our resources to serve them are shrinking. Nor can we retain the experienced staff they need when we can't keep up with competitive wages. In July of 2022, our funding included two housing grants and a legal grant, all funded by VOCA. Today, those grants are gone, knocking out most of our housing program and two thirds of our legal program.
- May Rico
Person
Today, if someone calls us for help with a restraining order, it will take time to find someone who can provide legal assistance and even more time to get an appointment. When someone is hunting you, someone who knows all the places you'll go to hide, and all the people who will help you, that time matters.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Continue.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Please continue.
- May Rico
Person
Two years ago, there was a good chance we could provide transitional housing assistance to anyone in our emergency shelter. Now we are very limited in the direct room assistance we can provide, and our master lease units are gone. Someone today in our shelter is unlikely to find their own housing in the four to six weeks they are with us. Crime victims in California deserve better.
- May Rico
Person
They come to us because they are in a system that has already failed them, and when we can't meet their needs in a timely manner, they are failed again. They need to know when they pick up the phone, their call will be answered quickly. We can't ensure that without this funding provided by this Measure, your support on AB 2432 will ensure our life saving programs continue. Thank you, and I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you.
- Evan Ackrion
Person
Thank you. Good morning, Mister Chair and honorable Members of the Committee. I appreciate the opportunity to discuss AB 2432 with you on behalf of one of the co sponsors, Attorney General Rob Bonta. We'd like to thank the Committee Council for the detailed Bill analysis, and we applaud Assemblyman Gabriel for his authorship of 2432.
- Evan Ackrion
Person
To add to both the authors and my co sponsors presentations, AB 2432 would establish a state level additional funding mechanism to strengthen crime survivor restitution, and it supports by creating a corporate criminal financial enhancement that California courts can levy on corporations following a criminal conviction of the corporation. On the more technical side, currently the default criminal fine in California is $10,000 per felony conviction for any defendant, whether it's an individual or corporation.
- Evan Ackrion
Person
There are certain specialized criminal fines in certain areas, such as environmental and white collar, that create larger fines. The proposed enhancement in 2432 would apply to all corporate defendants and corporate defendants only, and it would supplement the existing financial penalty enhancement by giving the courts additional discretion to impose financial penalties that match the seriousness of the crime.
- Evan Ackrion
Person
Whenever a corporation is convicted of a crime. This Bill will hold corporations accountable for criminal wrongdoing, but it still requires the prosecutor to prove criminal intent for each crime that's being charged and to create, and sorry, and to obtain a conviction beyond a reasonable doubt before the proposed enhancement could be sought. As mentioned earlier 2432 is a win win due to declining VOCA funding that is linked to federal prosecutions.
- Evan Ackrion
Person
Attorney General Bonta recently joined a coalition of attorney generals representing 32 states and territories, urging Congress to provide critical support and services to victims and survivors of crime by taking steps to increase the VOCA Fund with short term bridge funding. As noted in the Committee's analysis, both the California administered VOCA funding as well as the California Victims Compensation Board are perpetually underfunded, leaving many crime survivors with limited support.
- Evan Ackrion
Person
I'm happy to answer any questions, and we respectfully request your I vote so that the state may create supplemental state funding for VOCA and for the other California victim services by supporting prosecuting agencies with bringing these criminal cases forward on behalf of vulnerable California.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Any others in support, please line up your name position only.
- Natasha Minsker
Person
Natasha Minsker Smart Justice California and strong support.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel on behalf of Initiate Justice and strong support.
- Taina Vargas
Person
Taina Vargas Initiate Justice, action and support.
- John Finley
Person
John Finley representing the Center for Community Solutions in San Diego speaking in support.
- Cheryl Marcell
Person
Cheryl Marcell CEO, Stand Up Placer and strong support.
- Jamie Garrick
Person
Jamie Garrick on behalf of Sacramento LGBT center in strong support.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, San Francisco Public Defender's office in support.
- Holly Fleming
Person
Holly Fleming, Children's Advocacy Centers of California, as well as Homebridge Victim Empowerment Support Team, Women Inc., Jewish Family Services in LA, Interface Childhood Family Services, Shelter from the Storm and House of Ruth in strong support.
- Ed Little
Person
Ed Little on behalf of Californians for Safety and Justice. And support.
- Tunisia Owens
Person
Tunisia Owens, policy and advocacy manager at Family Violence Law center in Alameda County and the Gender based Violence Coalition of Alameda County, in strong support.
- Dan Felizzatto
Person
Mister Chairman Members Dan Felizzatto on behalf of Los Angeles County District Attorney's office and the Crime Victims Action Alliance in support.
- Faith Lee
Person
Good morning. Faith Lee with Asian Americans Advancing justice Southern California in support
- Sarah Brennan
Person
Sarah Brennan with the Weideman Group on behalf of ValorUS, which represents a strong network of advocates, crisis professionals, volunteers and community partners that make up California's safety net for sexual violence survivors. We're proud to co sponsor AB 2432 ask for an aye vote. Thank you.
- Magaly Zagal
Person
Good morning. Magaly Zagal with Greenberg Traurig on behalf of the California Partnership, 10 domestic violence a co sponsor the Culturally Responsive Domestic Violence Network, co sponsor Casa Esperanza, Center for Domestic Peace, Family Services of Tulare County, Family Violence Appellate Project, Humboldt Domestic Violence Services and Next Door Solutions to Domestic Violence. Thank you.
- Laura McMahon
Person
Good morning. My name is Laura McMahon, I'm the Executive Director of Legal Aid in Marin and we strongly support this Bill. Thank you.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox, LSPC strongly support.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alissa Moore. All of us or None. Strongly supported.
- Tannah Oppliger
Person
Tannah Oppliger with Californians United for a Responsible Budget. Strong support. Thank you.
- Lisa Moore
Person
Lisa Mantero Moore with the Stanislaus Family Justice Center as well as the California Family Justice Network and strong support. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Do we have any opposition to this Bill? Doubtful. Impressive coalition of support. Seeing none, questions or comments from Committee Members. We do have a motion in a second. Mister Lackey.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah, excuse me. I'd like to say first of all I need to be consistent in being a victim's rights advocate. Clearly their funding is in jeopardy and they're actually having a very difficult time at this environment right now. But my question to the author's desk and I kind of inferred it somewhat in our previous conversation, but what is the assurance that this money will go to the crime victim's circumstance and not be diverted to General Fund?
- Jesse Gabriel
Legislator
Yeah, you have my commitment on that. And right now the money is set aside specifically to do that. Yeah. I just want to thank you all. I want to thank the really in particular, thank the Attorney General's Office and also most importantly, all of the advocates who do the incredible work in our communities to help crime victims. That is difficult and challenging work and they make a real difference in the lives of a lot of folks across the state. So on their behalf, and on my behalf, respectfully request and aye vote. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
We have a motion. A second.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Kevin McCarty
Person
The measure passes. Thank you. Next author, Assemblymember Irwin, Item number 2, AB 1779.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Good morning, Chair and Members. I'm pleased today to present AB 1779, which returns authority to the district attorneys to join charges from multiple counties into one trial when prosecuting organized retail theft rings that have operated across multiple jurisdictions.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
This morning I was honored to have the measure included in Speaker Rivas's Californians Together Against Retail Crime slate of bills. As my two witnesses will share more about, organized retail theft continues to plague our communities and its resulting financial impact burdens not only retailers, but also the average family trying to purchase goods.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
While I'm proud to have revived this ability to join charges from multiple jurisdictions from the Attorney General in 2022, we have heard from the CHP at the Little Hoover Commission and from retailers that there are more multi-jurisdictional cases than the Department of Justice is willing to take on.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
With district attorneys ready and willing to respond to their constituent concerns with multi-jurisdictional organized retail theft and our state budget investments building out their capacity for this specific purpose, it is an appropriate time to revive this tool for district attorneys. This Bill was amended last month to provide that DAs have the written agreement of other jurisdictions. Otherwise, charges occurring in a non-participating jurisdiction will be returned.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
And additionally, this Committee has suggested on page 5 of the analysis an amendment to require a joinder hearing under Penal Code 954 be added to address constitutionality concerns. I accept this Committee's suggestion and in consultation with the Committee, have agreed to amend the Bill accordingly on the Assembly floor. Now I'd like to introduce my two primary witnesses, Ventura County District Attorney Erik Nasarenko and President of the California Retailer's Association, Rachel Michelin.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Please proceed.
- Erik Nasarenko
Person
Good morning, Chair McCarty, Members of the Assembly Public Safety, Committee staff. I want to thank all of you for entertaining this important legislation. I, too, want to thank and applaud Assemblymember Jacqui Irwin for bringing forward this Bill. Last year in Ventura County, we were able to receive 17 million in organized retail theft prevention grant funding, 15 to our sheriff, 2 to the Office of the District Attorney.
- Erik Nasarenko
Person
We now have law enforcement and prosecutorial resources in Ventura County to combat the scourge of organized retail theft. We respectfully seek and ask your assistance in creating the legal framework that will allow us to address and combat these organized retail theft rings that occur in Ventura County and elsewhere. I want to emphasize that this is a sensible and cost-effective piece of legislation. Why is it sensible and cost-effective?
- Erik Nasarenko
Person
Because we have the ability to take organized retail thefts that occur in multiple counties and consolidate them into one action in one county, so long as there is the permission of the other DAs in those surrounding counties. I welcome the amendment. This is a longstanding practice in California penal code to seek the acceptance or buy-in of DAs wherein thefts or other offenses occurred, but it also preserves judicial economy. Rather than try the defendant in multiple locations, it consolidates the location into one venue.
- Erik Nasarenko
Person
And lastly, and perhaps most importantly, it also ensures and protects defendants' rights. Rather than face prosecution in multiple counties, they have one action in one county. So I encourage this body to vote in the affirmative and I want to thank all of you for considering the restoration of this important cross multi-jurisdictional piece of legislation. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you, next witness.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
Chairman McCarty, Members of the Public Safety Committee, we've all seen the videos, individuals walking into a store, cleaning out a shelf full of products into a garbage bag and riding out on a bike. Or what about the thieves targeting essential items like baby formula, crossing county lines to steal from multiple stores while threatening a retail employee, knowing it would be more difficult to be prosecuted to the full extent of the law, because prosecutors currently lack the authority for multi-jurisdictional prosecutions.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
Retailers, retail employees, and California customers are frustrated with seeing retail theft and organized retail crime happening all around them. We must give our law enforcement and local prosecutors the tools they need to address these sophisticated crime rings and holds these enterprises accountable for their criminal activity. California prosecutors effectively utilized cross jurisdictional charging between 2019 and 2021, and while in 2022 the State allowed for the Attorney General the ability to continue prosecuting with this tool, the unfortunate fact is retail theft is so rampant that in order to deter it from increasing and ensure our businesses, employees and customers are safe from criminal activity, we need to restore the ability of cross-jurisdictional charging to our district attorneys. Through collaboration among the Department of Justice, district attorneys, and retailers across the state, I am confident we can begin to tackle the growth of retail theft ORC and begin to see safer retail environments throughout the state.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
We support the amendments to address the concerns regarding the potential conflicts between neighboring counties to require the prosecutor to present written authorization and the recent amendments the author agreed to take on the Assembly floor. And this Bill builds on a number of legislative proposals as part of the Assembly retail theft package package that, taken comprehensively, could have meaningful impacts on stopping the growing threat of retail theft and organized retail crime in California.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
And it sends a signal that the conversation around the issue of holding repeat offenders accountable for their criminal behavior is changing. AB 1779 ensures Californians that we will not allow criminals to circumvent the law by crossing county lines to avoid accountability for their criminal actions. For those reasons, I ask for your aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Any others in support, please line up. Your name, organization and position only.
- Jolena Voorhis
Person
Mr. Chair and Members, Jillian DeVors on behalf of the League of California Cities in strong support. Thank you.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Mr. Chair and Members, Cory Salzillo on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association, in support.
- Danielle Sanchez
Person
Chair and Members, Danielle Sanchez on behalf of the Chief Probation Officers of California, in support.
- Jack Yanos
Person
Mr. Chair, Jack Yanos on behalf of the California Fuels and Convenience Alliance, in support.
- Megan Holtman
Person
Meg Holtman, California District Attorneys Association, in support.
- Brenda Bass
Person
Brenda Bass, California Chamber of Commerce, in support.
- Daniel Conway
Person
Daniel Conway, California Grocers, in support.
- Natalie Boust
Person
Natalie Boust, California Business Roundtable, in support.
- Skyler Wonnacott
Person
Skyler Wonnacott, California Business Properties Association, in support.
- Candace Chung
Person
Candace Chung, on behalf of Attorney General Rob Bonta, in support.
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
Bradley Schoenleben, Orange County District Attorney's Office, full support.
- Daniel Felizzatto
Person
Mr. Chair and Members, Dan Felizzatto on behalf of Los Angeles County's District Office, District Attorney's Office, in support.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Opposition, please come forward.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
The California Public Defenders Association. We thank the Member for the amendment. We're considering withdrawing our opposition. Thank you.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, San Francisco Public Defenders Office, in opposition.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox, on behalf LSPC, strong opposition.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alissa Moore, All of Us or None, in strong opposition.
- Barbara Chavez
Person
Barbara Chavez with the Ella Baker Center, opposition.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. We have a motion and a second. Questions? A motion, a second by Mr. Ting. Mr. Lackey?
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah, I just wanted to thank the author and asked to be a co-author on this measure. And this is not the first time we've addressed this issue, so I'm thankful it's here again. And I think this time it has a good chance of getting where it needs to get because accountability needs to happen. So thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Mr. Alanis?
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I would also like to echo those comments and also ask to be a co-author.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Mr. Zbur?
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Also want to thank the author on this. I know that she worked hard with the Public Safety staff and the Speaker staff on this Bill and it's been refined and want to appreciate the hard work that you put into this. So thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. No further questions. We have a motion, a second. And you did recognize that your willingness to further clarify some of these before the next.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Yes, we're taking all the amendments.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yes. So thank you. You may close.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Just respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. We have a motion, a second. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 1779 by Assemblymember Irwin, the motion is do pass. [Roll Call].
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Consent calendar is adopted. Mr. Alanis, please present your measure item number six. Item number six first.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Yeah. AB 1845 thank you Mr. Chair and Members. I am proud to present AB 1845 today. I would like to start by saying my office has been talking to the opposition on this Bill and we are committed to continuing having good faith conversations attempting to address the concerns. My main goal with this proposal is to help vertically elevate misdemeanor cases like retail theft through the system.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Colleagues, we are having a lot of needed debate and discussion around retail theft. Obviously, we had a press conference just on it not too long ago. I hear often people say we need to simply prosecute the laws that are on the books already. While I do not want to trigger debate on the effects of current law today, what my Bill will do is provide the needed resources to vertically elevate cases pending based on current law.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
As I have traveled up and down the state, I have spoken with various DAs and law enforcement officials who have told me they would love to focus on misdemeanor cases such as retail theft, but they lack the necessary resources to vertically elevate these cases on a wide basis. We can have all the laws we want on the books, but if we do not have the resources to move those cases in the courts, they are in fact ineffective laws.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
We must continue to fund proven and successful programs like the organized Retail Theft Program grant program, a program that has proven to be successful in Stanislaus County, which I represent. I know the chair is working to advance other innovative solutions through other programs proven successful in other counties. And I have promised to take amendments to this Bill to support the chair's efforts through those proposals.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I want to thank the chair for his leadership, and I want to thank him and his staff for working so collaboratively with me and my office on issues like retail theft. To speak on success of the Organized Retail Theft Prevention grant program, I have the Stanislaus County DA, Jeff Laugero with me who will testify in support to this proposal. Thank you. Thank you. Please proceed.
- Jeff Laugero
Person
Thank you Mr. Chair, Members of the Committee, I'm honored to be here today alongside Assemblymember Alanis in support of AB 1845, which will provide additional resources to agencies like mine in our ongoing effort to combat retail theft through vertical prosecution. Organized retail theft Vertical prosecution has been a successful strategy for Stanislaus County for several reasons.
- Jeff Laugero
Person
Vertical prosecution allows our office to have organized retail theft crimes handled by a specialized prosecutor from the time the case is received in our office to case resolution. This has resulted in a significant increase in successful case outcomes. Vertical prosecution has expanded our ability to collaborate with community stakeholders and allowed for a more cohesive response to organized retail theft.
- Jeff Laugero
Person
Through our dedicated organized retail theft prosecutor and DA investigator, we have cultivated relationships with agency ORT investigators, loss prevention officers, and local businesses, not just the big box stores, but the mom-and-pop shops as well. From these conversations, we have worked together to develop strategies designed to deter and reduce theft, effectively prosecute ORT offenders, protect employees, staff and shoppers, and to support consumers by ensuring needed products are available in their neighborhood stores.
- Jeff Laugero
Person
Ultimately, vertical prosecution has improved the quality of the investigations and case outcomes specific to ORT. These cases can be complex and multi-jurisdictional, so having the right resources available to conduct the required follow-up and coordination between prosecuting offices is paramount to successful prosecution.
- Jeff Laugero
Person
As Assemblymember Alanis has repeatedly stated, retail theft is not only a policy issue, but also a funding and a resource issue. AB 1845 builds on the success of other retail theft funding programs such as the Organized Retail Theft Prevention grant program, which we have successfully implemented and applied in Stanislaus County. Organized retail theft grant funding has allowed my office to implement our ORT strategy.
- Jeff Laugero
Person
Without this grant program, we would not have had the money or resources needed to effectively combat Ortiz and enforcement of ORT crimes, as well as the affected businesses and consumers would continue to suffer. ORT grant funding has allowed us to dedicate a prosecutor and DA investigator, not just to prepare and prosecute these cases, but to engage the community and collaborate with our law enforcement, retail and community partners on effective strategies to combat organized retail theft.
- Jeff Laugero
Person
I'd like to thank Assemblymember Alanis for authoring this Bill and for his continued support of the prosecutors who work every day to keep our communities safe. His collaborative approach to problem-solving is seen in Sacramento and at home at the local level. I hope this Committee will reward that effort by voting to advance this much-needed legislation for California. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Others in support please come forward.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Cory Salzillo on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association in support.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
My name is Ryan Sherman with the Riverside Sheriff Association, the California Narcotic Officers Association, River California Reserve Peace Officers, Deputy Sheriffs of Monterey, and Placer and Peace Officer Associations of Arcadia, Burbank, Claremont, Corona, Culver City, Florida, Marietta, Newport Beach, Nevada, Palos Verdes, Pomona, Riverside, Santa Ana and Upland. All in support. Thank you.
- Mike Holtman
Person
Mike Haltman, California District Attorneys Association in support.
- Jolena Voorhis
Person
Julianne Duvors with the Lead California Cities in support.
- Skyler Wonnacott
Person
Skyler Wonnacott, on behalf of California Business Properties Association in support.
- Daniel Conway
Person
Daniel Conway, California Grocers, in support.
- Sarah Pollo Moo
Person
Sarah Pollo Moo, California Retailers Association in support.
- Julian Kennedy
Person
Julian Kennedy, California's Chambers of Commerce in support.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Do we have opposition to this measure?
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, San Francisco Public Defender's Office just acknowledging that the office, author's office has reached out and we're having conversations. Thank you.
- Mica Doctoroff
Person
Micah Doctoroth on behalf of ACLU California Action, we have opposed this measure, but we're also eager to hear about future amendments. Thank you.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox, on behalf of LSBC opposition.
- Melissa Moore
Person
Melissa Moore, All of Us or None in opposition.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Do we have questions or comments from Committee Members? Mr Zubr.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I just want to thank the author for bringing this Bill and want to thank you for really your leadership on this whole area of retail theft. I know that you've been engaged in all the discussions with many of the authors, and I think this is one example of really someone who is like getting into the details of the reforms that we sort of need to make sure that what we're doing is effective.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And so thank you for that. I'll be supporting the Bill today and I think I'm already co author. Thank you. If you're not, you will be. If I'm not, I'd like to be added. So thank you. Thank you Miss Wilson,
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Thank you to the author, everyone, just follow-up questions. Given the fact that if there's enough impact of retail theft on a particular county, wouldn't you say that DAs would prioritize it already in terms of the resources? Because this resources is used for not just for the DAs, but, you know, the law enforcement agencies and money for them. So I'm just wondering, wouldn't they prioritize it anyway?
- Jeff Laugero
Person
Do you want to answer that? I can speak to Stanislaus County. So our local agencies have received funding as well. And between working with the agencies and working with the businesses, we've been able to collaborate and come up with a strategy to address not just shoplifting generally, but we're talking about organized retail crime, so it has been effective. As the prosecuting office, we tend to be the umbrella and bring everybody together.
- Jeff Laugero
Person
So the funding for the prosecutors and the resources really allow us to go out and have that dedicated prosecutor to bring the resources in the community together and to figure out strategies on how to deal with organized retail theft.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
So are you saying then it would allow you to have better focus on that particular. Whereas if you would be pulled away for other issues, if this resource didn't exist
- Jeff Laugero
Person
If the resource didn't exist, we would not be able to dedicate a person to the time and the effort that it does take to address organized.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Retail theft, like murders and other things would take priority over it and could derail.
- Jeff Laugero
Person
Right. We've been able to have a dedicated prosecutor specifically for organized retail theft versus pulling them in multiple different directions.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Okay. And so you're finding that effective, and so you're saying, you know, other Das or other counties may not have the sufficient resources to be able to do that same thing. And since you're effective, you're saying, hey, we've been a pilot, so to speak.
- Jeff Laugero
Person
Absolutely.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Thank you. Okay. Mr. Lackey.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah. I would just like to congratulate you on doing something a little bit different, because this particular grant program focuses on the upstream participants and not just the offenders themselves. So it's truly not, it's a substantive versus punitive approach to what needs to take, take place in this process of addressing this very, very threatening toxin to our economic system. So thank you for that, and it has my full support. Thank you, Ms. Reyes.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
I also want to thank my colleague for a very thoughtful approach. I think that the dedication of at least half the time of a full time Deputy District Attorney to this particular issue, having that as the foundation to then apply for and receive the grant, I think is extremely important. It's such an important issue in so many of our, of our districts, and we all hear from our constituents, they want something done.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
And I appreciate the approach that you put here and the amount of time, as we was noted earlier, that you spent with the Committee and with others to get it right to the point that you have so many people that are supporting it, and I think this reflects on you and the good work. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Any thought? Thank you. We have a motion. Motion. Motion by Assemblymember Nguyen. Second by Assemblymember Reyes. Further questions or comments? Seeing none, I did note that you mentioned our companion legislation. I appreciate you talking about how this funding could enhance the Fastpass program if it does pass later this afternoon. Thank you, you may close.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair, for those comments. It's teamwork, really. A lot of us here in this room working together to work on real solutions. So I'm very proud to be part of that. I'm really happy to be part of this as well. Obviously, we have proving data showing that this is helping us in our in Stanislaus County and hoping other counties can also be able to enjoy this as well. With that, I ask respectfully for your aye vote.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. We have a motion. A second. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 1845, Assemblymember Alanis. The motion is do pass to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Your next measure. We're good. Yes, we're good. Yes. Thank you. That's right. Thank you. Thank you, everyone. Thank you. Next, we have Assemblymember Sanchez, please proceed.
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. And Members, I'm proud to present AB 1872, which will provide clarity to the illegality of using AI generated images for extortion purposes. The development of our artificial intelligence is moving at a record pace, and so are the dangers it poses to our most vulnerable populations. Of particular concern for these populations, especially minors, are sextorial cases involving AI generated images.
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
Sex torsion involves coercing victims into providing sexually explicit photos or videos of themselves, then threatening to share them publicly or with the victims family and friends if their demands are not met. Last year, the FBI issued an alert to warn the public of the growing use of AI by malicious actors to create manipulative images in videos for the purpose of ensnaring victims in sex stories schemes. These crimes can result in victims harming themselves or even committing suicide.
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
From October 2021 to March 2023, the FBI and Homeland Security investigations received over 13,000 of online financial six torsion of minors. The sextortion involved at least 12,000 victims, primarily boys, and led to at least 20 suicides. That is why I partnered with the Orange County Sheriff's Department introduce AB 1872 and help equip our prosecutors with the tools they need to crack down on sex extortion cases.
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
This is a reasonable measure that will make it easier for prosecutors to successfully convict criminals using AI to extort their victims for money or sexual images. I respectfully ask for your aye vote on this measure. And testifying with me today is investigator Heather Timmins with the Orange County Sheriff's Department.
- Heather Timmins
Person
Good morning, everybody. I'm investigator Heather Timmins with the Orange County Sheriff's Department. I have been a sworn deputy sheriff for 16 years and assigned as an investigator for the past five years.
- Heather Timmins
Person
I'm currently the senior investigator assigned to the special victims detail as well as the federal task force officer with Homeland Security assigned to the Orange County Child Exploitation Task Force. For the past two years, my caseload has primarily focused on possession, distribution, and manufacturing of child pornography, the luring of minor victims for sexual purposes, as well as what's commonly been referred to as sex torsion. In January 2024, the FBI issued a warning on the growing threat of sex torsion.
- Heather Timmins
Person
The FBI reports that in the six month period of October 2022 to 2023, there was a 20% increase in the reporting of financially motivated sex sort incidents. Just in my own experience working as special victims and working on the child exploitation Task Force, I receive a handful of sex sort cases a week. Primarily these are coming out of our victims are middle school as well as high school age. But I also do get adults that are being victimized as well.
- Heather Timmins
Person
The FBI is now reporting that the prevalence of sex sort in using AI generated fake images. That's kind of a newer thing that I'm seeing now. And the reason that this is so harmful is because a lot of these minor victims are not actually making a poor decision. They're not sending an explicit image where then they can look back and think, okay, well, you know, maybe I shouldn't have done that, but instead they're being victimized regardless.
- Heather Timmins
Person
And there's nothing stopping these images from being created and then these victims having to go to school and face consequences for something where they didn't even do an action to receive a consequence. To begin with, the availability of AI tools and AI generated images to create this type of material has been well documented in recent studies. The Stanford Internet Observatory found more than 3200 images of suspected child sexual abuse in the giant large scale AI open network database.
- Heather Timmins
Person
Users on a single dark web forum shared nearly 3000 AI generated images of child sexual abuse in just one month. That's 3000 images in one month, according to a recent report from the UK Internet Watch Foundation. A recent example of this was in the news at a middle school in Beverly Hills as well as we did have some news cameras recently in the County of Orange at Laguna Beach High School over AI generated child sexual abuse material.
- Heather Timmins
Person
Unfortunately, the advances in technology have made it so much easier for suspects to manipulate photos, to send them to others, and to simply just post them online for anybody to see. FBI has reported on financially motivated extortion, and offenders threaten to take. What they offenders do is they take these images that they've now created, these deep fake images, and then they threaten to release them to the public to post them online.
- Heather Timmins
Person
If these victims do not give them money, usually in the forms of gift cards or a lot of times what will happen to our female victims is they'll be sex sorted for more images, whether that be them actually having to create their own child sexual abuse material or more AI generated material.
- Heather Timmins
Person
Examples of sexsortion impacts that I've seen on these victims is that it's absolutely humiliating for these kids to go to school and know that these images have been circulated around campus, whether or not it's an actual image of them or an AI generated image. These AI generating images look so realistic that when you look at them, there's no way to tell if it's AI generated or if it's an actual image. So these poor kids, their self confidence is being ripped away from them.
- Heather Timmins
Person
Their ability to feel comfortable and safe at school is being ripped away from them. And even more importantly, their relationship at home with their family is just being forever altered due to this humiliation. And I know it was pointed out that over a two year timeframe, there was 20 suicides simply related to sexortion. And that's not even an up to date account of how many suicides there has been. And one suicide is too many.
- Heather Timmins
Person
But to say that 20 kids have taken their lives over sexortion is absolutely devastating to our society. AB 1872 makes it clear that extortion includes threatening to post, distribute, or create AI generated images or videos of another. So this Bill is so important because it's going to add another factor to keep these AI images from being able to be used to sextor people.
- Heather Timmins
Person
As an investigator who worked these cases day in and day out, I encourage you to pass AB 1872 and take the opportunity to send a strong message that those who victimize others and violate one's privacy will be met with consequence. And I also want to point out that as it. I got.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Your time's up. I'm sorry. If you could just wrap real quick.
- Heather Timmins
Person
Yeah. Okay. Please vote yes.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses, please line up. Name, position, and I'm going to move the Bill.
- Randy Perry
Person
Mr. Chairman, Members, Randy Perry, on behalf of PORAC and the California Association of Highway Patrol in support.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
Hi, Dylan Hoffman on behalf of Tech Net in strong support.
- Shane Lavigne
Person
Mr. Chair, Members, Shane Levine on behalf of the Association Orange County Deputy Sheriff's in support thank you.
- Mike Holtman
Person
Mike Holtman California District Attorneys Association in support.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Corey Salzillo on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association support.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Ryan Sherman with the Riverside Sheriff's Association support also the California Coalition of School Safety Professionals and the other POAs and DSAs previously stated. Thank you.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Do I have any witnesses in opposition? Go ahead.
- Matt Sotorosen
Person
Okay. Good morning again, Assembly Members. My name is Matt Sotorosen. I'm here on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association. I've been a public defender in California for 25 years, and I'm currently a public defender in San Francisco County. Have been for the last 18 years. CPDA understands the concern of potential abuse of artificial intelligence to harass and intimidate individuals. Also, as the parent of two teenagers, I'm concerned personally with harassment of young people, as was just referenced in the earlier testimony.
- Matt Sotorosen
Person
However, Assembly Bill 1872, as it is currently worded, raises a number of concerns. First, the proposed amendment to the penal code presents a constitutional issue because as it is written, it is vague. Artificial intelligence is a novel technology that's not easily understood by the average member of the public. The statute also fails to define the term as it is written simply as AI generated images or videos of another. Prosecutors, judges, and most importantly, juries would struggle to interpret and apply the statute in consistent ways.
- Matt Sotorosen
Person
Because the amendment fails to properly define and give notice of the prohibited conduct, it undermines fundamental principles of due process. And if the definition of AI that was included in the legislative analysis I read last night is any indication, this is not a term that is easily defined or understood. The second issue is that as the amendment is proposed, it is over broad. If passed, the mere creation of any AI image, any AI image would constitute a felony offense.
- Matt Sotorosen
Person
This could end up resulting in some bizarre scenarios. For example, if someone said, give me money or I'll create an AI image of you saving a puppy from a burning building, that would be a felony as it is currently written. Naturally, the import of this crime of extortion is that someone threatens to expose or impute to a person some type of deformity, disgrace, or crime. Also, this amendment is not necessary. Penal codes 518, 519, and 520 already cover this type of conduct.
- Matt Sotorosen
Person
The amendment that was passed in I think it was 2018 that created penal code section 518 covers this issue of sexploitation by expanding the definition of what consideration is to include sexual conduct. The medium by which somebody extorts or attempts to extort someone is not limited by the current statute. The potential fears raised by AI are not new. With each new technological innovation, from Photoshop to voice recordings to other technologies that manipulate manipulate likenesses, there is the potential for misuse.
- Matt Sotorosen
Person
In fact, adding and specifying and singling out AI could have the unintended effect of excluding the use of other technologies to extort from successful prosecution. And finally, to the extent that the issue sought to be addressed by this proposed amendment is the issue of sexploitation. Perhaps monies could be devoted to education programs to teach our young people about the harms of this type of conduct, rather than reacting after the fact in charging young people with felony crimes. We respectfully ask for a no vote on Assembly Bill 1872. Thank you.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have any members of the public?
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, San Francisco Public Defender's Office in opposition.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Okay, bring it back to the Committee. I think Assembly Member Wilson had a question.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Well, I was about to say good afternoon, but I don't think we've made it there yet. I think wishful thinking. Good morning to the author. Thank you for bringing this forward. I understand the intent as it relates to extortion and incorporation of AI generated images. I do have some concerns that are consistent with the opposition. And so I have a few follow up questions related to that. It is broad and the analysis states as such.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And when you look at where you're amending, there's an A through E section, and this adds an F where it was numbers before. Why not relate the new section that you're adding to those other items so that AI could be considered as, as a potential of a way to express those? And I'm asking that particularly because a lot of times people view, as the opposition stated, it's better to be tech neutral.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
But a lot of times people make the assumption of if it's AI, it's reasonable to assume because current AI technology, in some ways you can tell it's AI and not real, but for the most part, it has a real look to it. And so why not make it relate to the other sections versus it being on its own?
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
Sure. So we're happy to work with the opposition and continue to work on this bill. As you had stated, the intent is to make sure that we're, that AI is covered under the threat to extort an AB 1872. But I'm happy to continue to work with the opposition.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Yeah, I think that's extremely important because it is just as it is. It's very broad and it doesn't rise to the same level of all the other, the A through, so to speak, E. But if they were related to that in the broad sense, that a way to do this is not just stating it or it's to use AI to be able to express those, that seems like it would make more sense, but I think that's really, really important.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And so I'm not sure where I'll be. I might lay off and wait to see what as you work through that issue. But I think right now it is extremely broad and could have a lot of unintended consequences. So I'm glad to hear that you're willing to work with opposition.
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
Thank you.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Mr. Lackey.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah, I want to say thank you. This is clearly something that's becoming widespread. And to me, the language is as explicit as the associated behavior. Some argument was, the same argument was used when using the term pornography. We all know pornography when we see it. And I'll tell you, this AI has become so good, so good, that it is very difficult. Not all AI is created equal. But I'm telling you, it is really remarkable how good it is.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
And what also is very clear to me is the disgusting, hurtful, and demoralizing circumstances that have long lasting impacts to these victims. Once this has happened to you or your loved one, it doesn't disappear with time. It may soften, but this is a very, very hurtful occurrence. And we need to address it, because right now it's my argument that there's no prosecution that is really addressing this in a meaningful way. And it's time. It's time. So thank you for bringing this to our attention.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
I see this as the modernization of Senator Leyva's Bill of 2019. AI is causing lots of anguish throughout the comments by my colleague about it being overly broad. The constitutionality is an issue that will have to be addressed, and I appreciate your willingness to work with the opposition. I think what you are trying to do, I think needs to be addressed.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
And I appreciate that you're tackling this, but making sure that the language isn't so overly broad that we then run into constitutional issues will be important. Some say that this is already covered in law the way the law is already written. But I think addressing that is something that is valid. And I appreciate this bill. I will be supporting it today.
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Ms. Wilson.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Just a follow up question. Has there been a case where someone used AI generated materials in extortion and they were not able to be prosecuted?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I have seen most sextortion cases unable to be prosecuted at this time. Just our District Attorney's Office is having a hard time bringing it forward. So I personally have not gone to court on a sextortion case yet.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Okay. So just in general. Just in general, they're hard to prosecute. So we haven't got factored in the AI portion yet. Okay. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay, Mr. Lackey.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
I just have a comment that I think a lot of reasons why we don't have a lot of case laws. There's no filing that takes place. And that's, that's the bigger problem. And that's why we, I mean, there is going to be debate, but debate is good. Debate is healthy and that's how we get good case law, as I mentioned before. And so I think that this, it's time for this to move forward. So thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay, we have a motion a second. No further questions. Would you like to close?
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
Thank you for your consideration of this measure. I believe it is vital to help protect our most vulnerable populations from extortion cases involving AI images and video. I respectfully ask for your aye vote today.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 1872 by Assembly Member Sanchez. The motion is do pass to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Measure passes. Next measure. Item number 16, AB 2209.
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Chair and Members. AB 2209 is a critical measure that will allow California to better combat the devastating fentanyl crisis plaguing our communities. Fentanyl is a deadly drug that is extremely lethal in very small amounts. It is 50 times stronger than heroin and 100 times stronger than morphine. It's wreaking havoc across the nation, claiming countless lives and tearing our families apart. In California, fentanyl-related deaths have skyrocketed.
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
We must do everything we can and use every tool in our belt to tackle this issue head-on. California's current sanctuary state policies create a significant roadblock in our fight against this poison. AB 2209 is a common sense approach that adds felony fentanyl dealing and trafficking to the list of offenses exempt from sanctuary state protections. This provides law enforcement more flexibility and discretion to do what they need to do within the bounds of other laws to address this fentanyl crisis.
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
By empowering law enforcement to better communicate with federal authorities to remove these high-level fentanyl dealers from our streets, we can create a safer environment for everyone. This isn't a partisan issue. In a poll last year, San Francisco voters, 70% actually, of them, said they supported denying sanctuary state protections for felony fentanyl dealers. Imagine what would happen if we polled that question statewide.
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
I think it's time we listen to our constituents and our communities who are rightfully concerned with how things have become and do something about it. That's why I've introduced AB 2209 to completely exempt felony fentanyl charges from state's sanctuary state protections. Testifying with me today is Ray Grangoff with the Orange County Sheriff's Department.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. You have five minutes.
- Ray Grangoff
Person
Great. Thank you, Mister Chairman. And thank you, Assemblywoman Sanchez, for authoring this very important Bill. The California Values Act, or SB 54, restricted the ability of law enforcement to fully communicate with our federal partners. And that's why much of law enforcement opposed the measure, because it violated really the best practice of open communication amongst law enforcement to address shared threats, threats like the fentanyl epidemic. For us in Orange County, the negative consequences of this law was quickly evident.
- Ray Grangoff
Person
For example, due to the restrictions in the law in 2019, the most recent full year with a pre-COVID jail population, OCSDR Department was prevented from notifying ICE on the release of 1015 inmates who had an immigration hold placed on them. Of those inmates, 238 were re-arrested for new crimes in Orange County, including charges of assault, battery, rape, robbery, drug crimes, and many others. These numbers only reflect individuals arrested on new charges who returned back to the jail in Orange County.
- Ray Grangoff
Person
But beyond the limitations on communication in a custody setting, the limitations of that Bill chilled our ability to collaborate fully with our partners in an operational and investigative setting. This is particularly concerning with regard to our efforts to combat fentanyl. To stop the flow of fentanyl into our community is imperative that local law enforcement work hand in hand with our federal partners. Such collaboration maximizes resources and intelligence sharing.
- Ray Grangoff
Person
While there are great partnerships in our region among local and federal agencies, the unnecessary limitations imposed by SB 54 prevents full sharing of critical information on fentanyl traffickers, handing the cartels an additional advantage. AB 2209 would remove this barrier by making clear in the law our ability to communicate with federal partners regarding any person who is alleged to have violated or who has been previously convicted of violating laws relating to the selling and distribution of fentanyl.
- Ray Grangoff
Person
To be clear, our support for AB 2209 and desire to work with federal authorities to keep drug traffickers out of the community should not be construed to mean we have any interest in enforcing immigration law. Local law enforcement does not engage in immigration enforcement. Enforcement of immigration law is the responsibility of the Federal Government in carrying out our duties. We do not ask the immigration status of suspects, witnesses, or those who call to report crimes.
- Ray Grangoff
Person
Notifying federal authorities of the pending release of a fentanyl trafficker is not the enforcement of immigration law. These offenders help perpetuate the fentanyl crisis in our communities, and removing them is consistent with our department's mission to enhance public safety for all residents in Orange County. These offenders, they do not discriminate in who they perpetuate their crimes against. And we must not hesitate to take advantage of every opportunity to keep them out of our neighborhoods.
- Ray Grangoff
Person
This communication is even now more important with regard to the crisis at our border. And California is beginning to have a disproportionate share of that crisis. Migrant encounters are up 85% in the San Diego Border Sector when compared comparing February of 2024 to February of 2023. While most crossing the border are undoubtedly entering our country in search of a better life, the sheer volume overwhelms resources and makes it difficult to stop those who seek the harmless.
- Ray Grangoff
Person
This is demonstrated by the fact that 169 people on the terror watch list were encountered between ports of entry at the southern border during Fiscal Year 23. With an estimated 860 got-aways in FY 23, there's a high likelihood others on the terror watch list entered our country without an encounter. The risk we face is also clear with regard to fentanyl trafficking, which is what this Bill is trying to address. We are seeing a flood of fentanyl into our communities.
- Ray Grangoff
Person
We have seen exponential increases in fentanyl seizures by our own narcotics team in Orange County. In 2021, we seized 104 pounds of fentanyl in 16,000 pills. By 2023, that increased to 808 pounds of fentanyl powder and 658,000 pills. These numbers highlight the importance of continued cooperation and open communication with our federal partners on the shared threats that we face. I urge a yes vote on AB 2209.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Next witnesses. Your name and position only.
- Randy Perry
Person
Mister Chairman and Members. Randy Perry with Aaron Read Associates on behalf of PORAC and the California Association of Highway Patrol in support.
- Dillon Lesovsky
Person
Dillon Lesovsky with the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department in support.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Cory Salzillo on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association in support.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Ryan Sherman with the Riverside Sheriff's Association. California Narcotic Officer Association and the other POAs and DSAs previously stated support. Thank you. I'm sorry. Yes. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Seeing no others in support. Opposition, please come forward.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
You have five minutes combined for your panel. Please begin.
- Sean Reardon
Person
Good morning. My name is Sean Reardon. I'm a senior staff attorney at the ACLU of Northern California, based out of our Sacramento office. Having spent much of the past half decade challenging violations of the California Values Act by law enforcement bodies, including the Sacramento County Sheriff's Department, I appreciate the opportunity to address the proposed amendments to that law.
- Sean Reardon
Person
The fentanyl overdose crisis has devastated communities across the United States and must be addressed with evidence based solutions in order to save lives. However, AB 2209 contradicts what we know about the drug trade and scapegoats immigrants and refugees. First, targeting immigrants for fentanyl and other drugs ignores the realities of the drug trade. In 2022, U.S. citizens constituted 89% of convicted fentanyl traffickers, while over 90% of fentanyl seizures occur at legal border crossing points and interior vehicle checkpoints used by U.S. citizens.
- Sean Reardon
Person
Further, drug convictions, fentanyl or otherwise, already carry some of the most severe immigration penalties, including mandatory detention without bond, ineligibility for nearly all relief against removal, and deportation without even seeing a judge in many cases. The Values Act already allows law enforcement to cooperate with ICE in cases of a felony fentanyl related conviction, and federal immigration law already imposes the most severe penalties on those so convicted, regardless of hardship to the person or to the U.S. family that they leave behind.
- Sean Reardon
Person
Everyone in this country is entitled to basic protections when they interact with law enforcement. The bill removes these basic protections only for immigrants, opening the door for grave abuses by law enforcement, including asking people for their immigration status, detaining them without a warrant, wrongful referrals to ICE, and racial profiling of API, black, and Latina community members even before law enforcement has formed a reasonable suspicion or probable cause that someone has committed a felony offense.
- Sean Reardon
Person
We know from experience that law enforcement agencies have too often failed to follow existing protections under state law. Right here in Sacramento, for years, the Sheriff's Department illegally transferred community members to ICE and hid information about its practices from the public and the Board of Supervisors. It took years of advocacy, the intervention of the County Inspector General, and a lawsuit to end these practices. The Legislature should not create further exceptions to the Values Act. I strongly urge Members of the Public Safety Committee to vote no on AB 2209.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Please proceed.
- Carl Tannenbaum
Person
My name is Carl Tannenbaum. I was a San Francisco police officer for 32 years. I am here in respectful opposition to AB 2209 on behalf of the Law Enforcement Action Partnership, LEAP. LEAP is a nonprofit organization of law enforcement professionals advocating for sensible criminal justice and drug policy reforms that will make our communities safer and more just. The impact of the overdose crisis has been felt in every community.
- Carl Tannenbaum
Person
This is a public health issue that, without a doubt, is personal to us all. I spent the first six years of my career walking a footbeat in San Francisco's Tenderloin district. I built relations with the community and worked to improve conditions there. I saw the pain caused by addiction and also the lack of adequate resources to address the needs of the community.
- Carl Tannenbaum
Person
At the height of the war on drugs in the eighties and nineties, I was assigned to the narcotics unit, where I participated in aggressive enforcement of drug laws. There I saw the pain, I'm sorry, many of which were low level and not threats to public safety. After the death of my partner, who was killed in a line of duty during a drug bust, I began to question the strategies used to enforce drug laws.
- Carl Tannenbaum
Person
John's death made me realize the futility of what we were doing and that there had to be a better way. So I take this issue very seriously, and I am here to tell you this bill is a travesty. Singling out people who happen to be immigrants as the cause of the overdose crisis is a textbook case of discriminatory enforcement. It is also another failed attempt, like sentencing enhancements and military intervention, to address a major social and public safety and public health issue solely through law enforcement.
- Carl Tannenbaum
Person
This bill ignores the fact that 89% of those convicted of trafficking fentanyl in the U.S. are U.S. citizens, not undocumented immigrants or asylum seekers. It also circumvents the legal tenet of due process of the law. It allows anyone suspected or convicted of dealing fentanyl to be turned over to ICE. State law already allows law enforcement the discretion to contact ICE for people convicted of dealing drugs. I repeat, state law already allows law enforcement the discretion to contact ICE for people convicted of dealing drugs.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Witnesses in opposition, please come forward.
- Carl Tannenbaum
Person
This bill will create a wide dragnet primed for racial profiling and abuse. We need real solutions to the overdose crisis, but more mass incarceration and discriminatory enforcement will only make things worse while depleting the finite resources we have. For these reasons, I respectfully request a no vote on AB 2209.
- Natasha Minsker
Person
Natasha Minsker, Smart Justice California. Strongly opposed.
- Matt Sotorosen
Person
Matt Sotorosen in the California Public Defenders Association, opposed.
- Rhonda Rios-Kravitz
Person
Rhonda Rios-Kravitz, CEO of Alianza. Strongly oppose.
- Shereen Miles
Person
Shereen Miles with the Immigration Coalition of Sacramento and also with Sacramento Area Congregations Together, strongly oppose.
- Tana Opliger
Person
Tana Opliger with Californians United for Responsible Budget. Strongly oppose.
- Andrea Amavisca
Person
Andrea Maviska, on behalf of the California Immigrant Policy Center in strong opposition.
- Danica Rodarma
Person
Danica Rodarma, on behalf of Initiate Justice and Law Defense in strong opposition.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, San Francisco Public Defender's Office, in opposition and on behalf of the following organizations in opposition: Pacific Juvenile Defender Center, Human Impact Partners, Black Alliance for Just Immigration, Orange County Equality Coalition, Asian Prisoner Pacific Islander Reentry and Inclusion through Support and Empowerment, Surge San Mateo, NorCal Resist, Viet Rise, Senior and Disability Action, Siren, Inland Coalition for Immigrant Justice, Alliance San Diego, Legal Services for Children, National Day Labor Organizing Network.
- Obed Franco
Person
Obed Franco, on behalf of the Asian Law Caucus, in opposition.
- Claire Simonich
Person
Good morning. Claire Simonich, on behalf of the Vera Institute of Justice in opposition.
- Gretchen Bergman
Person
Good morning. Gretchen Burns Bergman, A New Path, Parents for Addiction Treatment and Healing, and Moms Unite to End the War on Drugs, strongly oppose.
- John Rodney
Person
John Rodney, Immigrant Defense Project, in strong opposition. Also on behalf of the following organizations in strong opposition: Santa Cruz Barrios Unidos, Transitions Clinic Network, Orele Buen Besino, Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity, Communities United for Restorative Youth Justice, Glide, Harbor Institute for Immigrant and Economic Justice, South Bay People Power, San Mateo County Participatory Defense Hub, National Harm Reduction Coalition, Pacifica Social Justice, San Francisco Gray Panther, San Francisco Pretrial Diversion Project, Sirac, Ventura County Clergy and Laity, United for Economic Justice, Bien Estar Human Services and Unibersidas Popular.
- Taina Vargas
Person
Taina Vargas, Initiate Justice Action in opposition.
- Alicia Benavidez
Person
Alicia Benavidez, on behalf of Drug Policy Alliance and Immigrant Legal Resource Center in strong opposition.
- Eric Henderson
Person
Eric Henderson on behalf of ACLU California Action in opposition.
- Edward Little
Person
Ed Little on behalf of Californians for Safety and Justice in opposition.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alyssa Moore, All of Us or None, in opposition.
- Morris Cox
Person
Morris Cox, LSPC, opposition.
- Barbara Chavez
Person
Barbara Chavez, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, opposition.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Seeing no opposition. Comments, questions from Committee Members? Mister Alanis, moving your hands. You were not. Okay. Assembly Member Reyes.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
I sincerely appreciate the comments from the opposition. The California Values Act, there's a purpose for it. And there are already harsh consequences for any of our immigrants who are convicted of drug charges, as is noted in the analysis, indefinite detention, permanent separation from their families and homes. So I appreciate you coming here to provide that testimony, and especially Officer Tannenbaum, I'm sorry for the loss of your partner.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Mr. Ting.
- Philip Ting
Person
I'm just going to ask the sheriff a couple questions. So you mentioned there was 200 reoffenders. Was that over a year's time?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
That was in the calendar year 2019.
- Philip Ting
Person
2019. Great. And so how many of those reoffenders were drug cases?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I don't have the exact number in front of me, but there were some that were drug cases. Yes. We can get that number to you.
- Philip Ting
Person
Were any of them fentanyl cases?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
We would have to look at that and be able to tell you that. But I think that that was from 2019. What we're talking, the concern here with fentanyl now is that, as we've seen, I demonstrated the numbers of the giant influx that we're continuing to see, and we don't want to chill that communication from happening now that we have even more fentanyl coming into our country. So what we're trying to do is give law enforcement the tool to be able to talk to a partner, federal partner, to help address this challenge that we're facing.
- Philip Ting
Person
Great question. So the opposition says you have that authority right now under drug cases. Is there a reason there?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
There are.
- Philip Ting
Person
You're saying that you're for not, you don't have that authority?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Sure. So there are some drug crimes where we are allowed to communicate. There are some where we're not. So it's not in totality all drug crimes. And I think what the Assemblywoman's bill is trying to do is just.
- Philip Ting
Person
To which drug crimes can't you communicate with?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
You know, I don't have that in front of me right now, but I know that there's.
- Philip Ting
Person
There's a lot you don't have in front of you when you're coming to testify on this very important case, right? Of the fentanyl cases, you mentioned how many fentanyl cases last year?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So last year we had 27 of our 245 people we were unable to notify ICE on 27 were rearrested for new crimes. So that included some drug crimes. Don't have specific numbers on fentanyl.
- Philip Ting
Person
How many on fentanyl?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I don't have that specific number, sir, but what I, the point is that.
- Philip Ting
Person
Excuse me, I'm asking the question, but you're here testifying about a bill the author is talking about that. This is to, you know, you talked about how there's a huge uptick in fentanyl. Very important issue.
- Philip Ting
Person
This is a Committee that's very concerned about fentanyl. We've been passing a lot of fentanyl bills. You have no data on how many fentanyl cases. I can't even get my next question, which is how many fentanyl cases are involving undocumented immigrant?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So one of the challenges, sir, is that we don't have that ability to communicate fully. And so this is going to help us communicate better with our federal partners. And I think when I say that we've gone from 104 pounds of fentanyl to 108 pounds, we've gone from 16,000 pills to 658,000 pills, this is a crisis that's coming into our community. We agree. And why wouldn't you want us to be able to talk to our federal partner about?
- Philip Ting
Person
We totally agree. We don't have any facts. So, again, of the fentanyl cases, you don't even have the number of fentanyl cases in your office. You can't even answer my question.
- Philip Ting
Person
Of those fentanyl cases, how many involved in undocumented immigrant? Which is what this bill does. If this is. We've had other bills regarding fentanyl which we have passed out because they're very important. This is, to me, a bill in search of a problem. You can't even identify the problem.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Of course it's a problem. I think it's a problem when we've had, in Orange County, over 700 people die of fentanyl in a year. So it's a problem. What we're asking for is the ability to talk to our federal partners who are engaged in the fentanyl crisis. We want the ability to talk to them about people in our custody that have drug offenses related to fentanyl.
- Philip Ting
Person
The opposition says that you have that ability. You can't even articulate which cases you have that ability and which you don't. So I think when you come back to the Committee and you tell us which cases you want us to help you with so you can have communication, I think we could have a discussion. But you don't have any information about how many fentanyl cases. You don't have any information about how many fentanyl cases involving undocumented immigrants. You don't have any information about even which cases you can or cannot discuss. So what problem are we trying to solve? Well, I don't understand this.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
We're trying to solve the inability to communicate with our federal partners about this serious threat of fentanyl. Because if you acknowledge that fentanyl is a serious threat, and you acknowledge that communication with law enforcement partners to solve our threats is important, that's what this legislation is.
- Philip Ting
Person
So you're telling me in a fentanyl case, you cannot communicate with your immigration partners with ICE?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Correct.
- Philip Ting
Person
Can I ask opposition to address that issue?
- Sean Reardon
Person
Sure. So the California Values Act already contains an express exception to the, the general prohibition against notification of ICE about somebody being in custody or transferred to ICE for conviction of a felony substance abuse offense. So for any, for any felony fentanyl conviction, law enforcement would be able to communicate.
- Philip Ting
Person
Do you want to respond to that? So you have a felony conviction, you have the ability to communicate.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And what if it's not a felony conviction?
- Philip Ting
Person
I'm sorry?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
If it's not a felony conviction, if it's a misdemeanor fentanyl conviction, or if there's not a conviction, they're arrested for a fentanyl crime if there's not a conviction. So if they're arrested for a fentanyl crime, and we want to further investigate that with our federal partners that were prevented from doing that.
- Philip Ting
Person
So if there's an arrest, they cannot communicate. There has to be a conviction?
- Sean Reardon
Person
There are also circumstances where if there's been a probable cause determination by a judge, the communication could occur even without a conviction. But our big concern about this bill is that it does, well, one of many concerns, but one of the biggest concerns is that it does allow that communication on mere, quote, allegation, to use the terminology in the proposed amendment, which could be something far short of an arrest, even.
- Sean Reardon
Person
It could be an officer engaging with somebody on the street and engaging in some sort of, whether conscious or not, pretextual profiling that results in ICE being brought in and consequences flowing from that. So that's one set of concerns. And the other, of course, is that as you're hearing, there's a desire by law enforcement potentially to communicate, even in cases where there's not a conviction at all, and the state simply shouldn't countenance that kind of high consequence.
- Sean Reardon
Person
Collaboration with ICE, when the whole thrust of the Values Act, which has protected so many families and kept so many California families together, is to prevent that kind of thing from happening.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Can you kind of wrap it up, Mr. Ting?
- Philip Ting
Person
Yeah, no, I appreciate that. I mean, to me, I think it's clear there's a really lack of information and data. I'm not really understanding the connection between the bill and the situation around fentanyl. So at this point, I can't vote for this bill.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Mr. Alanis, Vice Chair.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. So, opposition, you're saying that there's ways that law enforcement can communicate if a judge is involved. At what point and stage the case does a judge get involved? Because I know there's no judge out on the streets with us when we're trying to investigate a crime. So I think you're referring to like, into the court system already. Is that what you're getting at?
- Sean Reardon
Person
Right, yeah. I mean, law requires that somebody be promptly brought to court if they've been arrested or if for some reason it's a citation situation, they of course have to appear for court.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay. But I think this bill, what this bill is addressing is the investigative portion. Before we get to that part, if you can comment on that for Orange County.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Sure. So, you know, as part of an investigation, it's important to be able to talk to our federal partners. If there's a nexus there, if there's a nexus to a local law enforcement partner, we talk to our local law enforcement partner. And that's really when I talk about. And sir, when we're talking about communication with our partners, this is the principle that goes all the way back to prior to 911, when people weren't talking to each other and there was barriers and walls to communication, barriers like SB 54, where we're unable to connect the dots. So we are very follow the law, the state law.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
We're very closely. That's so important to us. So law enforcement is always going to err on the side of caution when it comes to the law. So if we think we're going to violate SB 54, we don't talk to our partners. And so this will help us do that as we're investigating these fentanyl cases.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay, thank you. And one last question. As far as felony fentanyl convictions were brought up, do you guys have any felony convictions on fentanyl?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
We have. I don't have the numbers specific to those that we have communicated with ICE on, but we as an agency do communicate with ICE on all those charges where we're allowed to communicate with ICE.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay, thank you. And I'm sure some of that will be addressed in closing.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Just as a big picture, you know, this is more than fentanyl in the bill. It's other entities that we think criminal activity that would be applicable in this. So it's just not just fentanyl, but just on fentanyl, there's several bills today that we're going to pass, several next week on the docket, several have passed.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
So it's not like we're not addressing this big issue that we acknowledge. You know, this is somewhat of an immigration issue. I think the Legislature has stepped up the last few years and said that's the responsibility of the Federal Government. Our job here in California is state law enforcement. That's what we want to focus on. So I concur with Mr. Ting. I don't think this is the approach that we want to go today with that. Do we have a motion? Yeah, we have a motion. A second. Would you like to close?
- Kate Sanchez
Legislator
Sure. Respectfully, I don't believe this is an anti-immigrant bill at all. It's anti-fentanyl. To start. This bill simply is a referendum on the sanctuary state policy as it relates to fentanyl dealers. I don't believe current law is working, and I believe we need to give law enforcement more tools to protect our California communities. AB 2209 is a choice. It's a choice between fixing our fentanyl crisis or doing nothing. It's a choice of either protecting innocent lives or protecting the livelihoods of criminal cartel members. So I asked my colleagues today, will you vote to protect innocent lives or end the fentanyl crisis?
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 2209 by seminar Sanchez. The motion is do pass to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Kevin McCarty
Person
That measure fails. Next author, Mr. Berman. A motion and second for reconsideration? Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On reconsideration for AB 2209. [Roll Call] That motion fails.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Mr. Berman, please proceed.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair and colleagues. We're going to start with AB 1831. AB 1831 would modernize our laws to ensure that AI-generated sexually explicit images of children are illegal to possess, distribute, and create. With the rapid advancement of AI, this technology is being used to create highly realistic images of child sexual abuse, which can be virtually indistinguishable from a real child.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
The creation of these AI-generated images victimizes thousands of children because an AI program must first learn what these images look like by using thousands of real images of children on the Internet. Law enforcement in California are catching people with AI-generated sexually explicit images of children, but are not able to prosecute those people because the current loopholes in our laws. This is unacceptable.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
The heinous crime of possessing, creating, and distributing sexually obscene images of children must be illegal, no matter if it is AI-generated or not. Therefore, it's critical we act quickly to stop child predators from abusing AI to perpetuate child exploitation. We must ensure that our laws are keeping up with this emerging technology to protect children in California from this abuse. Here with me is Erik Nasarenko, the District Attorney of Ventura County, as well as Kaylin Hayman, who is a survivor and victim advocate from Ventura County. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. You have five minutes combined.
- Erik Nasarenko
Person
Good morning, Chair McCarty, Members of the Assembly Public Safety. Good to be before you again, and thanks to your staff as well as ours. Terry Dobrosky and Rikole Kelly of the Ventura County DA's Office. I want to introduce a crime survivor and victim advocate, Kaylin Hayman. As Assembly Member Berman just mentioned, she was victimized by computer-generated software. Specifically, her face as a child actress was imposed upon adults who were doing sex acts.
- Erik Nasarenko
Person
She bravely and courageously testified against the child predator. He was convicted in federal court, but as Assembly Member Berman just stated, we do not have currently a companion statute here in California that would have punished that type of conduct, which is why I want to thank and applaud Assembly Member Berman for introducing this legislation. Kaylin.
- Kaylin Hayman
Person
Thank you, Chair and Members. My name is Kaylin, and I am a 16-year-old girl born and raised in California. I was lucky enough to be a series regular on Disney Channel's Just Roll With It from the ages ten to 13. Unfortunately, the 12-year-old version of myself became a victim of morph child pornography.
- Kaylin Hayman
Person
On July 16th, 2023, the living shield protecting my innocence broke when I got a phone call from the FBI saying that a man was in possession of images that were morphed to have my face on someone else's body participating in sexual acts. I felt violated and disgusted to think about the fact that grown men see me in such a horrendous manner. While speaking about this topic is daunting, I know deep down I need to share my voice.
- Kaylin Hayman
Person
I need to bring awareness and justice to those in my position. This is not only affecting children in the public eye, but also normal kids simply existing. These cases also affect one's social life as well as being detrimental to mental health. It truly gives the feeling of being alone. But to all other victims, I am living proof that you are not alone.
- Kaylin Hayman
Person
Since my victimization, it is a constant thought that every man has malicious intent against me because I feel a lack of protection in my everyday life. These circumstances have made me feel uneasy and angry. The fact that grown adults think that this is right is appalling and is even worse that those are the people setting examples for young children. The children growing up in this world are being exposed to harmful material, but that can be stopped.
- Kaylin Hayman
Person
There is development going in a negative direction, but we can still change the ending. Not only is this going to help children all over the world, but it will protect their inner peace and innocence. California is a state with so much power and this is an opportunity arising for positive growth. This state is also home to the base of the entertainment industry. This law would protect minors in the industry from being sexually exploited like they have been for decades. No more kids would have to be susceptible to the feeling that they were not protected. Respectfully, I ask that you please support AB 1831.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Next.
- Randy Perry
Person
Mr. Chairman and Members, Randy Perry, on behalf of California Association of Highway Patrol and PORAC, in support.
- Elizabeth Espinoza
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members. Elizabeth Espinoza, here on behalf of the Ventura County Board of Supervisors, in support. Thank you.
- Shane Gusman
Person
Good morning. Shane Gusman, on behalf of SAG-AFTRA, in support, and a co-sponsor.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
Dylan Hoffman, on behalf of TechNet, in strong support.
- Heather Timmins
Person
Investigator Heather Timmins, on behalf of the Orange County Sheriff's Department. Strong support.
- Kimberly Stone
Person
Kim Stone, Stone Advocacy, on behalf of the Children's Advocacy Institute, one of the co-sponsors in support.
- Ryan Schumer
Person
Ryan Schumer with the Riverside Sheriff's Association and the other POAs and DSAs, in support. Thank you.
- Megan Holtman
Person
Meg Holtman, California District Attorneys Association, in support.
- Jonathan Feldman
Person
Chair and Members, Jonathan Feldman, California Police Chiefs Association. Support.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Cory Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriffs' Association. Support.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. We have opposition. Please come forward.
- Mica Doctoroff
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members. Mica Doctoroff, on behalf of the ACLU of California. We've opposed this bill unless amended. We've had had good conversations with the author's office. Really appreciate his willingness to engage with us, and we look forward to continuing the conversation.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Questions or comments from Committee Members? Mr. Lackey. We have a motion and a second. Mr. Ting and Mr. Zbur.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah, I would just like to just briefly thank the witness for such a display of courage. This is very, very difficult, and we appreciate that. We appreciate your willingness to be here and be part of our process, and I am proud to be a co-author and I thank the author also because this is really a crass, vile offense that deserves attention, and I'm thankful we're giving it that, so thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yes. Mr. Alanis.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I'd also like to echo this great job as a prior Crimes Against Children's detective. This one touches me right here, so I'd also like to be a co-author if possible.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Thank you very much.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. We have a motion and a second. No more questions. Mr. Berman, you may close.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I want to thank Dan Azarenko for bringing this issue to us. I honestly couldn't believe people did this when I first heard about it, and then, as we learned more information about how often this happens and how available these images are, especially on the dark web, it's terrifying.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
And then I absolutely want to thank Kaylin for your bravery, for your courage, for leaning into the advocacy process to make sure that this doesn't happen to more young people in the future. So, really appreciate you stepping up and sharing the absolutely awful experience that you went through that nobody should have to. So thank you very much. Thank you to colleagues. Respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay. Thank you. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 1831 by Assembly Member Berman, the motion is 'do pass to the Privacy and Consumer Protection Committee.' [Roll Call].
- Kevin McCarty
Person
That measure passes. Thank you. Next measure, item number 29.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Are you gonna go present your bill?
- Kevin McCarty
Person
3209.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
You wanna do it right now? Do you wanna go right now? Yeah, I'm gonna duck out. I'll come back to that next bill.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yes. No worries.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
I'm gonna go back to my Committee. Thanks.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay. Assembly Member Soria. AB 1960. Please begin.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
Ready? Okay. Good morning, Chair and Members. AB 1960 restores an important tool for law enforcement to combat retail theft and keep our communities safe. As you all may recall, Members, in January this year, the Governor, Governor Newsom, delivered to us, the Legislature, an urgent call to action to send him legislation that cracks down on property crime.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
The Governor, in no uncertain terms, called for the Legislature to send him new laws that expand criminal penalties to hold criminals accountable, bolster police and prosecutor tools to combat theft, and take down suspects who profit from smash and grabs, retail theft, and car burglaries. We received that message loud and clear, and that's what we are here today to present, AB 1960, which checks all the boxes. It expands criminal penalties for theft. It bolsters the police and prosecutor tools to combat theft in our communities.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
And it helps take those down who profit from smash and grabs and retail theft. Specifically, the bill reinstates, which was previously law for 40 years, a tiered sentencing enhancement system. If the value of the stolen and damaged property is exceptionally high, this bill ensures the punishment actually matches the crime and holds individuals who steal large amounts accountable. Enhanced penalties to hold accountable those who take advantage of and victimize their neighbors will deter others from following the same path and harming our communities.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
Just a few weeks ago, actually, in Fresno, which is one of the counties that I represent, at the shopping center right in Central Fresno, Fig Garden, for those of you, of you that know that community. A suspect actually backed his truck through the doors, breaking the windows and the doors of a commercial retail space, not only stealing a lot of the merchandise, but, obviously, destroying a lot of property in this particular commercial establishment.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
Thank God there were no employees or, you know, shoppers present at the time. But the type of damage and that this individual cost this retail business was not the first time. Actually, this has happened a couple times to the same retail business. And so these are the types of instances that we are trying to prevent and deter. And we know that here in the State of California, we need greater accountability, and that's what AB 1960 does.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
Our communities across the State of California, not just in the Central Valley, are, you know, dealing with these issues and asking us to bring solutions forward. Crime, especially retail theft, is not only a problem in my district, but across the State of California. And so today, this bill helps to address that issue and addresses it with urgency and action.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
I also will say that I'm proud that my bill is part of the legislative package to combat retail theft that is led by Speaker Rivas and Assembly Member Rick Zbur. I want to thank them for the incredible work that they've spent over the last few months with many of us talking to the stakeholders.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
Like many of the retailers, I've spent a lot of time with my local community with our district attorneys and our law enforcement officials to try to figure out how we can combat this issue that many of our businesses are confronting and as well as is impacting many of the employees and even customers when they're visiting some of these establishments. Here today with me to testify in support of the bill is Tom Pfeiff, the Merced County Chief District Attorney, and I also have Rachel Michelin, President, CEO of the California Retailers Association.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Please begin.
- Tom Pfeiff
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chair and Members. My name is Tom Pfeiff. I'm a Chief Deputy District Attorney at the Merced County District Attorney's Office. I'm here today in support of AB 1960 by Assembly Member Soria and would like to thank her for her leadership on this issue. This bill would reenact the previously sunset statute providing enhanced penalties when an individual takes or destroys property during the commission of a felony when the value of the property is exceptionally high.
- Tom Pfeiff
Person
Penal Code Section 12022.6 was enacted over 40 years ago and was continually renewed by the Legislature until it sunset on January 1, 2018. This enhancement is critical to combating retail theft, smash and grabs that have been increasing at an alarming rate. According to data from the Public Policy Institute of California, commercial shoplifting increased by 28.7% in 2022 alone, commercial burglary saw an increase of 5.8%, while commercial robbery rose by 9%. The damage in many of these cases is well over $50,000.
- Tom Pfeiff
Person
Penal Code Section 12022.6 imposes penalty enhancements that punish these acts and help deter criminals from causing significant damage during the commission or attempted commission of a felony. The excessive takings enhancement are also extremely important in the prosecution of white collar and elder abuse crime in California. Many white collar crimes are especially difficult to prosecute because the offenders have sophisticated means to conceal their activities.
- Tom Pfeiff
Person
We have a number of cases in our county of theft of residences, businesses, and embezzlement from elderly people where the loss has been well over $100,000. Without these enhancements, the penalties for the theft and destruction of property over a million dollars is the same is the same as the theft of property worth $951. An enhancement is needed for a crime that involves the intentional taking, damage, or destruction of property valued over $50,000 during the commission or attempted commission of a felony. For these reasons, I respectfully ask for an aye vote on AB 1960 today. Thank you for your time.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Two minutes left.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
Great. Chairman McCarty, Members of the Public Safety Committee. Across the state, California consumers have seen products locked up or, in some cases, products not even sold in stores. They have seen retail theft happen before their own eyes. Everyone seems to have a retail theft store story. What's worse, the level of violence we are seeing and the destruction of property criminals are using. There are hundreds of videos of retail stores, large and small, being destroyed while thieves run out of the stores with stolen products.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
AB 1960 goes after these egregious acts. Individuals who are in the commission or attempted commission of a felony, or a person who is receiving stolen property charged as a felony, they know they are engaging in criminal behavior and, as such, should be held accountable with enhanced consequences.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
This bill sends a clear message that this type of violent behavior will no longer be tolerated in California and signals that this Legislature will put the safety of our communities and that of law abiding Californians above those who choose to commit crimes that not only put our employees and customers at risk, but also destroy property and the livelihoods of businesses across the state state. This bill builds on several other legislative proposals as part of the Assembly Retail Theft Package that, taken comprehensively, could have meaningful impacts on deterring the growing threat of retail theft and organized retail crime in California, and sends a signal that individuals who damage or destroy property in the commission or attempted commission of a felony will face new sentencing enhancements in California. For those reasons, I request your aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Others in support, please come forward.
- Randy Perry
Person
Randy Perry on behalf of PORAC in support.
- Brenda Bass
Person
Good morning. Brenda Bass, California Chamber of Commerce, in support.
- Daniel Conway
Person
Good morning. Daniel Conway, California Grocers, in support.
- Skyler Wonnacott
Person
Chair and Members, Skyler Wonnacott on behalf of the California Business Properties Association in support.
- Chris Micheli
Person
Good morning, Mr. Chairman. Chris Micheli on behalf of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce in support of the bill.
- Jolena Voorhis
Person
Mr. Chair and Members, Jolena Voorhis on behalf of League of California Cities in support.
- Jack Yanos
Person
Mr. Chair and Members, Jack Yanos on behalf of the California Fuels and Convenience Alliance in support.
- Julian Canete
Person
Mr. Chairman, Julian Cañete on behalf of California Hispanic Chambers of Commerce in support.
- Jonathan Feldman
Person
Chair and Members, Jonathan Feldman, California Police Chiefs Association, in support.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Ryan Sherman with the Riverside Sheriff's Association the other POAs DSAs in support. Thank you.
- Megan Holtman
Person
Meg Holtman and California District Attorneys Association in support
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
Bradley Schoenleben, Orange County District Attorney's Office, full support.
- Candice Chung
Person
Candice Chung on behalf of Attorney General Rob Bonta in support.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Cory Salzillo on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association in support.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Opposition, please come forward.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
All right. You have five minutes between your panel.
- Claire Simonich
Person
Thank you. Good morning. My name is Claire Simonich. I'm the Associate Director at Vera California which advances policies to promote community safety and mass incarceration and advance racial justice. AB 1960 would add sentencing enhancements of four years or more in prison for damaging property in the commission of any felony. Although the Bill purports to address organized retail theft, or so-called smash-and-grab robberies, its reach extends far beyond retail theft to cover property damage in the commission of any felony.
- Claire Simonich
Person
And the Bill is a sharp swerve away from the Legislature's recent progress in reducing sentencing enhancements and reaches again for an old, ineffective playbook. I think that's an important point about this Bill. It's not a new bill. In just 2018, the Legislature determined that a nearly identical but less harsh version of this law should sunset.
- Claire Simonich
Person
And since then, including with landmark legislation in 2021, this Legislature has taken multiple steps to recognize that sentencing enhancements have a detrimental effect on overcrowding our prisons and jails and increasing racial disparities. This Bill would reverse course on some of these important gains. Further, despite years of inflation since the 2008 Bill that set prior limits on property damage punishments, this Bill would set the threshold $15,000 lower than that was what was in effect before with inflation.
- Claire Simonich
Person
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, this Bill should set the threshold for damage at $95,000 if we're talking about 2008 dollars. The Bill also risks roping in innocent or accidental conduct by omitting the prior requirement in the last Bill that damage be intentional. Evidence has shown that sentencing enhancements are ineffective at deterring crime.
- Claire Simonich
Person
Study after study has shown this, and the Legislature has significantly better tools at hand to address retail theft, including so-called smash and grab robberies, things like regulating online marketplaces and supporting retail workers by enhancing pay and mandating increased staffing. We urge a no vote on this Bill. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Next witness.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel on behalf of Initiate Justice. Enhancements are something we have seen over and over again to be ineffective. This Bill is not about whether or not people should be punished for illegal conduct, but about how long and how hard, while we're also simultaneously having conversations in the State of California about the need to continue to decrease our prison population. It costs over $130,000 a year to incarcerate one person in our prison system.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
This is the kind of policy that led to an explosion in our prison population and mass incarceration. We're still trying to keep it in check so that we are not in violation of the United States Constitution of cruel and unusual punishment. And so this is exactly the kind of thing that will put us back into that territory without any proof at all that it will meaningfully deter any conduct.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
In part because, as is pointed out in the same thing that is cited in every analysis about enhancements, this Department of Justice report, which I highly recommend everybody take a look at the things that would be required for an individual to know in order to actually be deterred by something like a sentence. Enhancement is just not in the realm of reality of what people are actually thinking about before they commit crimes.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
So for all of those reasons, and because we believe that it will cost the State of California a lot of money and do more harm than good in the process, we urge your no vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Others in opposition, please come forward. State your position only.
- Roxanna Gonzalez
Person
Roxanna Gonzalez, behalf of Initiate Justice Action, opposed.
- Gretchen Bergman
Person
Gretchen Burns Bergman, A New PATH, Parents for Addiction Treatment and Healing, oppose.
- Olivia Gleason
Person
Olivia Gleason, on behalf of Californians United for a Responsible Budget, strongly oppose.
- Matt Sotorosen
Person
Matt Sotorosen of the California Public Defenders Association. We oppose.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, San Francisco Public Defender's Office, in opposition.
- Eric Henderson
Person
Eric Henderson, on behalf of ACLU California Action, in opposition.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alyssa Moore, All of Us or None, in opposition.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox, LSBC, opposition.
- Barbara Chavez
Person
Barbara Chavez, on behalf of the Ella Baker Center. We oppose.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Questions or comments from Committee Members? Assembly Member Wilson.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Thank you to the author for your intent and being a part of the greater coalition to deal with this particular issues. I know opposition brought up some concerns about sentence enhancement, and I think quite a few of us on the Committee share those just in general. One concern I have, and I wonder if you'll address it today, is so previously, and I think your witnesses provided this as a part of the testimony, that the Legislature had regularly reviewed this particular legislation.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And part of it, as I understand it, had to do with the dollar amounts as well. So enforcing a review period, basically to consider whether those thresholds were sufficient enough, and so there's no adjustment to that. I think the staff analysis, the Committee analysis showed that the amounts that were equivalent from 2018 to today would be a much higher threshold. But your Bill goes lower than even what 2018 numbers would be today.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And since it doesn't include the sunset provision, there's no opportunity to have the Legislature automatically review whether that's relevant or not, which is important because we exist today. But we have term limits. We're not going to be here later. And so I just wonder why, why take out the sunset and leave the dollar amount static? They're lower. So that means every single year, in theory, the threshold is getting lower and lower and expanding the number of people that would be impacted by this. Thank you.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
Thank you, Assemblywoman Wilson, for that point and for your question. We're happy to have the conversation if, you know, having a sunset and allowing us to come back and review this to make sure that it is working. I'm happy to work through that with, with the Committee. In terms of the threshold, I think that for us, as we were making a determination where we should land, we were looking and having, having conversations with a variety of stakeholders.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
And I will tell you, I heard from many of the kind of small businesses that I've been talking, that have talking to, that have been victimized. The threshold is even a little bit lower. But we were trying to reach a middle ground and, you know, and present something that will be helpful and will be a tool to our law enforcement officials to go after folks. I feel that it is important that the punishment does meet the crime and what is happening in our communities.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
I just mentioned in Fresno just three weeks ago, you know, people busting in with cars and breaking doors and windows, that's not gonna be cheap to replace. And so for me, I think it's important to make sure that those folks that are being impacted, that are smaller businesses that may not be able to afford, also feel like they have a sense of justice when people are being held accountable.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
So be happy to work with the Committee and with you guys to figure out an appropriate timeline of review.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Thank you. I appreciate that. Given that this is a part of greater coalition, I'll support the Bill today, but I do think that a sunset would be appropriate, personally, especially because in 2018, the legislatures had the mindset that enhancements don't work even in 2024. We find that the overall view of the Legislature's enhancements, you know, don't deter, they don't do what we're supposed to.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And so if we are, as a greater coalition, determining that we need to have stronger laws as it relates to, you know, property crime, we may find that that's needed now, but there needs to be an opportunity to reevaluate that and not be in perpetuity. So I would recommend putting in some type of sunset. But given, given that it's part of a greater coalition of supporting stronger laws related to property crime, I will support it today.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay. Assembly Member Ting.
- Philip Ting
Person
Yeah, I think Assembly Member Wilson sort of stole all, most of my thoughts, so I would agree with her on all points. I think I did have a question regarding the intent language, because it seems like the intent language was not as narrow as the previous law. And I did want to understand around the felony language because it seemed that with the felony language in the previous law, there was more specificity. So that even though it didn't say.
- Philip Ting
Person
It didn't say only theft, it sort of inferred that it was really inferring to theft. So I was just curious if you could address those, those two issues.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yeah, if I may?
- Philip Ting
Person
Please. Absolutely
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I'd be happy to. Sure. So theft is all kinds of theft, in particular is a specific intent crime. So even though the enhancement is based on a number, the prosecutor still has to prove the specific intent to steal, in particular on theft crimes beyond a reasonable doubt.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And even in other crimes like vandalism or other property crimes, it's still a general intent crime. We have to prove intent. These are not strict liability offenses like a speeding ticket, just because you do it, even if you didn't intend to, it's still against the law. We do have to prove intent.
- Philip Ting
Person
But I guess. Was there a reason why you broadened the intent language from the previous law?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Well, I. I don't believe with respect to the dollar amounts.
- Philip Ting
Person
Not the dollar amount, just the language around intent.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yeah. Would you please? No, no, thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I don't know what. Do you know what section you're looking at?
- Philip Ting
Person
I don't have my glasses.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And I apologize.
- Philip Ting
Person
Well, this is a previous law. It was section 12022.6.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I just have the current Bill.
- Philip Ting
Person
Yeah, yeah, sorry. It was just comparing the Bill from the.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yeah, I mean, I would just, you know, an underlying. The underlying offense. We still have to prove the intent. So I'm not sure what the difference is between the old 12022.6 and the current version, but. But we still have to prove intent.
- Philip Ting
Person
Got it. And I understand regarding just the felony. I think in the previous. In the previous law, there actually was specificity around theft.
- Philip Ting
Person
So that it was sort of an understanding that it really was around theft versus. This is just broad felony language.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
It is broader. And I think the idea for that is it's just really kind of, as Assembly Member Soria indicated, it's sort of a punishment fits the crime types of situation. Sometimes a theft of $951 is a lot different, or can be than a theft of 50,000 or a million or $20 million.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And sometimes, and I noted the opposition's comment that, well, sometimes it's inadvertent, you know, the damages or the amounts, but sometimes it's not. And judges still have the opportunity to take, take into account all of those things when it comes to sentencing. They have a right to, the judges have the discretion to dismiss these enhancements or to adjust them appropriately. So I think part of the concern in this whole area we're talking about is just there's no increased punishment for increased damage.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And from our perspective, perspective, we're trying to hold people accountable and more accountable for more serious crimes and more serious damages. And we want the people in our community to feel like the justice system is holding people accountable.
- Philip Ting
Person
Got it. Yeah.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
I think they wanted to respond, the opposition, briefly.
- Philip Ting
Person
Sure.
- Claire Simonich
Person
Thank you. I'll be brief. I have the language from the prior bill. So the 2018 Bill included a provision that the damage or attempted damage had to be with the intent to cause that taking, damage, or destruction. And I think this is an important point because it could loop in conduct that occurs in any felony that causes damage, even if that damage was not intentional.
- Claire Simonich
Person
So say, for example, somebody was doing reckless driving, and that's a felony that would loop in any damage as a result of that, and add the sentencing enhancement on top, even if that damage was not intentional, even if the damage itself was not reckless. So the sentencing enhancement itself is strict liability, even if the underlying offense is not, which I think is an important point.
- Claire Simonich
Person
And then as to the discretionary point and judges' discretion, certainly we appreciate that SB 81 has added some discretion into the mix, but this Bill does say shall, and I think that may sow some confusion for courts who are trying to balance those two things.
- Philip Ting
Person
Got it. So I think I share a lot of the concerns that my colleague from Suisun mentioned. It seems like you have the votes to get out of Committee. I'm gonna lay off today in hopes that you can kind of address some of those so that I could vote for it on the floor.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. One more question.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
Okay.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Yeah. And just following up onto that, noting what the opposition noted, is that I think that intent language is extremely important just because there's a lot of crimes that aren't intentional, that even our young people get involved in, and that we don't want that sentencing opinion enhancement on and to the point the opposition made in regard to shall versus may. Being a local leader, we dealt with that a lot. Shall versus may.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And so because the word may is not there, and the word is shall, that does not give discretion. And so if you so, I would say one or the other. I'd prefer both, not only the intent plus may, but if you're going to pick one I would say taking out the shall and saying may would allow the judge truly to have discretion. But I'll be supporting. And since we don't have a lot of folks in here, I'll make the motion.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
We have a motion and a second. And just the second point of clarification is your desire to have some sunset in there.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
Yes. Yes. Yeah. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
So with that, you may close.
- Esmeralda Soria
Legislator
Awesome. Thank you, Mister Chairman. And I appreciate, obviously my colleagues, you know, the points that you guys raised, they're well taken. I will definitely be working with you guys moving forward to address some of those technicalities and then also looking at a sunset that is appropriate for review. Happy to do that. So thank you again for the time and I ask for your aye support.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 1960 by Assembly Member Soria. The motion is do passed to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll call]
- Kevin McCarty
Person
That bill is on call. Next, we have Mr. Reggie Jones-Sawyer. You have two bills, Mr. Chair Emeritus. First, we'll start with Item Number Four: AB 1802.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Okey-dokey. Good morning, Chair and Members. I present AB 1802, which will eliminate the sunsets on the crime of organized retail theft and the operation of California Highway Patrol Property Crimes Task Force. In 2017, I authored AB 1065, which created the crime of organized retail theft. The bill was carefully crafted to specifically target organized crime rings.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
AB 1065 also established the California Highway Patrol Property Crimes Task Force, which to date has recovered over 30 million in stolen goods. This year, I've offered AB 1802 to eliminate the sunset from my original bill and make the crime of organized retail theft and the CHP Task Force permanent tools available to law enforcement in California.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
This will ensure that law enforcement has the necessary means to arrest and prosecute the organized crime rings that continue to disrupt life in the Golden State. With me to testify in support of the bill is Bill Felizzatto, on behalf of of the bill sponsor, Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yes. Please proceed.
- Dan Felizzato
Person
Mr. Chairman and Members, Dan Felizzatto, on behalf of the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office. We're happy to sponsor AB 1802. As the Assemblyman said, AB 1802 will remove the sunset on California's organized retail theft statute. Everybody realizes that organized retail theft is a growing problem, not only in California, but across the country.
- Dan Felizzato
Person
Since the Covid pandemic, organized retail theft has increased 26 percent nationwide. We've all seen videos of high-end stores--Neiman Marcus, Saks Fifth Avenue--being victimized by organized retail theft rings, but in reality, over 80 percent of these thefts occur at smaller neighborhood stores that have a much greater impact on all Californians. Organized retail theft makes our citizens feel unsafe when they're shopping. It also drives up the cost of goods, and coupled with inflation, that is hugely problematic.
- Dan Felizzato
Person
We also have to worry about the fact that many retail establishments are closing their doors in part because of organized retail theft. This will have a huge impact on our neighborhoods when it's your local pharmacy that gets closed and you now have to make a much greater distance to travel to get everyday goods that is needed. In Los Angeles County last year, our office filed over 500 counts of organized retail theft, 434 felony filings, and 107 misdemeanor filings.
- Dan Felizzato
Person
This law is one of the main tools that we have today to combat organized retail theft, and for that reason, we believe that it's time that the sunset be removed and this become a permanent part of our efforts to combat retail theft in California.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Others in support, please come forward.
- Ethan Nagler
Person
Ethan Nagler, on behalf of the City of Carlsbad, in support.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
Dylan Hoffman, on behalf of TechNet, in support.
- Brenda Bass
Person
Brenda Bass, California Chamber of Commerce, in support.
- Chris Micheli
Person
Mr. Chairman, Chris Micheli, on behalf of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce, in support.
- Danielle Sanchez
Person
Danielle Sanchez with the Chief Probation Officers of California, in support.
- Ryan Allain
Person
Ryan Allain, on behalf of the California Retailers Association, in support.
- Jack Yanos
Person
Jack Yanos, on behalf of the California Fuels and Convenience Alliance, in support.
- Jolena Voorhis
Person
Jolena Voorhis, on behalf of the League of California Cities, in support.
- Natalie Boust
Person
Natalie Boust with the California Business Roundtable, in support.
- Daniel Conway
Person
Daniel Conway, California Grocers, in support.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Ryan Sherman with the Riverside Sheriffs' Association and the other law enforcement associations I represent, in support.
- Candice Chung
Person
Candice Chung from the California Attorney General's Office, in support.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Do we have opposition? Please come forward. Seeing none, questions or comments from Committee Members? Mr. Lackey.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah. I'd just like to congratulate the author for allowing this successful effort to continue beyond a sunset date. It should be commended that we're trying to establish permanence for success. So thank you. Oh, and I want to be a co-author.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Yes.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Motion and a second? Motion a second, Mr. Lackey and Mr. Ting. Thank you, Mr. Jones-Sawyer, and I know this is your work and I think it's appropriate that we're finishing this with you back here today to continue this effort. So you may close.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I don't want to mess it up. This is my first Lackey co-author bill, so I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yes, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 1802 by Assembly Member Jones-Sawyer, the motion is 'do pass to the Appropriations Committee.' [Roll Call]. Measure's on call.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Call you one more vote. Your next item, Mister Jones Sawyer, is item number 15. AB 2064.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
Thank you. Good morning chair Members. I present AB 2064 which will establish the Community Violence Interdiction grant program. This Bill is among the 14 priority Bill moved and seconded identified by the California Black Caucus as part of reparations package.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
This Bill would be administered by the California Health and Human Services Agency, which will ensure funding for the community driven solutions to increase violence in our schools and neighborhoods as opposed to the continuation of incarcerations. These funds would be secured through an appropriation of the savings from any future prison closure within the state. By using funds for these preventative programs, we reduce incarceration even further and focus on finding solutions to crime beyond the incarceration of most vulnerable, underserved communities.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
AB 2064 allows for a true rehabilitation through putting an emphasis on the community and the victim impacted, gives them voice and reduces monetary expenditures accrued on imprisonment which has not been shown to reduce recidivism. Respectfully ask for your. aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Witnesses in support
- Ignacio Hernandez
Person
Ignacio Hernandez on behalf of the California Attorneys for Criminal Justice in support
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
... for the Greater Sacramento Urban League. In support.
- Taina Vargas-Edmond
Person
Taina Vargas Initiate Justice Action in support
- Margo George
Person
Margo George on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association. In support. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay, thank you. Do we have opposition to this Bill? Seeing no opposition. Questions or comments from Committee Members? Seeing none. We have a motion. A second. You may close.
- Reginald Byron Jones-Sawyer
Person
I respectfully ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Kevin McCarty
Person
You need one more vote. Mr. Berman, you're back.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
I'm still a little thrown off by all the business and law enforcement support for that Jones-Sawyer bill, but we're going to move on. Mr. Chair and colleagues, AB 3209 would provide a new enforcement tool that will keep stores and workers safe from the rise of retail crime. In recent years, rates of retail theft and robbery have risen in California and this affects both our communities and our businesses.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
AB 3209 would not only address retail theft, but also the issues of vandalism within the stores and assaults on the employees working in retail. It would authorize a court to impose a retail crime restraining order for up to two years for theft, vandalism, or battery on an employee within the store.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Importantly, AB 3209 would require the court to consider whether the individual resides in a food desert where the affected store is the only location for necessities and encourages diversion programs for any violation of the restraining order. Therefore, this bill strikes a balance between providing a necessary enforcement tool to keep stores, customers, and workers safe while not perpetuating the underlying causes of retail theft, such as poverty.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
I want to clarify that the intent of this bill is to authorize a court to impose a restraining order following two or more citations, not arrests, which is the current language. There was a drafting error by Legislative Council, but I will work with Committee and correct this error at the next opportunity. Here with me is Rachel Michelin with the California Retailers Association and Josh Callery-Coyne with downtown San Diego Partnership.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Please begin.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
Thank you, Chairman McCarty, Members of the Public Safety Committee. The safety of retail employees and customers is our top priority and too often retail employees or customers have been put in harm's way due to repeat retail theft offenders. AB 3209 would provide a new enforcement tool that will keep stores and workers safe from repeated retail criminal activity.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
AB 3209 would authorize a court, when sentencing a person for an offense involving theft from a retailer, vandalism of a retail establishment, or battery of a retail employee, to issue a criminal protective order prohibiting a person from entering the retail establishment, including any parking lots or other franchise or chain locations of the retailer. Retail theft has become an increasingly prevalent problem across California, with detrimental effects on both local businesses and customers.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
The significant losses incurred by retailers due to theft not only threaten their financial stability, but also jeopardizes their ability to provide essential goods and services to the communities they serve. Moreover, the rise in organized retail crime has led to safety concerns for both employees and customers, further aggregating the problem. The introduction of the retail theft restraining order presents a proactive and effective approach to combating this growing issue.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
By enabling retailers to obtain civil restraining orders against habitual offenders, this legislation empowers businesses to protect themselves and deter potential thieves from engaging in criminal activities. Additionally, the restraining orders provide law enforcement with valuable tools to address repeat offenders, disrupt organized retail crime networks, and enhance public safety. Furthermore, the implementation of the restraining orders offers a balanced solution that upholds the rights of both retailers and individuals while holding accountable those who repeatedly engage in criminal behavior.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
By targeting habitual offenders and providing avenues for rehabilitation and support, this legislation not only addresses the symptoms of retail thefts, but also tackles the underlying issues contributing to criminal behavior. The California Retailers Association urges the support of AB 3209 and the establishment of the retail theft restaining orders. By doing so, we can take meaningful steps towards safeguarding our local businesses, protecting the livelihoods of hardworking employees, and promote a safer and more prosperous retail shopping environment for all.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
This bill builds on a number of legislative proposals as part of the retail theft package, taken comprehensively, provides meaningful impacts on stopping the growing theft of retail theft and organized retail crime, and sends a signal that the conversation around the issue of holding repeat offenders accountable for their current behavior is changing.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
AB 3209 illustrates that the safety of retail employees is an important part of the Assembly retail theft package and will help ensure the retail environment is safe for both our employees and customers in the store. For those reasons, I ask for your aye vote.
- Josh Callery-Coyne
Person
Thank you. Good morning, Committee Chair McCarty and Members of the Public Safety Committee. My name is Josh Callery-Coyne and I'm Vice President of Policy and Civic Engagement with the Downtown San Diego Partnership and here on behalf of the California Downtown Association. The California Downtown Association represents thousands of diverse businesses throughout California. CDA's primary purpose is to formulate solutions and mutually shared problems while being committed to long term preservation of our urban centers.
- Josh Callery-Coyne
Person
We want to thank Assembly Member Berman and we are here today in full support of AB 3209. In San Diego, the downtown San Diego Partnership maintains 275 blocks of property based business improvement districts, which is the property owner assessed services that provide enhanced safety and janitorial services above and beyond what the city provides.
- Josh Callery-Coyne
Person
I'm here to reiterate the repetitive story that our clean and safe teams see and hear on a daily basis, which is retail establishments and small business owners in and around our urban centers are tired. They are tired of seeing and dealing with the same individuals disrupting and doing harm to their storefronts, businesses, their communities, and their families' livelihoods.
- Josh Callery-Coyne
Person
While our urban centers continue to be places where innovation, arts, culture, commerce, and creativity thrive, business owners need to know that lawmakers and advocates have exhausted all options to hold repeat bad actors accountable. And they need to know someone has their back. Just like the San Diego bike shop on 600 C Street in downtown San Diego, who time and time again must fend off repetitive thieves while repairing personal modes of transportation or attempting to sell to new patrons.
- Josh Callery-Coyne
Person
We are also talking about building confidence in the consumer to step into these small businesses. While the actual bottom line of business is practical, we also support this to address the perception that plagues in and around our retail establishments. I mentioned this before, but business owners are tired and they have reached compassion fatigue. They're investing more and more of their own money, their family's hard earned money, to try to keep their doors open, and frankly, it's not fair. We thank you for your time and request your aye vote today.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Others in support, please come forward.
- Randy Perry
Person
Mr. Chair, Members. Randy Perry on behalf of Poor People's Campaign in support.
- Brenda Bass
Person
Brenda Bass, California Chamber of Commerce in support.
- Skyler Wonnacott
Person
Skylar Wannacott, California Business Properties Association in support.
- Daniel Conway
Person
Daniel Conway, California Groceries Association. Also in support.
- Jolena Voorhis
Person
Juliana Voris with the League of California Cities in support.
- Candace Chung
Person
Candace Chung, the California Attorney General's Office in support.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Opposition?
- Oliver Kroll
Person
Good morning, Chairman, Members of the Committee. My name is Oliver Kroll. I'm a Deputy Public Defender at the San Francisco Public Defender's Office. Thank you. Providing respectful opposition to AB 3029. We oppose this measure for two main reasons. First, AB 3209 would create a harmful new process where attorneys representing large retailers could seek a two year retail theft restraining order for nonviolent property crimes, misdemeanors such as petty theft and vandalism.
- Oliver Kroll
Person
Of course, my office understands the importance of safe working conditions for everyone, including retail workers, but this bill goes beyond that. This order could be sought merely if somebody's been arrested, not convicted of such an offense. And it wouldn't necessarily involve a public prosecutor. It would be these retailers and their attorneys picking who are the targets of these restraining orders. The restraining orders would prevent people not just from entering the store, but from even setting foot on the parking lot outside.
- Oliver Kroll
Person
And not just that store, but the other chains across the state. It's yet another tripwire for marginalized, unhoused community members to suck them into the legal system, and that's what this would create. Additionally, since it would apply to multiple stores, retail workers would be tasked with enforcing the restraining order based on photos of someone who may have visited another store within the past two years.
- Oliver Kroll
Person
And of course, we know that a large majority of wrongful convictions stem from eyewitness misidentifications, and this opens the door for even more racial profiling and discrimination. The second reason is that this bill is not needed because existing law, when enforced properly, would meet the concerns raised by this bill. I know there was a bit of a debate earlier about the scope of trespassing law. I did want to respectfully point out one I believe error in the bill analysis.
- Oliver Kroll
Person
Existing trespass law 602 T already permits misdemeanor prosecutions for trespass when somebody's been convicted of an infraction, a really low level offense in a store, and they're asked to leave by the proprietors and they refuse to leave, doesn't require a felony conviction. Additionally, if somebody's causing a nuisance in a store, obstructing the store's business and they're asked to leave, that's a misdemeanor if they refuse to leave. And of course, any threats, let alone violence, against retail workers, can already be severely punished under the law.
- Oliver Kroll
Person
These tools are still available, and they're more than sufficient for theft and vandalism offenses. Study after study demonstrates that harsher penalties, including for people with prior thefts, will not be effective at combating retail theft. Moreover, people have lost their lives because of overstated retail theft concerns and have needlessly been sent into the criminal legal system. Banco Brown, 24 year old black Trans man shot and killed in San Francisco last April by a Walgreens security guard who accused him of shoplifting.
- Oliver Kroll
Person
Joseph Southwick, former army captain and Iraq war veteran, broke a window of a restaurant, stole six chocolate chip cookies. He put his hands in the air. Officers shot him with a foam round, punched him, wrestled him into handcuffs, and then somebody like Jordan Smith, living in an RV with no food or heat, he tried to steal copper wire from a warehouse. He was convicted of theft, sent into the system. He could have used those resources and housing instead of being funneled into the system.
- Oliver Kroll
Person
The one thing I would add with respect to these two year restraining orders, I represented people charged with misdemeanor petty theft all the time, both in Fresno and in San Francisco. You can already get a restraining order barring you from going into the store even before you're convicted as a bail condition. And then if you're put on probation, the court has broad powers to put in those probation conditions, including banning you from going back to the store.
- Oliver Kroll
Person
So this bill, we submit, is not needed and would provide another tripwire into the system for these low level misdemeanors. So we would urge you to vote no on this bill. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Any others in opposition, please come forward.
- Claire Simonich
Person
Thank you. Claire Simonich on behalf of the Vera Institute. We appreciate the ongoing conversations with the author on this bill, but we have concerns about the bill in print. Thank you.
- Taina Vargas-Edmond
Person
Taina Vargas, Initiate Justice Action in opposition.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, San Francisco Public Defender's Office in opposition.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Questions or comments from Committee Members? A motion. A second.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank the author. Can I just get maybe a response back from the retailers in regards to keeping their employees safe, as opposition had brought up with it already being able to be used in a misdemeanor.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
Sure. I mean, this is our first priority is keeping our employees safe. These are repeat offenders. These are people, we know who these people are that are coming in over and over and over and over and over again. They're harassing our employees. They are, you know, I'm not going to get into detail the amount of what our employees are going up against. Not only our employees, but our customers. We think this is a tool for our retailers to be able to use, large and small.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
And, you know, I think my colleague here alluded to, it's not just about large retailers. It's small retailers. It's mom and pop shops. You know, I think there are places here in Sacramento who see the same person coming in every single day, stealing from their stores, and there's, you know, unfortunately, we need to figure out a way to keep them from coming in and stealing. And I think this is an innovative way to do it. I think there's safeguards here to do that.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
I think it's a new approach to doing it. And for us, again, it's deterring them from coming into the stores and stealing. And that's our key point. And so we appreciate the author for bringing this forward, and I think it's a good first step to doing it.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. Chair, I have no further questions, just ask to be co-author.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Thank you, sir.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. We have a motion and a second. And again, this was part of our retail package that we outlined this morning, a tool in our toolbox going forward. You may close.
- Marc Berman
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair and colleagues and I appreciate the concerns that were raised. And, you know, I'm committed to continuing to talk with opposition to see what we can do. We're trying to take a balanced approach, but we do need to make sure that it's an approach that is strong enough to really matter and make a difference. And so with that, respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 3209 by Assembly Member Berman. The motion is do pass to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Kevin McCarty
Person
That measure passes.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. We're gonna try to squeeze one more Bill in before our caucus lunch so that next on the list is Assembly Member Pacheco. So Assembly Member Carrillo will have you go after caucus lunch. Item 30, AB 3241. We have a motion a second, so be brief, real quick. Bipartisan motion.
- Blanca Pacheco
Legislator
What's that wonderful. Thank you Mister chair and Members. AB 3241 sets clear and comprehensive statewide standards for law enforcement k nine programs with the goal of insurance, uniformity, accountability, and excellence in the use of public canine canines. Police K nine s throughout California. This Bill represents a significant step forward in standardizing law enforcement k nine programs, enhancing accountability and fostering trust between law enforcement agencies and the communities they serve. In passing AB 203241 California will have the most comprehensive statewide standards in the country.
- Blanca Pacheco
Legislator
I have. I have with me representatives from the California Police Chiefs Association and the Police Officers Research Association of California here to testify if needed.
- Zach Vandersteele
Person
Thank you chair Members of the Committee. My name is Zach VanDerSteele. I'm the San Diego police K nine training sergeant representing Porac, a co sponsor of the Bill. Our goal as police canine units throughout California is to increase officer safety as well as community safety. Police canines add an incredible value to public safety because of the heightened senses they possess which cannot be replicated or replaced. These senses include smell, sight, and hearing, sometimes tens of thousands times greater than any human sense cannon.
- Zach Vandersteele
Person
Handlers rely on these senses for maximum officer safety when properly trained police dogs are capable of locating an otherwise undetectable subject who may be lying in wait to ambush an officer or civilian victim. Utilizing a police dog allows officers to remain at a safe distance, allowing time to react to the suspect's actions and De escalate the situation. In addition, police dogs are a reactive tool, not proactive. The K nine is deployed based on the individual's actions, with the ultimate goal of bringing about a peaceful surrender.
- Zach Vandersteele
Person
During a five year span from 2018 to 2022, the San Diego Police K nine unit responded to over 92,000 calls for service, with only 150 of those resulting in an apprehension. This is due in part to the high caliber training and structured K nine program. Porac supports all K nine units in California meeting this level of training standardization as will be required under AB 3241.
- Zach Vandersteele
Person
For these reasons, we respectfully ask for your I vote chair Members Jonathan Feldman with the California Police Chiefs Association, also a sponsor of the Bill and strong support here to more answer technical questions if you have any. But I just want to point out that language was developed over a period of months with top legal experts in the state, sheriffs, police chiefs, handlers and practitioners.
- Zach Vandersteele
Person
And you know, really the focus on developing a comprehensive package that addresses not just guidelines, but training policy, reporting requirements and a legal standard. And for those reasons, we ask for your support today. Thank you. Others in support Mister Chairman Members Randy Perry on behalf of the California Association Highway Patrol and PORac, co sponsors of the bell. Thank you. Thank you. Next, Mister Chairman Members Corey Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association, in support.
- Zach Vandersteele
Person
Ryan Sherman with the Riverside Sheriff's Association and other POAS vsas previously stated. Thanks Mister chair Members. Matthew Cyberling, on behalf of the Association for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs, the California Peace Officers Association and also on behalf of the Paternal Order of Police, all in support. Thank you.
- Megan Holtman
Person
Meg Holtman, California District Attorneys Association in support.
- Jolena Voorhis
Person
Jolena Voorhis at California Cities in support.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Opposition please come forward.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
Good morning, Chair and Members. My name is Stephanie Padilla and I am a Staff Attorney at the ACLU of Southern California on behalf of ACLU California Action. I speak today in respectful opposition of AB 3241, which would provide dangerously broad language on permissible deployment circumstances. For example, Section 4 would allow the deployment of police dogs to search for or apprehend a suspect in essentially any situation and does not place strict limitations on deployment in ways that would meaningfully safeguard community members from harm.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
Rather, it would do the opposite. Despite ample data proving that police agencies often use dogs to bite and seriously injure people who pose no threat to officers or others, including unarmed people who are already lying down, restrained or with their hands in the air, or individuals experiencing a behavioral health crisis. Subdivision A1 would allow police dogs to be deployed in these situations. Subdivision A2 would allow the use of police dog when a suspect is physically resisting or threatening to resist arrest.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
A canine attack is not proportional as a response to any movement a person may make or any form of physical or threatened resistance. Subdivision A3 would allow the use of a police dog when a suspect is concealed in an area where entry by a person would pose a threat to the safety of officers or the public.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
A report by special counsel to the LA County Sheriff's Department concluded that less harmful alternatives to police dogs can be used to apprehend hiding suspects and that, generally, a suspect barricaded or hiding in a confined area like a shed or closet can be extracted without a dog. Accidental maulings by police attack dogs are a serious threat to the safety of Californians in AB 3241, with obscure efforts to address this threat.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
For example, Subdivision C 1A's deployment definition is narrow and is limited to situations where a police dog is deployed for any legitimate law enforcement purpose. This will result in the failure to document and report critical information relating to accidental or unintentional incidents, both of which occur with regularity, such as when police dog broke out of a patrol car and attacked a woman in a parking lot, causing her major bite wounds. Police have no incentive to regulate themselves.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
AB 3241 will cede to post the responsibility of crafting guidelines for the use of police dogs without establishing clear and strict statutory limitations. This troubling concern is exasperated by the fact that this is sponsored by PORAC, who we have observed over the years, along with other police special interest groups, to manipulate the outcome of post-use of force policymaking process in ways that completely undermined both public safety and the legislators intent. AB 3241 will not safeguard our community members and will further perpetuate the status quo.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
In a recent interview, San Diego Police Chief Nisleit admitted that AB 3241 will not change anything about the way officers currently use attack dogs. The Legislature must enact legislation that includes clear and strict limitations on the use of police dogs, which AB 3241 fails to do. For these reasons, we respectfully request your no vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. You have about a minute and a half left.
- Chris Burbank
Person
My name is Chris Burbank, retired Police Chief from Salt Lake City, Vice President of the Major City Chiefs for four years, as well as President of the National Executive Institute that represented police leaders across the country. I'm speaking in opposition to this simply because I believe that this is a valuable tool. But this valuable tool should be regulated by a legislative body that says, statutorily, this is what the rules are, and then host and the training standards set forth, identify how you train then to that standard that's been identified. I think we are missing a step in this particular circumstance. That is a vital step. We would not say, "go forth and tell us how to use deadly force." We have regulated deadly force. We have batons. Time and time again, statutorily, we say, "these are the rules." And then police officers, sheriffs deputies, tell us how you're going to enforce those rules.
- Chris Burbank
Person
I believe that's the proper way in order to conduct this, because we run the risk of letting forth a tool that is one of the most violent tools that police officers have at their capacity. When we talk apprehension, you are talking about a dog that's trained to bite somebody. That is plain and simple. That's what apprehension is about.
- Chris Burbank
Person
And there are alternatives and where alternatives have been taken across the country, including New Orleans, Salt Lake City, we have not seen an increase in the number of officer injuries. We have not seen a decrease in the number of felony arrests, and we have not seen the increase in crime that is sometimes discussed about this. Again, this is a tool that deserves to be regulated, that the public needs to have input on from your behalf.
- Chris Burbank
Person
And then we go forth and say, this is how we'll accomplish.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Others in opposition, please come forward.
- Taina Vargas-Edmond
Person
Taina Vargas, Initiate Justice Action, in opposition.
- Taina Vargas-Edmond
Person
I was instructed to give these pictures to the secretary to share with you folks.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Sure, you can hand them to the sergeant just behind you. Just state your name and position. Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Mr. Chairman. I have a perspective on this Bill, and.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yeah, I'm sorry we ran out of time for testimony. You could just state your. Your name and your view on the Bill. Yes or no?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I oppose it.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, San Francisco Public Defender's Office, in opposition.
- Margo George
Person
Margo George, I want to thank the author's office for the conversation, but we remain in opposition for California Public Defenders Association. Thank you.
- Edward Little
Person
Ed Little with Californians for Safety and Justice in opposition.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alissa Moore with All of Us or None in strong opposition.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox, LSPC, opposition.
- Alicia Montero
Person
Alicia Montero, Californians United for a Responsible Budget in strong opposition.
- Eric Henderson
Person
Eric Henderson, on behalf of ACLU California Action, in strong opposition to AB 3241.
- Alicia Benavidez
Person
Alicia Benavidez on behalf of Alliance for Boys and Men of Color, in opposition.
- Gretchen Bergman
Person
Gretchen Burns Bergman, a New PATH (Parents for Addiction Treatment and Healing) in opposition.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Carmen-Nicole Cox, ACLU California Action. I do want to thank Committee staff for making it very clear that a vote in support of 3241 is a vote for injustice. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay, any others in opposition? Seeing none, questions or comments from Committee Members? I'll start here. And we wanted to hear these back to back, we're going to caucus, lunch was another Bill, hearing one Bill at a time. So I guess my big picture on these bills related to canine police dogs, or canines are dogs, but is that a few years ago, we had a big debate here in the Legislature, and I authored a Bill with Doctor Webber, changing our use of force standards.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
And we wanted to focus on de-escalation. And one of the things that I always recall is one of the hot moments that brought that Bill to fruition in 2019 was a shooting just down the street here in Sacramento. A young man named Stephan Clark in his grandma's house had a cell phone and was shot and killed. And it got our city's attention, the state's attention, the nation's attention. And that became a flashpoint for that Bill.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
One of the things that we heard over and over after that was a need for alternatives other than deadly force, de-escalation. And the family actually asked many times, "why didn't you send in the canine? Why couldn't you send in other pieces?" And so, you know, these are pieces of the puzzle, especially as we try to have safer alternatives when law enforcement goes out to a dangerous situation. So I think that we need to look at both sides of the coin here.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
That being said, I do support this, and will support the other Bill as well. We're debating one Bill at a time here, but I'm trying, I think I want to talk about it in context here as well. This Bill certainly sets out kind of rules of engagement. The other measure is more setting the direction for posts to kind of work on these things.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
It's my hope and our hope that you continue to work with our other author and come together and recognize the leadership that the prior Bill started first. But with that, I do support this measure today and encourage you to keep engaging not only with the other companion measure, but with the opposition groups as well. So thank you. Assemblymember Wilson, sorry. Assemblymembers Wilson.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
If I may. Thank you to the author for bringing this forward and trying to address some of the concerns from the Bill last year. And I think even though we're not talking about the Bill, I will note, thank you to Assemblymember Jackson for being a leader in this space and starting the dialogue with the Legislature on what's appropriate and what is not appropriate. And how I view this particular Bill is setting up a standard statewide.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
That was one of the many conversations that were occurring last year, was about the inconsistency across the state, even how the use of canines and every single department had their own way of doing it, pretty much the wild, wild west when it came to it, and how there was a need, at minimum, for a standard. And so I'll be supporting this Bill today as we work to define that standard.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
I'm going to also encourage the continued conversations with the author who led this discussion on this, because I think this does create a standard and comes from the point of law enforcement. But at the same time, there has to be a discussion where we have community input and the Legislature has to weigh in on what the guardrails are for this.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And that can't be silent because we do find, although it is a useful tool and an appropriate for de-escalation and alternative ways that don't end in death, there are tragic incidents that we hear. Even one in my own area, where it was actually in the County of Napa, but a person, a dog was put forth to apprehend someone who was in the process of committing a crime, or had been committing a crime, that was clearly visible.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And the dog did not attack that person, but attacked someone well behind them who was actually a resident from my county and in my district. And so that was unfortunate, but there was no mechanisms in place to be able to address that situation. So I think that just like we have rules surrounding other uses, police use of force, there has to be rules around this.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And it has to take into consideration not just giving our law enforcement tools to keep us safe because that's important, but from the community point of view, keeping the community safe from the tools of law enforcement. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Assemblymember Alanis?
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you, Chair. I want to thank the author, the sponsors, everybody working on this Bill. This Bill is an example of what we should be doing. Most of our bills, actually talking and working with those that actually put the Bill in place, working with the handlers, working with the associations as well. One of the questions I have for the opposition, you had brought up that in the Bill, it talks about canines being used on unarmed people. Can you elaborate on that?
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
Sorry. So the Bill itself doesn't use that language, but our data shows that canines, when canines are usually used, they're used in situations and against people who are typically unarmed, people who are posing no threat to officers, no imminent sort of threat of serious bodily injury or death to officers or other community members. They're used against people who are experiencing a behavioral health crisis, people who have disabilities and disproportionately against communities of color.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
And so when I said that it's used against unarmed people, our review of public records data from over 38 agencies revealed that when law enforcement is using these canines to bite people, they're usually against people who are unarmed and who are not committing any sort of violent crime.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
And with that data, did you happen to see anything that showed how many surrenders were collected as well?
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
So, unfortunately, that data is not collected. And, you know, alternatively, there's no sort of data on when there are surrenders in situations where, like, no canine is used to sort of, like, counter compare. So that data.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
And at what level is that, at the state level collected or is that at the individual departments?
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
That was. So it was. You're talking about the data that we reviewed? So it was public records requests that were sent out to 38 agencies in the State of California.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay. I know for a fact, in my neck of the woods, surrenders are collected as far as data, and I don't think I know of any other canine unit that does not collect that because that's basically the bread and butter of a canine unit. We want somebody, as mentioned in the earlier briefing, was we want to de-escalate. We want to have a peaceful surrender. That's the goal. If I could turn it back over to a supporter, the canine handlers.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Can you elaborate on that a little bit more as well?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yes, sir. It's obviously a de-escalation tool to have that dog there. All force is applied under Graham v. Connor, which is severity of the crime, actively resisting, and immediacy of the threat. They're going to have to meet that criteria before the dog is deployed. As we say, the suspect's actions are going to dictate the canine handler's response. They are given warnings, numerous warnings to get them to surrender. And if they don't, then the dog would be deployed.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
There are checks and balances with that, and there is statistical tracking for those interventions or those surrenders as well.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
And what would happen to a dog, as an example that was given today, that canine inadvertently attacked someone else other than the suspect?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So if he attacked somebody else other than the suspect, either A, that dog gets pulled offline, handler has remediation training, they could be on performance plans. You have to go into the avenue. Is it a training issue or is it a personnel issue? Like similar to like a use of force complaint. So there will be checks and balances for that. It's not just a "give me," or it's not just a "hey, that we're just gonna put this one to bed."
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Great, thank you. Glad you guys are addressing that. I have no further.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
Sorry, can I just add one quick thing?
- Kevin McCarty
Person
You have a question from? We're good. Further questions or comments? Assemblymember Reyes.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
I'm sorry I arrived late, but I understand that our two bills regarding canines by Assemblymember Pacheco and Assemblymember Jackson. Jackson. Doctor Jackson. I understand that there is ongoing discussion with the Speaker's Office in trying to reach a place to have both of these bills through. And with that in mind, I am not going to ask any questions. I'm assuming that that process is going through, and in the end, it will be something that is acceptable before it reaches the floor.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay, you may close.
- Blanca Pacheco
Legislator
Thank you. And thank you again, everyone, for allowing me to present this very important and vital Bill with respect to canine programs. This will be a Bill that is the most comprehensive statewide standards here in California, and it's a great tool for law enforcement. And I will continue to work with the companion Bill, also, all stakeholders, in order to get this Bill to a right place so that, you know, it can be presented on the floor.
- Blanca Pacheco
Legislator
And hopefully I can also get your votes when it gets to the floor. But this is an extremely vital tool, and I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay, thank you. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 3241 by Assemblymember Pacheco. The motion is do pass to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call].
- Kevin McCarty
Person
That measure passes, and we will recess until 1:30. We'll come back in this room at 1:30.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
We will reconvene this hearing this afternoon. Next up, we have Assemblymember Jackson.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Thank you very much, Mister Chair. Committee Members, this is AB 2042, which ensures that for the first time, California has a statewide law to safely and effectively use police canines. This Bill before you today does not and will not remove police canines as a tool for law enforcement. Working collaboratively with stakeholders, we will continue to work on this Bill to deliver a balanced approach that we can all be proud of. I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Anyone in support? Mister Jackson, you have anybody to come speak?
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
No.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay. Anyone in support for me too, please come up. Give your name and organization, please. Okay, anyone in opposition, please come up to the table. No, we're not doing that yet. I want opposition at the table first.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
Okay. Good afternoon, Chair and Members. My name is Stephanie Padilla and I'm a Staff Attorney at the ACLU of Southern California. On behalf of ACLU California Action, I speak today in respectful opposition to AB 2042 unless it is amended. The California Legislator must act with urgency to protect the public and enact legislation that sets clear and strict limitations on the use of police dogs. But unfortunately, AB 2042, as written, does not satisfy this objective.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
Police dogs are a type of force that has the potential to end and forever alter the lives of individuals. Police dogs sharp teeth puncture and anchor flesh while their molars tear and shred tissue, causing deep puncture wounds, extensive tissue lacerations, avulsions, and degloving. Police routinely deploy attack dogs against people who pose no danger or threat, who are not suspected of a crime of violence or any crime at all, who are experiencing a mental health crisis or who were exercising their constitutional right to assemble in protest.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
For example, in Visalia, police responded with a police dog unit to a mother's 911 call to help to transport her son to the hospital for a psychiatric crisis, despite having informed the dispatcher and responding officers that her son was not armed. Two officers held her son's arms behind the back and the handler commanded the dog to bite and allowed the dog to jump up and tear into his face, slicing open his neck, bottom lip, and nostril almost to his top line.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
Statewide, two thirds of Californians severely injured by police dogs are people of color. The racialized use of police dog attacks is shown by statistical disparities and by the language and symbolism used by police agency who deploy the dogs. Public records document a San Diego Police Department handler joking that his dog only likes dark meat. Police cannot adequately control their attack dogs, who often mold people they are not instructed to bite.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
In Fresno, a police dog accidentally attacked and seriously injured a police officer, sending that officer to the hospital. When the dog attacked a different officer, latching onto his arm and refusing to release, the officer shot and killed the dog. Police dogs cannot be controlled and frequently fail to stop attacking when recalled. For example, a Sacramento county sheriff's attack dog tore into a man's arm, requiring reconstructive surgery and resulting in the permanent disfigurement of his right arm, of which he no longer has full use of.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
This police dog ignored the handler's release and instead his jaws stayed clamped in the individual's arm for over 1 minute and did not release until the deputy grabbed the dog's head with both hands and pulled him off. Because many police attack dogs refused to release their bites when commanded, canine supply companies have developed outing tools such as metal bars that handlers can then stick into their dogs mouths to trigger a gag reflex and dislodge their jaws. This Bill will not safeguard our community Members and will further perpetuate the status quo, and for these reasons, we respectfully request your no vote on AB 2042 unless amended.
- Chris Burbank
Person
Thank you. I forego the introductions. My name is Chris Burbank. Again, I am sitting here before you for the same reasons, right, that I believe this body has a responsibility to put in place statutes, laws that govern the use of canine and then POST, and the officers attending are the ones who then develop the policy, the training that meets that standard. One of the things that I think is very confusing about canine deployments is we often talk about the ability to deescalate situations.
- Chris Burbank
Person
Well, canine dogs, by most policies in California and throughout the nation, are not deployed on armed individuals because of the danger and risk to the dog. And I'm not standing here before you and advocating that we endanger a police dog. However, we need to know that when we start evaluating this, they're not designed to be an alternative for deadly force.
- Chris Burbank
Person
And so many of the tactics that you use a police dog for, such as search, such as location, such as holding an individual, those things can be accomplished with other dogs that are not, in essence, attack dogs, not designed to bite people. Bloodhound programs have been effectively used. In Salt Lake City, we actually changed our program drastically to where we used more bloodhounds and fewer patrol animals because of the risk involved with it and the accomplishment. We did not see an increase in violence on our streets, nor did we see a decrease or we actually didn't see an increase in officers injuries that occurred.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
You have 30 seconds.
- Chris Burbank
Person
In the City of New Orleans. Because of a consent decree. They actually nearly did away with their dog program. They went three years without a canine bite, and they did not see any increase in officer use of force in officer injuries. And so again, I believe it's the responsibility, because the question should always be asked of policing, right. There's many things that we can do, but should we do these things?
- Chris Burbank
Person
And you have the opportunity to set the standard by which we then train everybody. And it was said by a Member over here that California would lead the way. Right. If you in fact enacted laws that said this is how they will be used, and then the state followed through that everybody in this state did this, you would lead the way, and I would applaud that. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Any other witnesses in opposition.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Mister Chairman, Members Corey Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association. In opposition.
- Eric Henderson
Person
Eric Henderson, on behalf of ACLU California Action. We want to thank Doctor Jackson for listening to us and listening to our concerns. And we look forward to working with your office. And respectfully opposed, unless amended.
- Elizabeth May
Person
I'm Elizabeth Rose May. I'm sorry for being selfish and inconsiderate earlier. I'm opposed to this Bill.
- Jolena Voorhis
Person
Julianne Duvors with League of California Cities in opposition.
- Jonathan Feldman
Person
Chair and Members Jonathan Feldman, California Police Chiefs Association opposed.
- Margo George
Person
Margot George, on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association, I want to thank the author for the conversation. We are, at this point, still in respectful opposition. Thank you.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim San Francisco public defender's office opposed unless amended.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay, questions or comments from Committee Members? Mister Lackey?
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah, I would just like to remind all my colleagues and everybody that's listening at this point that this force option overwhelmingly results in a surrender. Overwhelmingly. The numbers are staggering as to how many times when a canine is present that it results in a surrender. And talking about what we should seek, that's what we should seek, is surrender. I do have some concerns with this particular Bill right now, but I understand there's serious negotiation going on. I'm not in a position to support at this moment, but when it gets to the floor, if negotiations are successful, I will support it. So that's all I have to say.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Mister Zbur.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I want to thank the author for bringing this Bill. I know that his goal is really to make sure that the use of police dogs is one that doesn't harm communities. And that's the objective. I did have a question about from the ACLU, about what's the general area of amendments that you're seeking and discussing with the author.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
So that's a great question. So we're seeking strict and clear limitations on the use of canine. So in particular, like particular situations in which canines can be deployed, currently, that's not here. And I know the Assembly, the Public Safety Committee was considering AB 3241 earlier, but there needs to be strict and clear limitations that are set forth by the Legislator. Otherwise, what we've seen is that POST will not create regulations in a way that actually help public safety.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
What usually ends up happening is that POST really sort of seeds to the seeds to the special interest groups like PORAC or other special police interest groups to undermine and water down regulations. And so by having strict and clear limitations in the Legislator, it wouldn't allow for, for that to happen, and it would create a mechanism for the community to hold law enforcement accountable.
- Chris Burbank
Person
If I may, could I just add one thing to that? So immediately coming to mind are things like crowd control situations, handcuffed individuals. These are individuals that you absolutely can legislate and say, no, that's not appropriate to deploy a dog, and then you would have other circumstances where it would be.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Great. Thank you.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I also want to thank the Chair and his staff for being so engaged in this. I understand that that Assemblymember Jackson is working with Assemblymember Pacheco on the two sets of bills and that there are serious negotiations occurring. I want to thank you for doing that. I'll be supporting the bills to give both of the authors an opportunity to continue moving this forward.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you, Vice Chair Alanis.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Chair. For opposition. I just want to clarify real quick. You mentioned one that there the canines are routine, are deployed routinely. Like, how often are they deployed with your comments there.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
Yeah. So in the situations in which we see, so canines are deployed in large numbers, and I don't have the exact numbers in front of me, but for example, the Bakersfield Police Department responded to almost over 1000 calls with a canine on scene, and it had over nearly 100 canine bites in the span of less than 24 months. And so you see canines being deployed. And when we're saying, like, deployed in apprehensions, you're seeing them in large numbers.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
And in those situations, for example, with the Bakersfield Police Department, most of the people were unarmed, were people who were experiencing some sort of, like, behavioral health crisis. And so I don't have the exact numbers of how often they're deployed, but I'm happy to provide those numbers if that would be helpful.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I'm sure those would help. You also mentioned that they're deployed on protests. Can you tell me when and where on protests they were deployed?
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
Yeah. So the police have used canines to deploy them, usually at, like, police brutality protests or other types of protests. And you see canines. I can circle. Sorry, I don't have that in my notes. But I can circle back with.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
If you could. Cause it's pretty vague because. Are we referring back to, like, the sixties, or are we referring to, like, this year? Last year?
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
So, you know, in the last, like 2 to 3 years, we've had various incidents where police, California police have deployed attack dogs during protests, usually.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay, wait, wait. Hold on. And that's another thing you keep saying attack dogs. Are you talking canines or are you just calling the canines attack dog and that's what you're naming them?
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
I'm calling canines attack dogs.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay. Okay.
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
Thanks for the clarification. But, yes, we've seen them being deployed and used against people again in protests. Most recently, there was a protest with regards to an unarmed police shooting of an unarmed individual. And the police had a canine on site, and the canine got loose and bit someone who was trying, you know, went towards a crowd and then ended up biting someone who was trying to shield his child, who was in a stroller.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay, and you took your stats from one agency. Did you happen to talk to other agencies? Did you. You talk, like, with, like, the Riverside Sheriff's Department or anything like that? Did you happen to reach out to them or getting in numbers?
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
So these are just examples I had mentioned earlier when we were talking about AB 3241, but we sent out public records requests to over 38 agencies in the State of California. And so when I'm talking about the data and when I'm talking about incidents, this comes directly from data that we received from those 38 agencies.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Out of the 38, how many responded?
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
Most of them produced. I don't know the exact number. Sorry. But most of them produced, well over 20 of them produced records. And then this is also - information is also gathered from media articles describing really, really tragic incidents of canines and in consultation as well with attorneys who have represented individuals who have been impacted by.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
And these articles, I'm sure they don't ever talk about the surrenders, like, oh, this person gave up those kind of things. So I think it's kind of skewed on that way. Just real quick. Riverside 699 times they've had a canine deployment. And out of the 699, that's six bites. So I just want to point that also. And then to you sir, you said you were a Chief.
- Chris Burbank
Person
Former Chief.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
A former Chief. You mentioned that you had a canine program and that you basically got rid of it because lack of policies.
- Chris Burbank
Person
No, did not get rid of it. We actually changed to where we went for fewer apprehension dogs and more bloodhounds.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
You went to searching? You went to searching. No apprehension dogs, no protection dog.
- Chris Burbank
Person
No apprehension dogs.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
So just drug detection, that kind of thing, and no protection?
- Chris Burbank
Person
We did have some, but we never did none.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay. Chair?
- Stephanie Padilla
Person
May I respond?
- Kevin McCarty
Person
No, we're good. We have to proceed. You didn't ask a question. We have to just move on. I just want to go back to Mister Jackson. I told you during the prior Bill that one. We acknowledge that your leadership in this, knowing that it's an issue to focus on policies and practices with canines. I don't concur that they're attack dogs. Always. They serve a purpose.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
And I will note, a few years ago we had very tough bills here, focusing on excessive use of force and changing the deadly force standards and over and over. This was a tool that could be used so we don't have a fatality at the hands of law enforcement and either an unarmed individual or somebody who's partial armed, but not a firearm. So I think there is a delicate balance here. And I do know that you're doing the hard work because everyone's against your Bill.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
That means you're doing something in the middle. And I appreciate that. And so we want to push both these measures forward and recognize your leadership. And I know you're working with the other authors, stakeholders, as well as the leadership in the Assembly to hone this and narrow this forward. So with that, I support this measure. You may close.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
Thank you very much Mister Chair. I mean, obviously, as you've heard today, we really gotta get out of the personality and historical conflicts that have existed here in Sacramento and we have to just get to good policy. And I think that at the end of the day, I believe with all my heart that we can create a balanced approach here and that we can create one that both achieves both safety and justice.
- Corey Jackson
Legislator
But it takes the hard work of sitting down and going through things line by line and being able to making sure that we all come together in good faith. And that's what I have sought to do in this process and I will continue to do so. We have been achieving some great progress by the way, by going through this process in a thoughtful way. And actually I think that the way we're going through this is really what we all would have hoped to be able to go through when we come here to Sacramento to create good policy. And so I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. We have a motion moved by Mister Zuber, second by Assemblymember Nguyen. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 2042 by Assemblymember Jackson. The motion is do pass to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call].
- Kevin McCarty
Person
That measure's on call. Thank you. Next up, Assembly Member Carrillo. Sorry for the confusion and your patience. Item number 12, AB 1990. Please begin.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
Thank you, Mr. Chair and Members. Good afternoon. I would like to begin by accepting the Committee amendments. Thank you to you and to your staff for your diligence and commitment to the policy. Today, I am proud to present AB 1990, the Secure Transactions and Organized Theft Prevention Act, otherwise known as the STOP Act, which is a critical step towards securing the safety of our communities and putting a stop to retail theft.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
AB 1990 is an urgent call to action in response to the alarming escalation of organized retail theft that threatens the very fabric of our communities. Shoplifting adversely affects both small and large businesses as well as our state's economy and the security and well being of workers, jobs, and our neighborhoods.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
AB 1990, the STOP Act, aims to increase enforcement and introduce tougher penalties for suspected shoplifters by giving peace officers the ability to continue to follow current law and cite and release an individual or now give peace officers the discretion to arrest and book a suspect involved in retail theft with a witness report.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
Unlike other policies that you will hear today, or have heard today, AB 1990 does not put additional burdens on law enforcement, does not put additional burdens on small businesses, and the policy does not require any misdemeanor prior offenses to be arrested. If you commit a crime and that crime is retail theft, there has to be consequences. Additionally, AB 1990 answers a direct call to action from Governor Newsom in January to ensure the safety of Californians by, quote, bolstering law enforcement's ability to arrest suspects.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
Organized retail crime demands organized prevention, and the STOP Act repeats represents the Legislature's commitment to taking a proactive and organized approach to prevent organized retail crime that ultimately ensures the safety of our communities, small and large businesses alike, and the very livelihoods and the people who work in these jobs. According to the Public Policy Institute of California, crime data indicates that retailers have increasingly been targets of crime, with retail theft incidents rising in the Bay Area and trending up in Los Angeles and communities across California.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
In my district, the City of Los Angeles saw an increase in shoplifting reports from 6500 to over close to 12,000 over the course of one year from 2022 to 23, a significant increase by 81%. Additionally, the LA County District Attorney's Office recently reported having filed over 200 cases of organized retail theft in 2023 alone, indicating a significant surge in crime in Los Angeles. It is our responsibility to confront a problem that has been increasingly worsening over time.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
This bill prioritizes public safety and safeguards local economies and represents a significant step forward in enhancing the safety of both employees and customers facing an onslaught of organized retail theft. In a letter of opposition that you may see, it states that current law also gives shopkeepers and their agents the power to make a citizen arrest and turn the arrestee over to the police for processing and criminal prosecution.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
In 2021, while on the job at a Rite Aid in Glassell Park in my district, 36 year old Miguel Penaloza tried to stop someone from stealing beer and was shot and killed by that thief. Let me just be very clear. Workers who are not properly trained or part of any loss prevention team should not be risking their lives to stop someone from looting a store. The trauma that Mr. Penaloza's family faced, as well as his coworkers, cannot be normalized, but, unfortunately, it has become the norm.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
Retailers across California and the nation are actively also creating policies that penalize the workers for getting involved because they don't want anyone to be hurt over retail theft. In fact, workers have been fired. Retailers are shutting down. That Rite Aid that I mentioned, it's now closed in my community. Another argument that you may hear is the difference between probable cause and reasonable cause as opposed to reasonable suspicion.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
Unfortunately, the Committee analysis is misaligned with the California jurisprudence, which states, as a basis for arrest, the constitutional and statutory terms of probable cause, reasonable cause, and reasonable grounds are substantially equivalent terms. The general rule is that to constitute reasonable or probable cause that will justify an arrest on a criminal charge, there must be a state of facts that would lead a person of ordinary care and prudence to believe or entertain an honest and strong suspicion that person arrested is guilty.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
Having said this, and to clear any misalignment on the intent of AB 1950 and working with the Committee to rectify concerns, we are making an amendment to change reasonable cause to probable cause. Some of the criminal justice groups that you may hear from today also raise some of the aforementioned arguments, and I have worked with these groups in the past on advocating for much needed reforms that benefit communities of color.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
However, criminal justice reform does not mean that individuals who commit crimes will not be held responsible for their actions, especially when their actions threaten the public safety of others, as we have seen with the proliferation of retail theft. Standing by, as lawmakers, watching vulnerable people be put at risk and in danger and not doing anything to stop it is not the option. This bill enjoys bipartisan support and support of the League of Cities, law enforcement, small businesses, and local Chambers of Commerce. With me here to testify in support is Julian Cañete, the President and CEO of the California Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, and Daniel Conway, with the California Grocers Association.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Please begin.
- Julian Canete
Person
Thank you, Chairman McCarty and Committee Members. Good afternoon. Julian Cañete, President and CEO of the California Hispanic Chambers of Commerce. Again, thank you for the opportunity to address the Committee on AB 1990 this afternoon. The California Hispanic Chambers, through our membership network of over 125 Hispanic and diverse Chambers and business associations, represents the interests of not just the Hispanic business community, but the diverse and small business community of California at large. I would like to thank Assembly Member Carrillo, her staff, for their work on AB 1990.
- Julian Canete
Person
This legislation will give law enforcement a necessary tool and deterrent to assist in curbing retail thefts committed against our small businesses without putting any undue burden upon them. AB 1990 directly responds to communities across California facing an onslaught of organized retail theft and loss of jobs and creates for the development of a framework that intensifies a crackdown on property crimes. Member Carrillo mentioned the Los Angeles Police Department and LA District Attorney's statistics.
- Julian Canete
Person
One thing these statistics don't tell you is that it's not just the Rite Aids and the Walgreens. It is our small businesses. It is the small jewelry store that's in the downtown areas of our communities. It is the corner convenience store, the 7/11, which are all franchised and independently owned. AB 1990, this bill aims to reaffirming Governor Newsom and the Legislature's commitment to public safety by protecting our communities from the detrimental impacts of organized crime and retail theft.
- Julian Canete
Person
Retail theft and organized retail theft disproportionately impacts our diverse-owned businesses, causing severe harm on our community and undermining California's economic vitality. AB 1990 will be a crucial step towards safeguarding the interests of diverse businesses, entrepreneurs, their employees by creating a safer, more secure environment for our business community, our families, and the public at large. In closing though, you know, small business always talks about the impact on small businesses and everybody thinks it's about the bottom line profit margins.
- Julian Canete
Person
Our businesses know that the real impact is on their customers and communities with increased costs and concern for their safety. We see AB 1990 not only as a tool for law enforcement, but a tool for economic and small business success. We respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Less than two minutes.
- Daniel Conway
Person
Thank you so much, Chairman. Daniel Conway with the California Grocers Association. And at CGA, we represent some of the largest companies in the world but also independent mom and pop shops that are in every community in this state. And retail theft has become the top issue for our members, large and small. As you've heard throughout the day, this has become a challenge that... It permeates our state. You know, what we see in our stores, what happens in our communities happens in our stores, right?
- Daniel Conway
Person
And whether that's homelessness or mental health or now retail theft, we're seeing it every day in our stores. And so I appreciate Assembly Member Carrillo's proposal here because what this is going to do is it's going to once again empower law enforcement to do their job.
- Daniel Conway
Person
I think what's been troubling about some of the conversations that have been had around retail theft, frankly, is that at times there seems to be an effort to put more of the burden on our employees to essentially act as quasi law enforcement, to detain people, to hold people, to file detailed reports and things like that. Ultimately, we're here to continue to partner with law enforcement to make sure that our communities are safe. But we don't want to put our employees or our customers in harm's way.
- Daniel Conway
Person
Ultimately, that's what we want. We want people to have safe and welcoming stores in their communities, and we want to work with you to make that be true going forward. Thank you so much.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Other witnesses in support, please come forward.
- James Thuerwachter
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and Members. James Thuerwachter with the California State Council of Laborers. We're in proud support. Thanks.
- Skyler Wonnacott
Person
Chair and Members, Skyler Wonnacott, California Business Properties Association, in support.
- Jonathan Feldman
Person
Chair and Members, Jonathan Feldman, California Police Chiefs Association. We're in support of the bill in print. We'll take a look at the amendments, but we appreciate the author in addressing a very real problem. Thank you.
- Danielle Sanchez
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and Members. Danielle Sanchez on behalf of the Chief Probation Officers of California, similarly in support of the bill in print, and we'll review amendments. Appreciate your work on this.
- Ryan Allain
Person
Mr. Chair and Members, Ryan Allain on behalf of the California Retailers Association in support. Thank you.
- Megan Holtman
Person
Meg Holtman, California District Attorneys Association, in support.
- Jolena Voorhis
Person
Jolena Voorhis with the League of California Cities in support.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Ryan Sherman with Riverside Sheriff's Association and the POAs and DSAs in support. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Witnesses in opposition, please come forward.
- Taina Vargas
Person
Good afternoon, chair and Members. My name is Taina Vargas. I'm the founder and Executive Director of Initiate Justice Action, and today we are here urging your no vote on AB 1990 for three reasons. First, AB 1990 would disproportionately impact members of the community who are Black, Brown, low income or unhoused and those with mental health disorders. According to a 2021 PPIC report that was cited in this bill analysis, about 195 people die each year during interactions with law enforcement.
- Taina Vargas
Person
More than four in 10 people treated for nonfatal gunshot wounds caused by police have a mental health or substance use disorder, and Black Californians are three times more likely to be shot or seriously injured by police. Allowing on law enforcement to make warrantless arrests of individuals who they suspect have committed law enforcement would increase police interactions with these vulnerable populations and put them at unnecessary risk.
- Taina Vargas
Person
Secondly, because this bill exempts a person arrested for shoplifting from the requirement that they be released on citation, individuals can be taken into custody for being suspected of committing minor offenses, which can have major implications for that person's livelihood. An arrest can mean the loss of a job or housing, exacerbating already dire circumstances for people experiencing poverty.
- Taina Vargas
Person
This bill would also likely lead to an increase in pretrial detention, raising major constitutional and civil rights concerns, and creating more overcrowding in our county jails, where we are currently seeing record-level deaths among the incarcerated population. And thirdly, AB 1990 does nothing to address the root causes of shoplifting, which incidentally has largely been exaggerated by retailers and sensationalized in the media.
- Taina Vargas
Person
As stated in the bill's analysis, the PPIC has found that shoplifting is currently 8% below pre-pandemic levels and is lower now than it was every year between 2010 and 2018. However, if we do want to address the underlying causes of the lower-than-average rates of shoplifting we're seeing today, we must invest in sustainable anti-poverty measures, such as ensuring everyone in our communities has access to a thriving wage, affordable housing, and wrap-around social services.
- Taina Vargas
Person
Members, this bill is aptly numbered AB 1990, as it hearkens back to the failed 1990s tough-on-crime policies that did nothing to deter crime. Because the prison population explosion and devastated our communities, we cannot go backwards. Let us move forward and address the root causes of poverty and ensure everyone in our community feels safe and has the opportunity to thrive. I urge your no vote on AB 1990.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Two minutes left.
- Claire Simonich
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon. My name is Claire Simonich. I'm the associate director at the Vera Institute of Justice. We're a national criminal justice and immigration reform organization and we oppose 1990, which would increase arrests for the low level crime of shoplifting and negatively impact immigrant communities in California. As Ms. Vargas explained, there are significant racial disparities in California's arrest rates with Black and Brown Californians, many of whom are immigrants, arrested at far higher rates than white Californians.
- Claire Simonich
Person
California's immigration profile, in turn, includes 10.5 million immigrants, or 27% of our total population, and about 5 million Californians who are already at risk of deportation because they're non citizens. AB 1990 would subject more immigrants to arrest, which in turn risks their being brought to ICE's attention and placed in deportation proceedings.
- Claire Simonich
Person
Undocumented immigrants can face increased deportation risk even if they are never convicted of a crime, and their risk of immigration consequences increases from any arrest, even if they're not turned over to ICE authorities at the time of the arrest. That's because criminal justice interactions, including past arrests, like the types of arrests that will occur under 1990, that don't result necessarily in ICE detention, are generally a discretionary factor that immigration judges consider when deciding whether to grant relief from removal.
- Claire Simonich
Person
By subjecting more immigrant Californians to detention and deportation, this Bill risks separating immigrants from their jobs, families, and communities, all for misdemeanor shoplifting. Finally, by giving law enforcement discretion to arrest every person alleged to have shoplifted for something as small as a pack of gum, and no matter their personal circumstances, even if they will face the extreme immigration consequences discussed here, AB 1990 will not make our community safer. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Others in opposition, please line up your name and position only.
- Natasha Minsker
Person
Natasha Minsker, Smart Justice California we have reviewed the amendment. We remain strongly opposed. Thank you.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Danica Rodarmel on behalf of Initiate Justice, in opposition.
- Alicia Benavidez
Person
Alicia Benavidez, on behalf of Drug Policy Alliance and Immigrant Legal Resource center, in strong opposition.
- Margo George
Person
Margo George on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association, in opposition thank you.
- Mica Doctoroff
Person
Mica Doctoroff with the ACLU of Northern California on behalf of ACLU California action in opposition thank you.
- Tiffany Whiten
Person
Tiffany Whiten with SEIU California in opposition. Thank you.
- Thanh Tran
Person
Thanh Tran, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, respectfully in opposition.
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, San Francisco public defender's office in opposition and on behalf of California Immigrant Policy Center, in opposition.
- Roxanna Gonzalez
Person
Roxanna Gonzalez, on behalf of Initiate Justice action, in strong opposition
- Gretchen Bergman
Person
Gretchen Burns Bergman. A new PATH, in opposition.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox, LSPC, opposition.
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alissa Moore, All of Us or None, in opposition.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
On behalf of Californians for safety and justice and grace, in respectful opposition.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Back to Committee. Assemblymember Reyes.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
When I first saw this summary that read, authorizes a warrantless arrest for shoplifting not committed in the presence of a police officer. I was extremely concerned. I thought must be wrong. But the author's statement says, by enabling enforcement officers to make warrantless arrests based on probable cause, even if they were not present when the crime occurred, this bill strengthens the tools available. We're talking about a warrantless arrest of someone by a police officer who did not witness it.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
And I want you to know that I am very glad that you accepted the amendment that requires that someone who witnessed it has to sign as a witness that they have, that they witnessed this shoplifting. I agree. Retail theft has become a top issue for stores and for communities, and it's something that needs to be addressed. I understand that there is a reason to try to do something to be as creative as possible.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
I am so concerned, and I know in the analysis it talks about the possibility this could be unconstitutional. And I think it is as close as you can get to being unconstitutional. Nonetheless, I know your work. I know that you are someone who is committed to trying to find solutions.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
The problems in the bill as it is written does not provide the safeguards for the community that the community deserves. To be detained, to be held because someone, because law enforcement has reasonable suspicion or probable cause, reasonable cause should not be sufficient. There has to be more. There has to be more. We can't take away somebody's liberty because somebody has a suspicion of something that they did not witness.
- Eloise Gómez Reyes
Legislator
But again, I know your work, and I am going to give a courtesy vote for you to move forward, but I do reserve my right when we vote on it on the floor, and I absolutely request that the conversation with the opposition continue. Those arguments are very important in making sure that we have the protections and the guard rails that are necessary if we're going to impose, if we're going to take away somebody's liberty by arresting them without a warrant. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Is that a motion as well? Okay, second motion. Assemblymember Lackey.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah, thank you. Let me begin by addressing one of the expressed concerns by my colleague over there. Reasonable suspicion and probable cause are completely different. I know that there was some language confusion. Confusion because they use the term reasonable cause. Such a standard doesn't exist constitutionally. Reasonable suspicion is much less greater than probable cause. Probable cause is a much stronger standard, and that's what this bill requires is probable cause, not reasonable suspicion.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
So I just wanted to make that very, very clear because I think that's a very important distinction to make. Secondly, I think the opposition's expression that this may result in people stealing gum is absurd. It's, well, what it does, it cheapens the credibility of the opposition. That will not happen. I just get frustrated by some of the extreme examples because this is trying to strike a reasonable balance to theft and not excuse it.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Because there was an honest attempt to try to balance the enforcement standard and now it has been exploited. And now I need to get back to at least a reasonable standard and probable cause is a reasonable standard that someone has is stealing. Because I will tell you that I know for a fact that we've excused theft. My daughter, who I've shared this story before, but I'll say it again. She was instructed by her employer.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Her employer told the employees, when witnessing theft turn the other way, don't bring any attention to it. Let it go. That's the message that's out there right now. We've got to correct that. It's not fair to retailers, it's not fair to the consumer, it's just not fair. So thank you for bringing this forward. It's time. Thank you.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Okay, well, a couple comments and then a few questions. So let's remember, before Prop 47, I was actually able to make those arrests for somebody stealing $600 worth of merchandise off probable cause of what I did during my course of my investigation. Taking them to jail, that used to be a thing. That's something that we're trying to bring back right now for the Grocer's Association. The opposition stated that 80%, there's 80% lower rate in shoplifting.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Seeing no further questions or comments.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Do you agree with that? That there's been an 80% decrease?
- Taina Vargas
Person
Clarify. I said 8%.
- Taina Vargas
Person
And I was citing the report in the analysis.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Just 8%?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I mean, I'm not going to square up with the PPIC, but from what we're seeing in our stores, it's absolutely, we've seen a stark increase between the passage of Prop 47 and then the aftermath of the pandemic. We've absolutely seen changes in behavior around these type of activities.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
And are you guys, are the grocers or retailers, are you not reporting them as much as you used to prior to this and why?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
That is correct, sir. We are not reporting these at rate that we had in the past because the feedback that we get from our members is that ultimately nothing happens.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And they hear that from the police officers who come, they hear that from the criminals who commit these crimes, but they hear, it's very clear that it's like it's catch and release which is partly why we're so grateful for this bill, is that it at least it's going to serve as a deterrent, which is a word that I've heard a lot today.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
But right now we have so many members who have, it's the same people, it's the same few dozen people who are there, if not every day, several times a week. And so if we can start to prevent those folks from coming in and getting away with things, then I think we'll see a real sharp decrease in this activity and improvement throughout our state.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. And I just, I just want to make another comment. I represent communities, immigration, lower income communities who are having deserts happen in their communities because stores are closing down and they're being hurt a lot by that. Opposition, I know you brought up, this is an immigration issue. I don't think this is an immigration issue. If anything, I'm helping my immigration communities by doing this, getting them the same services that all the other communities get to have as well.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
It's not fair to them that we turn away from crimes happening and let it happen, and then those stores get closed and then those communities be without these services. So I'm happy to support this Bill and I'll second if it hasn't had it.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. You have a motion? A second? I'll let you close. But before that, I do support this.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
One of the reasons that was stated by so many Member Reyes is I do think we brought more balance to it by having that declaration in there to make sure that there is ample opportunity for a fair shake for the accused. With that, you may close.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
Thank you, Mr. chair. And I appreciate all of the conversations that we have had related to this bill, to the opposition. I just want to say that I commend the work that you have done. We have worked together on a variety of different things in the past.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
Having this happen in my district multiple times, every day, every week, where small businesses who don't have access to video cameras, who don't have access or resources to hire loss prevention personnel or private security, they want a response from us. And it is unfair to put the burden on small businesses who are also people of color, who also come from low income communities, who are also trying to make their California dream and their American dream be a reality.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
And for us to sit back and do nothing is not where we need to be. And so this is a step forward. I do want to say to my colleague from San Bernardino, thank you for your comments, but I would say that it is very dangerous to interchange the words between reasonable cause and reasonable suspicion. Those are two very different things. Nowhere in the nill do we talk about reasonable suspicion.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
And, in fact, reasonable cause and probable cause as defined by California jurisprudence is equivalent and the same thing. And we are clarifying that in the amendments that we are taking with the committee.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
And so I know that retail theft continues to be a large conversation, but we can't have soft solutions to a problem that is hitting our communities harder and harder each day and that is causing more loss of jobs, stores closing and people losing their ability to pay their rent and feed their families, because these stores are shutting down and because those jobs are no longer available. And that is happening across my community, in the heart of the city of Los Angeles.
- Wendy Carrillo
Person
And so we are working towards coming to real solutions. And again, I want to thank the Committee and the chair for working with me on this policy. And with that, I respectfully request an aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 1990 by Assemblymember Wendy Carrillo. The motion is do pass as amended. McCarty? McCarty aye. Alanis? Alanis, aye? Lackey? Lackey, aye? Nguyen? Nguyen, aye. Reyes? Reyes, aye. Ting? Ting, aywe Wilson? Wilson, aye. Zbur?
- Kevin McCarty
Person
That measure passes. Thank you. Next measure, item 20, AB 2438. Petrie-Norris. Proceed.
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. And good afternoon, Committee Members. I know that there's been a lot of discussion in today's Committee about the rampant growth that we've seen in organized retail theft and smash and grab crimes all across the state. I know that the Committee Members recognize the horrific effects that these crimes are having on our small businesses, on the employees who work there, and on our communities and our economic vitality as a whole.
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
AB 2438 is working to address smash and grabs that are being committed by organized criminal gangs in California. It's really a pretty simple Bill. What AB 2438 says is simply that if three or more people are working together to rob a business, commit what is obviously an organized retail theft, subject to a judge's discretion, an enhancement of 12 or three years would be on the table, again, subject to a judge's discretion.
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
And I know that in this Committee, there has been a lot of concern around the topic of enhancements, and why would we be applying one in this case? So I've got, I guess, in my mind, two reasons for me that an enhancement in this situation is appropriate. I guess the bottom line is because when you're working in an organized gang of three or more people, that is fundamentally different than one person working alone.
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
A it speaks to the organized element that has become so pervasive and such a dangerous part of this problem and at the core of what we are trying to address with the legislation that has been proposed by many Members this year. And number two, the impact that that has on the community, on employees in a store, there's a very big difference between three often armed with baseball bat guys running into a store, smashing up the store in order to rob it.
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
That's very different than somebody who wanders in and kind of like takes a few things off the shelf, in my view. So that is why I think that an enhancement is appropriate in this scenario. And that's why I was open to the suggestion when the Orange County District Attorney approached us with this, and we'll now just hand it over to our representative from the Orange County District Attorney, Bradley Schoenleben. Thanks for being here.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Please proceed.
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
Thank you. My name is Bradley Schoenleben and I'm a Senior Deputy District Attorney for the Orange County District Attorney's office. I'm both humbled and honored to speak before you today in support of Assembly Bill 2438 and I'd like to thank Member Petrie-Norris for authoring this Bill. Organized crime groups are attacking our storefronts at unprecedented levels, greater than we've ever seen before. Gone are the days of a subtle and stealthy theft at the hands of a lone thief.
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
Instead, thieves are working together and have shown a complete disregard for any consequence and commit theft, showing little to no worry of capture, much less punishment. I have personally spoken with business owners and frontline employees who have all relayed the same sentiment. Theft by criminals acting in concert is terrifying. In fact, employees are quitting their much needed jobs because they're simply too afraid to go to work. When these thieves work in concert, their numbers are their strength.
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
This makes them harder to stop, harder to regain the merchandise, and even harder to capture. Often, when these thieves commit these reckless thefts, there is more than fear left behind, but damage the store they have just ransacked can be left in ruins. The amount of damage that can be done to a store can cost more than the items that were even taken. Thieves may steal 5000 in merchandise, but leave 50,000 in damage.
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
And if one thief can walk away with 5000 in merchandise, what can two thieves do? Or five, or 10 or 15, all in the same incident? We see these chaotic scenes of flash mobs. Smash and grabs play out over and over on the news and on social media, as they do make sensational stories. But what is not discussed is the damage to the reputation of the community in which the crime occurs.
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
What is not discussed are the countless shoppers, employees and business owners who are left traumatized by the incident and left to literally pick up the pieces, who have anxiety the next time they walk into a store or who must close up shop because of the damage done. It is for those folks, those communities, that something needs to be done to deter this crime. AB 2438 will be a start at doing so. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Other witnesses in support, please come forward.
- Jonathan Feldman
Person
Chair Members. Good afternoon again. Jonathan Feldman, California Police Chiefs Association in support.
- Daniel Conway
Person
Daniel Conway, California Grocers Association. Also in support Skyler Wonnacott, California Business Properties Association, in support.
- Ryan Allain
Person
Ryan Elaine, on behalf of California Retailers Association, in support.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Corey Salzillo, on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association, support.
- Megan Holtman
Person
Meg Holtman, California District Attorney's Association, in support.
- Julian Devores
Person
Julian Devores on behalf of the League of California Cities in support.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Ryan Sherman of the Riverside Sheriff's Association of the POSDSA's support. Thank you. Witnesses in opposition.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
Good afternoon. Danica Rodarmel on behalf of Initiate Justice. Not at all to discount the kinds of conduct that was being discussed as the impetus for this bill. Absolutely, it is terrifying when those kinds of things happen and have a lot of sympathy for people that experience that and the harm that is caused.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
But the truth is, again, increased punishment is not going to actually provide justice to victims in the way that we often claim that it will. This bill will do nothing to provide more resources to people or stores that are harmed in any way. And I feel like a very unfortunate broken record this year of having to repeat again and again there is no evidence that sentence enhancements really provide any meaningful public safety benefit or deterrent benefit.
- Danica Rodarmel
Person
They cost us a lot, both in dollars and I think in human cost by dramatically increasing prison sentences to no known benefit at $130 a year per person in CDCR. I think the risks that this bill causes more harm than good. Again, like all other enhancements bills we are considering this year, is very high. So the bill, I don't think will accomplish what it seeks to achieve and instead will accomplish greater coerced plea deals, higher sentences, and may, in fact, harm public safety. I urge an aye vote. Thank you.
- Claire Simonich
Person
Thank you. Claire Simonich on behalf of Vera California, which works to promote community safety, end mass incarceration, and advanced racial justice. 2438 would create a new sentencing enhancement of up to three years for acting with two or more people to take or destroy property during the commission of any felony. This bill allows judges unfettered discretion to choose between adding 1, 2, or 3 years onto a person's sentence without any guidance to to the judge on how to choose between those additional sentences.
- Claire Simonich
Person
And it also uses the mandatory language of "shall," much like the sentencing enhancement I spoke about earlier today. Notwithstanding existing law, it's unclear how a court would interpret that. I want to talk about how sentencing enhancements, both as a general matter and with respect to this bill, whose goals are to address organized retail theft, and which mirror to some extent the provisions within California's organized retail theft statute, how this sentencing enhancement risks increasing racial disparities in our prisons and jails.
- Claire Simonich
Person
According to booking data from 29 California counties between 2020 and 2023, a full 14% of arrests for organized retail theft were of black boys and young men aged 15 to 24. Young black men and boys in that age group, however, make up just 0.4% of California's population, which means there's a significant and disproportionate amount of arrest of young black boys and men for organized retail theft. And this bill, because it mirrors the statute, because it mirrors the organized retail theft, risks recreating that racial disparity.
- Claire Simonich
Person
In addition to all we know about how sentencing enhancements increase racial disparities, and that's precisely why we've moved away from them over the past five years in this Legislature, study after study has made clear that increased penalties and sentencing enhancements are ineffective in deterring crime, and this Legislature has better tools at hand to address retail theft, including so called smash and grab robberies.
- Claire Simonich
Person
Things like regulating online marketplaces, addressing people's needs by connecting them to housing, jobs, and other treatment and services, and supporting retail workers and increasing staffing in stores. I urge this Committee not to turn back the clock, and I urge the Committee to vote no on this bill. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Others in opposition?
- Natasha Minsker
Person
Natasha Minsker, Smart Justice California, strongly opposed.
- Roxana Gonzalez
Person
Roxana Gonzalez, Initiate Justice Action, strongly opposed.
- Margo George
Person
Margo George on behalf of the California Public Defenders Association, strongly opposed.
- Alesha Monteiro
Person
Alesha Monteiro, Californians United for a Responsible Budget, strongly opposed
- Barbara Chavez
Person
Barbara Chavez, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, in opposition.
- Oliver Kroll
Person
Oliver Kroll, San Francisco Public Defender, in opposition.
- Edward Little
Person
Ed Little on behalf of Californians for Safety and Justice in opposition.
- Lawrence Cox
Person
Lawrence Cox on behalf of LSPC in opposition
- Alissa Moore
Person
Alissa Moore, All of Us or None, opposition.
- Gretchen Bergman
Person
Gretchen Burns Bergman, A New PATH, in opposition.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Questions or comments from Committee Members? Assembly Member Nguyen.
- Stephanie Nguyen
Legislator
Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thank you to the author for bringing this forward. Just a couple of questions, clarifying questions. The enhancements are for the crimes that have already been committed, not attempted, right? These crimes, the enhancements. And then the second, the second question is just to give kind of, like, a scenario where, if there was a group of folks that were going to break into a commercial store and stole merchandise, the alarm goes off, the police show up, and the theft wasn't completed yet, the enhancement would then not apply to them because the theft wasn't completed yet. Correct? In reading the bill, I kind of was looking through it... And then I just, you know, if you can speak to sections of the law where it excludes attempt.
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
Where it excludes it?
- Stephanie Nguyen
Legislator
Attempt. Attempt. Attempt. Yeah.
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
So the bill, as in print, would apply to attempted crimes, and I'll give my kind of big picture rationale for that, and then would love for Mr. Schoenleben to chime in. The reason for that is that the crimes we're talking about are oftentimes the larger scale ones, where you've got folks that are attempting big smash and grab, alarm goes off, they know that police are on their way, and so they scatter.
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
But if there's not a deterrent to those attempts, those attempts continue, and that becomes a crime and a pervasive challenge. So it does, as written, apply to attempted as well. And you can speak to why, from your perspective, that's an important element.
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
Right. I know there's some discussion during amendments to this about not having an attempt or a 459 in this. The attempt language, first of all, as it relates to enhancement, I'm unaware of any enhancement that doesn't include attempt language in it. Furthermore, it would defy logic to, in essence, apply it only to those that are successful but not to those who failed, maybe because there was a loss prevention officer who was able to intervene.
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
The same is true if you bring up the idea of a commercial burglary. Again, you want to focus on the intent of the actor, the intent of the criminal. And when they commit that burglary crime, their intent is to come in and commit felony theft, larceny, et cetera. And so, again, just because they're not successful, this covers that group as well. And again, it would defy logic to not have that group be a part of this enhancement.
- Stephanie Nguyen
Legislator
I'm sorry, can you say that one last thing, that last sentence one more time? I was just thinking of my... I was just thinking of my last question, and then when you said that, I lost my train of thought.
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
Of course, as it relates to the 459, the burglary aspect, if a group of actors are going to commit a burglary, that shows that their intent was to go in and, in fact, steal or commit a felony. And the idea would be that you'd want to make sure that enhancement applies to that, even if they're unsuccessful.
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
So if they go into that building with that criminal mindset of committing that intent of that criminal act, you'd want to make sure that, if they do it in these kinds of numbers, that the enhancement would apply. Because even if they're not successful in taking any of the property, the fear that they've imposed upon the workers within that store, that commercial building, that fear is already in place. The worker leaving that place doesn't walk away going, well, I'm okay, because they didn't actually take a purse, so it was less terrifying. To the worker, the crime itself is the terrifying part.
- Stephanie Nguyen
Legislator
So right now, if they were to go in and attempt to, but weren't successful, they would be released and be able to leave. But what we're saying is that they attempted to, but they were unsuccessful.
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
Right. As is written in the current form, if they were to go in and are unsuccessful, the enhancement would still apply, which obviously makes sense.
- Stephanie Nguyen
Legislator
And that would be the 1, 2, and the 3 enhancement based off of... Okay
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
Yeah. Based on a judge's discretion.
- Stephanie Nguyen
Legislator
Right. Because right now, there isn't, there Isn't that in place. There's nothing in place for that.
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
Under current law?
- Stephanie Nguyen
Legislator
Right. There's nothing in place.
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
Under current law, attempted burglary, attempted theft can still be prosecuted, and, I think in some cases, is. My understanding, it's perhaps prosecuted less than it otherwise would be because without kind of sufficient teeth, our law enforcement partners end up spinning their wheels for very little result. I don't know if that is true.
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
Yeah. There's no current law for your questions. If it applies now, there's no current law to address this specific issue as it relates now.
- Stephanie Nguyen
Legislator
Right.
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
Right. So there are, we certainly prosecute attempted burglary, attempted theft, attempted grant theft, and so on. But right now, to address the issue of large groups of people coming in and inflicting that terror upon that store, there is nothing that currently addresses that.
- Stephanie Nguyen
Legislator
And that's why they continue to do it. They continue to because there's nothing that addresses that.
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
Right. I mean, there's safety in... I mean, like I said in the statement, there are safety in numbers. I think we often underestimate our criminal actors in this, in that they plan this out. They do reconnaissance missions to the stores. We know this. I mean, we've talked to the defendants. We've seen evidence of it. They do recon. They know when to hit, how to hit, and who to hit, and then they do. Each person has a role.
- Bradley Schoenleben
Person
And the fact that when they come in in these large groups, that by itself creates an element of fear, even without being armed with a weapon or a tool, such as a hammer, to break in. And so that's what we're here to address.
- Stephanie Nguyen
Legislator
Okay, thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Further questions or comments from Committee Members? Seeing none, we have a motion and a second. You may close.
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
Right. Well, appreciate the questions. Appreciate the engagement with you, Mr. Chair, and with your Committee staff. I know we did not necessarily find a landing place on which we both agreed. I think, as I said, in my view, when we're talking about an organized group of criminals working together to terrorize our small businesses, our community members, and our community as a whole, that is sufficiently different than someone acting alone.
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
That It merits, in my view and in the view of this bill, a different consequence. And I think that a world without consequences is not a world where people actually follow the rules. And so with that, I respectfully ask for an aye vote on AB 2438.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 2438 by Assembly Member Petrie-Norris, the motion is do pass to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call] That measure's on call.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
That's on call.
- Cottie Petrie-Norris
Legislator
All right. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Okay, thank you. Next author, Mr. Hoover.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Please proceed.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chair and members, appreciate the opportunity to present AB 2045 to you. First, I want to thank the committee for working with my office on this bill and start by saying that I do accept the committee amendments. Fentanyl is a nationwide crisis and is the number one cause of death of 18 to 45-year-olds. Unfortunately, our laws do not reflect the growing threat that fentanyl poses to our children. This bill seeks to remedy that specifically regarding crimes that involve minors.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
As amended, AB 2045 simply extends a one-year prison enhancement for an adult who solicits, encourages or intimidates a minor to commit a drug crime involving fentanyl if it occurs on the premises of a religious institution, playground, youth center, daycare or public swimming pool, It also extends a two-year prison enhancement for the same crime if the offense occurs within 1000 foot of a public or private school when children are present. Simply put, this brings fentanyl in line with other hard drugs such as cocaine and heroin.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
It does not create a new penalty. With me today to testify and support is Cory Salzillo, representing the California State Sheriff's Association. And strongly encourage an aye vote. Thank you.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Thank you Mr. Chair and members, Cory Salzillo on behalf of the California State Sheriff's Association here in support of the bill. As the author said, fentanyl-involved deaths continue to rise in California every year and unfortunately, too many of those involve minors. Given the growing threat that we've seen very clearly, it's important to update reasonable penalty enhancements to combat the devastation caused by this deadly drug and to recognize and statute the realities of today and the controlled substances that our communities are facing.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
Perpetrators need to face appropriate consequences when encouraging miners to be engaged in fentanyl commerce as is already the case with other hard drugs like cocaine and heroin. But we know that fentanyl is unique. It's more deadly than other illicit drugs. It's often marketed to children and others as other substances altogether. In many cases, the person thinks they are purchasing some other substance only have it to be fentanyl or laced with fentanyl and resulting in a deadly poisoning.
- Cory Salzillo
Person
The bottom line is we need to do all we can to protect our communities. This is a reasonable update of existing law to match statutes to what is happening in our communities and to recognize the scourge that fentanyl has quickly become over the last few years. So we thank the author and respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Others in support, please come forward.
- Jonathan Feldman
Person
Chair and members, Jonathan Feldman, California Police Chiefs Association, in support.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Ryan Sherman with the Riverside Sheriff's Association, California Narcotic Officers Association, and the other POSDs support.
- Jeff Rubin
Person
Jeff Rubin, on behalf of the California District Attorneys Association in support.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Opposition, please come forward.
- Gretchen Bergman
Person
Thank you, Chair and Committee. I'm Gretchen Burns Bergman, co-founder and Executive Director of A New Path, Parents for Addiction Treatment and Healing. Here in respectful opposition to AB 2045.
- Gretchen Bergman
Person
A New Path is a nonprofit organization working to reduce the stigma associated with substance use. We advocate for therapeutic, rather than punitive drug policies for 25 years now. I'm the mother of two sons who are in long-term recovery from heroin addiction. I've experienced firsthand the failures of our society in treating drug use as a criminal justice issue rather than a public health issue. For over 50 years, we've prioritized incarceration over treatment, and yet problems of addiction.
- Gretchen Bergman
Person
And overdose are increasing, not decreasing. Criminal justice approaches have always made things worse. Adolescent drug use is at a record low. However, there's been an alarming spike in teen drug overdose deaths, and fentanyl was a major factor.
- Gretchen Bergman
Person
This is particularly frustrating, as many of these deaths could have been prevented with public health strategies. I understand the author's intent, trying to keep our youth safe, but this bill does not propose a new solution to reduce the risk of teen overdose. We really need more resources.
- Gretchen Bergman
Person
Providing students with honest, fact-based drug education is the biggest way for youth to assist their family and friends and keep themselves safe. Since 2014, we've been doing overdose prevention training and Narcan distribution throughout our county. and across the country.
- Gretchen Bergman
Person
Teens need to have naloxone available to them as well. The state must also increase access to substance use treatment that includes behavioral health and Medicaid-assisted treatment, including and especially for youth.
- Gretchen Bergman
Person
We must prioritize public health interventions with open minds and without judgment and criminalization. We can engage youth early and help them live fulfilling lives. I and thousands of parents across California urge this Committee to vote no on AB 2045.
- Oliver Kroll
Person
Good afternoon, Mister Chairman and Members of the Committee. My name is Oliver Kroll. I'm a deputy public defender at the San Francisco Public Defender's office. First, I want to acknowledge the alarming public health crisis posed by fentanyl. As a parent myself, I understand the importance of doing everything we can to protect children. I want to thank the author for accepting the amendments. And of course, there's no one who doesn't want to address the fentanyl epidemic.
- Oliver Kroll
Person
But this bill will not meet its stated goals in preventing or reducing crimes related to fentanyl. Actually, it would result in a waste of critical resources and would make racial disparities in sentencing even worse. The existing laws on the books are already harsh. The current penalty for encouraging a minor to use a controlled substance, or to transport or possess for sale a controlled substance is nine years in prison before any enhancements.
- Oliver Kroll
Person
This bill would take the same enhancements that damaged communities during the crack cocaine epidemic and extend it to fentanyl, based on proximity to schools, places of worship and other sensitive areas. But there is no evidence that this would prevent teenage drug use or deter drug sales. And we know this because these enhancement zones are nothing new. Drug-free zone laws have existed for decades. The first such law was passed by the Congress, the federal Congress, in 1970. All 50 states have some version of this.
- Oliver Kroll
Person
And 50 years later and $1 trillion later, we continue to be faced with a devastating public health crisis. Increasing prison sentences for drug-related crimes does not make us safer, and it will not solve the opioid public health crisis. Instead of protecting children, these draconian laws resulted in worsening the mass incarceration of Black, Latino Californians, who are more likely to live in urban areas where every block has a school, a place of worship, or a community center, compared with perhaps suburban or rural areas.
- Oliver Kroll
Person
Drug sentences for Black men significantly longer than drug sentences for white men between 2007 and 2009. And this bill also leans into a kind of, I think, a false separation between sellers and users. 87.5% of people who sell drugs also use drugs, and additionally, 43% of that population meet the criteria for a substance use disorder. Enforcement bills that rely on criminal punishment, like this one, take away critical resources that could go to treatment, stable housing, alleviating poverty, addressing the root causes of drug use and crime.
- Oliver Kroll
Person
I respectfully urge this committee not to double down on one of the original failed war on drugs policies in defiance of evidence, the experts and what's happening on our streets. And I would respectfully request a no vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Others in opposition?
- Melanie Kim
Person
Melanie Kim, San Francisco Public Defender's Office, in opposition.
- Margo George
Person
Margo George, again, for the California Public Defenders Association, in respectful opposition. Thank you.
- Ed Little
Person
Ed Little, on behalf of Californians for Safety and Justice, in opposition.
- Norma Palacios
Person
Norma Palacios, on behalf of the Drug Policy Alliance, in strong opposition.
- Taina Vargas
Person
Taina Vargas with Initiate Justice Action in opposition.
- Thanh Tran
Person
Thanh Tran, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, opposition.
- Mica Doctoroff
Person
Mica Doctoroff with the ACLU of Northern California on behalf of ACLU, California Action in respectful opposition.
- Alesha Monteiro
Person
Alesha Monteiro with California United for responsible budget, opposition.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Questions or comments from Committee Members? Seeing none. Do we have a motion? A motion, a second? I did note in your opening that you mentioned that we did offer some amendments, which you took, which I think narrow it and make it more balanced and not overreaching. So, we thank you. And with that, you may close.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you. And yes, thank you again, Mr. Chair. Just in response to some of the arguments that have presented, I think it's important to point out that if we put this in reverse. Right. If someone was authoring a bill to eliminate these enhancements that exist in current law for heroin and cocaine, would you vote for that bill? Would you want to vote for that bill? All my bill is simply doing is bringing fentanyl in line with those hard drugs.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And in fact, in a lot of ways, fentanyl is more harmful to our youth. It is actually 50 times more potent than heroin. And so, obviously, while I just think it's really important that we remember that these enhancements already exist in current law, we are simply adding fentanyl to them. We are not creating a new penalty. That being said, I will just close by saying that as a parent of a freshman in high school, my oldest is now a freshman in high school.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
It is a terrifying time to be a parent of a teenager right now. And we know this because we see fentanyl continuing to come into our communities in greater and greater numbers. Governor Newsom just released the latest numbers a few weeks ago, and the amount of fentanyl that has come into our state is exponentially greater today than it was even three short years ago. We are losing 115 Californians per week to this fentanyl crisis.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And I do agree with some of the comments of the opposition that we need to attack this at every single angle. We do need resources. We need more resources. We need Narcan availability. There are a lot of different ways. We need more education for youth, for parents, for teachers. I have supported that legislation. I will continue to fight for that as well. But we also need more accountability, and that's what I hope this bill provides. I would respectfully ask for an aye vote. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 2045 by Assemblymember Hoover. The motion is do pass as amended. To the Appropriations Committee. McCarty? McCarty aye. Alanis? Alanis, aye? Lackey? Lackey, aye? Nguyen? Nguyen, aye. Reyes? Ting? Ting, aye? Ting. Wilson? Wilson, not voting. Zbur? I'm sorry. Zbur, aye.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
That measure passes.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. Next we have item number three, AB 1794. Assemblymember and Chair McCarty.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you for allowing me to present this measure. And yes, I will be accepting the Committee amendments that were forced upon me. This is AB 1794 as part of our package, which you were part of this morning in our response to retail theft law in California. This brings a balanced approach, allowing businesses that are struggling to grapple with the impact of retail theft to have some tools to address this in a smart manner. This Bill really does two things.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
It focuses on repeat offenders by focusing on aggregation issue to focus on individual perpetrators who commit crimes in different locations and with different victims. It also streamlines the process for reporting shoplifting incidents directly to prosecutors for retailers. This is a program that was modeled here in Yolo County, in my adjacent county. And this would create a statewide model to that and allow us to more effectively deal with retail theft in a timely manner.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thirdly, this focuses on a measure that you brought up earlier today, which is the grant program and makes those resources available for this. We know this is an issue across our state for large retailers and small. You know that we've heard from our large retailers, corporately owned retailers, Wall Street companies, but we also have main street companies you're going to hear from in a second. Small businesses throughout our communities in your district and my district right here in Sacramento.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
We know that businesses across California have reduced hours, alter their store product selections and forced closures. And mentioned earlier, sometimes these locations have have deserts because of that. These impacts affect all of us, consumers, businesses, and the State of California as a whole. But with us today is a measure that we think will adequately address this issue as part of a larger global solution. With me today is a small business owner from the Natomas area, Mister Jas Hundal.
- Jas Hundal
Person
Hello, Members. My name is Jas Hundal. I own couple of businesses like liquor store and Mountain Mike's Pizzas in Natomas. And since COVID everybody knows it changed everything. And especially the theft which has been happening at our stores. It has been a repeat. The people have been the same people are coming and doing the repeat theft. And it's not only now at the retail store or liquor store. It started at my Mountain Mike's Pizza also.
- Jas Hundal
Person
So people, sometimes they order and they say, okay, we gonna come and pay cash. And they order like 5-6 pizzas, and they snatch, and they walk out. Earlier I have seen this at the liquor stores or the gas stations, but now I'm seeing this happening at the pizza places, restaurants now. The main thing in this is it's not affecting us financially. It's affecting everybody over there.
- Jas Hundal
Person
When the shoplifter comes, and they ask for like expensive wine bottles or whiskeys or whatever it is, so they come and they look at it and they just snatch from our employees hands, and they run away. Our employees are so worried now and they are so afraid that we have to hire additional security guards over there.
- Jas Hundal
Person
If you come at my store in Natomas, West Hill, Camino and Truxill, with the help of our landlord, we hired a security company, which is an extra expense for us, which is really hard to afford. And not every retail guy can afford that. We have to afford it because we have to run the business, otherwise we're going to shut it down.
- Jas Hundal
Person
And if somebody is want to buy a liquor business or something, a lot of them are coming on sale because of this thing. Second thing is, families stopped coming over there. The reason when there is a shoplifting happens, those guys comes in like two or three people at a time together. And if our employees try to stop them, they threaten them, they yell at our employees. Then it affects the other customers. We don't see any kids coming in now at the stores. That's the biggest reason. We see less number of female customers. That's same reason.
- Jas Hundal
Person
Because it's an unpleasant situation happens over there. The financial is a big loss to us, and the biggest loss is a threat. And when we call, when we say, like, I heard somebody was saying, like, it's a decrease in the shoplifting. No, it is not decrease. There's no decrease in the shoplifting. People like us, they stopped reporting now because when we report to the police station, the police department, police department doesn't show up because they cannot even do anything. So that is the thing.
- Jas Hundal
Person
Shoplifting didn't decrease, it increased. So I will seriously request you guys to say yes to this Bill so that our small retailers can be taken. Like, you guys can help us. Thank you.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. You still have another half a minute if you want. If anybody else wants to. Okay. Anyone else in support, please come up. Give your name and association.
- Jonathan Feldman
Person
Chair and Members, Jonathan Feldman, California Police Chiefs Association in support.
- Ryan Allain
Person
Ryan Lane on behalf of California Retailers Association in support.
- Daniel Conway
Person
Daniel Conway on behalf of the California Grocers Association in support. Thank you.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Ryan Sherman with the Riverside Sheriffs' Association. The other POS DSAs in support.
- Kenton Stanhope
Person
Kenton Stanhope, California New Car Dealers, in support. Thanks.
- Irwin Nowick
Person
Normally I wouldn't be here doing this in my individual capacity, but my SO is a former deputy DA in San Francisco.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Sir, I just need your name.
- Irwin Nowick
Person
Irwin Nowick. You know me.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Just need support or not. Thank you.
- Irwin Nowick
Person
Because of the Yolo thing going statewide.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you, sir.
- Jolena Voorhis
Person
Jolena Voorhis on behalf of the League of California Cities in support.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you.
- Danielle Sanchez
Person
Danielle Sanchez on behalf of the Chief Probation Officers of California in support.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you very much. Anybody else in support? Okay, anyone in opposition, please come up to the table.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Do you want to just come up to the mic?
- Claire Simonich
Person
Good afternoon, Vera Institute of Justice Claire Simonich. We've appreciated ongoing conversations with the author on this Bill. We have concerns with the Bill that's written, but appreciate engaging in ongoing conversations.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you. Anyone else in opposition seeing none Committee. Assemblymember Zbur?
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
I just want to thank the author. I know that addressing this issue of retail theft has been one of his passions, and he's been meeting with all the stakeholders. The expansion of this calfast pass program, I think is something that's really significant. It really gives folks an ability to go directly to the Das and make sure that Das are tracking, have the information they need to understand when we've got, you know, multiple thefts happening and where they're concentrated.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
And I just think it's a pretty significant development. So I just want to thank the author, obviously strongly supporting the Bill.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Miss Nguyen.
- Stephanie Nguyen
Legislator
Thank you, sir. I also want to thank the author for bringing this forward, and thank you for coming out here and sharing your story. I know that takes a lot of courage and you did it really well. And you know, one of the things you talked about is that not a lot of businesses are able to put the extra funds out to be able to protect their employees and their staff, and you do that because you care about them.
- Stephanie Nguyen
Legislator
And so I want to thank you for coming out here for speaking, and I'd be more than happy to move this Bill forward, support this Bill, and continue to speak out and work with us, work with your local law enforcement and your representative as well too. So thank you very much.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Mister Lackey.
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Yeah, I'd like to first of all congratulate the author for at least momentarily converting to public safety. Very thankful to see this happen. And I ask to be a co author, that's it.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else? Okay, I also want to congratulate you and thank you for bringing this Bill, sir. Also for you probably could have used you earlier, also on your statements as well, but I think you've said what all of us already know for a sense on how retail theft's affecting businesses. So thank you for coming down here. I don't know if I'm a co author on this, but if I'm not, could you please make me a co author as well?
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
And with that you may close.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Co authors for everybody. Yes, you know, I think wasn't sure if it was this morning or one of the bills earlier today. We didn't get into this overnight and it's not going to take one magical solution to get out of this overnight. It's an issue that impacts all of our communities. We see it. People see it with our own two eyes, where they feel it when they're buying their goods, paying their bills, or they see it when their products are locked up. There is an impact across California.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
We need to be smart in our, our response, and we think this is just that, a piece of the puzzle, focusing in this absent piece of the aggregating these acts for multiple events, multiple venues, multiple victims, and making it easier to use that tool, but also looking at tools where our retailers can go directly to our district attorneys to make that more seamless as well. So with that, thank you for the conversation and respectfully ask for your aye vote thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
That measure passes. Thank you.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Next, Mr. Zbur, we'll go ahead and get on to you. Item 25, AB 2943 Mister Zbur. You have it
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Great. Thank you. Mister Chair and Committee Members, I'll start by accepting the Committee's proposed amendments and wanted to express that I'm deeply grateful for the ongoing engagement of the Committee chair, the Committee, and staff as we go forward with refining three key pieces to be added as soon as we finalize language and finalize our negotiations with various stakeholders. I'm proud to serve as the joint author, along with Speaker Reavis, for this Bill, AB 2943, the California Retail Theft Reduction Act.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
As you may have heard this morning, this Bill is one of the is one of the components of a broader comprehensive strategy and package of bills that advances balanced, effective, and meaningful solutions to retail crime and preserves criminal justice, reforms that have been effective at keeping our communities safe. We have worked and will continue to work hand in hand with the Speaker's policy staff, the Public Safety Committee, the Governor's office, and all the key stakeholders from all perspectives to develop these proposals.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
It's important to lay out the key elements of the Bill, each of which can be enacted by the Legislature and signed into law without voter approval. First, AB 2943 places great emphasis on stopping organized crime rings that are harming our communities by creating a new crime targeting serial retail thieves. For example, those are engaged in repeated specified conduct or who possess a quantity of goods inconsistent with personal use.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
This and other components of the Bill advance key recommendations released by the Governor's office earlier this year, and I want to thank the Governor for his engagement and leadership on this issue and also for the engagement of his staff. This Bill also more specifically defines how the value of thefts from different victims can be aggregated to charge grand theft.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Notably, the Bill clarifies the law that the intent standard can be met by evidence that the acts involved the same defendants are substantially similar and occur within a 60-day period. AB 2943 also expands the tools for police to arrest for shoplifting and to keep repeat offenders and those committing organized retail crime in custody. And significantly, this Bill helps address the root cause of theft by expanding the use of diversion and rehabilitative programs, offering the opportunity for early discharge if the program is completed.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
As you know, the legislative process is long and this Bill will continue to evolve. We are still finalizing language on three additional elements to be added to the Retail Theft Reduction Act, and we'll be conferring with your Committee staff and the chair of this Committee as we do that these are provisions that would protect businesses from having nuisance actions brought against them simply for reporting retail crime. Two, addressing the role of online marketplaces. and three, increasing data transparency from large retailers.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Again, I want to thank the Speaker, the Governor, the chair, the Members and staff of this Committee, the Members of the Select Committee, and all our stakeholders for their strong engagement over the past many months and for investing in developing this comprehensive set of proposals that will have a meaningful impact on retail crime. I ask for your aye vote at the appropriate time.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
With me today to testify in support and to assist with technical questions are Rachel Michelin, President and CEO of the California Retailers Association, and Michael Redding, Special Assistant Attorney General at the California Department of Justice.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
All right, here I am again. Hello. Rachel Michelin, President of the Retailers Association, in strong support of Assembly Bill 2943. This Bill demonstrates that the California Assembly has listened to retailers large and small, in addition to Californians across the state, and shows a serious approach to addressing retail theft that is plaguing our communities and putting our employees and stores at risk. This is a significant change in the conversation around retail theft that we have not seen for several years in this Committee.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
This comprehensive set of proposals builds on a number of other legislative bills as part of a package that brings meaningful impacts on stopping the growing threat of retail crime and ensures our stores are safe from repeat criminal activities, our employees have a safe place to work, and our customers can shop free from witnessing criminal behavior around them.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
This Bill addresses many of the issues the California Retailers Association has advocated for in the past, including providing consequences for repeat offenders and the creation of a new felony for not only serial shoplifting, but also if someone possesses property that was stolen from a retail business, whether or not they committed the act of stealing the property themselves.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
While we appreciate the attempt to provide clarity on the ability to aggregate up to the $950 threshold, we look forward to working with the authors to further define the issue of aggregation, as we believe that is a key point that must be addressed to ensure repeat offenders are held accountable for their criminal activity and also serves as a deterrent for individuals to not commit retail theft in the first place.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
AB 2943 also provides tools for law enforcement to make arrests for misdemeanor shoplifting, even if the officer obtains, when the officer obtains a sworn witness statement from a person who witnessed the alleged violation, or the officer observed video footage showing the person to be arrested committing the alleged crime, the arrest can be made even if the offense was not committed in the officer's presence.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
In addition to increasing accountability for serial retail theft, this Bill expands on the participation in collaborative courts and rehabilitation programs, something the Retailers Association has always been supportive of. Retail theft is a real problem, and one that impacts businesses large and small in every community and every corner of the state. AB 2943 advances a balanced, meaningful solution to addressing many of the concerns from retailers of all sizes throughout California.
- Rachel Michelin
Person
While there's still more work to be done, this Bill, as part of the overall Assembly Retail Theft Package is light years from the conversations around retail theft this body was having just a few short months ago. I'm encouraged by the willingness of this body to work on real reforms that will lead to greater safety for our retail employees, our customers, and the neighborhoods we operate in. For those reasons, I request your aye vote.
- Michael Redding
Person
And good afternoon, my name is Michael Redding. Good afternoon, Chair McCarty, honorable Members of the Committee, my name is Michael Redding. I'm a special assistant attorney general of the California Department of Justice here today on behalf of the Attorney General in strong support of AB 2943. First, the Attorney General would like to thank Speaker Rivas and Chair of the Select Committee on Organized Retail Theft, Chavez Zabur, for their leadership on this Bill, which includes elements of the governor's framework to combat organized retail crime.
- Michael Redding
Person
The Attorney General is honored to support this Bill, which gives local law enforcement and prosecutors additional tools to combat organized retail crime. Organized retail crime is not just about losses to retailers. It's about workers who have a right to safety. It's about families who don't need an additional thing to worry about on their trip to the store. And it's about sending a message to our communities that accountability matters. AB 2943 if passed and signed, will be effective at moving us closer to these goals.
- Michael Redding
Person
It clarifies the terms of aggregation so that repeat offenders will be held accountable. It creates a new crime that aims to target those who peddle stolen goods. It allows for arrests and appropriate theft circumstances, and as discussed, it emphasizes collaborative courts and addressing root causes. In short, it will be a vital tool for the California Department of Justice and for prosecutors throughout the state. Thank you and I welcome any questions.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Others in support please come forward.
- Ryan Sherman
Person
Ryan Sherman with Riverside Sheriff's Association, California Narcotic Officers, and all the other POAs in support. Thanks.
- Brenda Bass
Person
Brenda Bass California Chamber of Commerce in support.
- Stephanie Estrada
Person
Stephanie Estrada on behalf of the City of San Jose in support. Thank you.
- Daniel Conway
Person
Daniel Conway, California Grocers, in support. Thank you for all your work.
- Kenton Stanhope
Person
Kenton Stanhope, California New Car Dealers Association, in support.
- Tiffany Whiten
Person
Tiffany Whiten with SEIU California we are this close to being in support and continued conversations with the author's officer over the role of security officers. Thank you.
- Jonathan Feldman
Person
Jonathan Feldman, California Police Chiefs Association, support.
- Natalie Boust
Person
Natalie Boust for the California Business Roundtable in support.
- Danielle Sanchez
Person
Danielle Sanchez with the Chief Probation Officers of California. Please support in concept the issues and look forward to continued engagement.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Opposition.
- Claire Simonich
Person
Good afternoon. Claire Simonich from Vera Institute of Justice. We're engaging in very fruitful and productive conversations, and we really appreciate those conversations with both the speaker and the author. We look forward to continuing them, but we have concerns with the Bill as written. Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you.
- Cox Carmen-Nicole
Person
Carmen Nicole Cox on behalf of ACLU California Action. Same same. We have concerns. Looking forward to addressing them.
- Alicia Benavidez
Person
Alicia Benavidez for Immigrant Legal Resource Center. I'm going to be communicating with your office over concerns just to mitigate immigration unintended consequences.
- Taina Vargas
Person
Taina Vargas, Initiate Justice Action, in opposition as written.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. No others in opposition questions or comments from Committee Members. Mister Lackey
- Tom Lackey
Legislator
Just ask to be a co-author.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Thank you.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I think I'm already a co-author, but thanks again for doing this, making this happen. Very proud of you.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Thank you.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Do we have a motion? A motion by Assembly Member Wilson. Second by Vice Chair Alanis. Yes. And just I know that the speaker was going to present earlier today and he couldn't be here, but you know, this is certainly a top issue that we brought as many people together on as we could. And as you noted, it's part of an overall package and it's early in the legislative year. So we're committed to working with others, which I know you stated as well.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
And thank you for bringing this forward. And with that, you may close.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Mister Chair, thank you so much for your engagement on this Bill and on this issue. I want to thank the Committee Members. I'll just reiterate that this Bill is intended to advance balanced, effective, and meaningful solutions that address retail crime and preserve criminal justice reforms that have been effective at keeping our community safe. I'm committed to continuing to work with folks that have concerns today from both sides as we refine this Bill and move ahead.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
Widespread retail crime is not only bad for business and a source of shopper inconvenience, it's an issue of safety for workers and businesses, as well as an issue of the public's perception of safety. This Bill says to organized crime rings, we mean business. And we're going to give law enforcement the tools they need to shut you down. To those who are engaging in shoplifting to survive, these proposals embrace new tools like enhanced supervision and diversion programs to help people get on their feet.
- Rick Chavez Zbur
Legislator
To workers, small businesses, retailers, and the public, this Bill demonstrates that effective reform is on its way. I'm grateful for the Speaker's leadership. I'm grateful for the Chair's leadership, for the Governor's strong leadership on this issue, for all the stakeholders who are here today. And I'm grateful for the Members of the Select Committee for investing in this comprehensive and meaningful set of proposals. With that, I ask for your aye vote.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Thank you. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
On AB 2943 by Assembly Member Zbur. The motion is do pass as amended, to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll call]
- Kevin McCarty
Person
That measure passes. That concludes.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
No, no, no. We got to do last call.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
I know. No that concludes.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Sorry.
- Kevin McCarty
Person
I got it. I got it. That concludes the scheduled bills to be heard. We're going to go back through the list now with the on-call items and any vote changes or add-ons.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Kevin McCarty
Person
Yep, that's good. We're all set. Thank you. With that, we will adjourn. zero, I didn't say today. This is our. Everyone's left the room, but. But we are here. We are here. This is. This is the. This is the final hearing for our amazing chief lead consultant for the Assembly Public Safety Committee, who's been here a decade, just about a decade in going on to other public service opportunities to help work on these same issues. So thank you for your service to this Committee and to the Assembly. Sandy Uribe. Thank you. Thank you.
Committee Action:Passed
Speakers
Legislator