California reduces penalty for lower-level crimes

Zippyjuan

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http://www.kcra.com/politics/voters-approve-controversial-proposition-47/29225292

Prop 47 will allow re-sentencing for about 10,000 inmates currently in prison

SACRAMENTO, Calif. —California voters on Tuesday approved a ballot initiative that will reduce penalties for low-level drug and property crimes to save hundreds of millions of dollars in prison costs.

Under Proposition 47, shoplifting, forgery, fraud, petty theft, and possession of small amounts of drugs including cocaine and heroin are among the offenses that will be treated as misdemeanors rather than felonies.

With about 2.6 million ballots counted, the measure had 58 percent support.

Passage in the nation's most populous state "sends a powerful message nationally, demonstrating that voters are not just ready but eager to reduce prison populations in ways that can enhance public safety," Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the national Drug Policy Alliance, said in a statement.

Major law enforcement groups opposed the measure, saying reductions go too far because the crimes include possession of date rape drugs and stealing firearms. They said reducing penalties is dangerous at a time when the state still is adjusting to another change, prison realignment, that often results in shorter sentences and early releases to cope with crowding.

Jennifer Jacobs, spokeswoman for the No on 47 campaign, said opponents were outspent 17-to-1 mainly by national groups supporting lower criminal penalties for drug use. Major backers included Public Storage founder B. Wayne Hughes, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings, wealthy civil rights attorney Molly Munger and a fund linked to New York billionaire George Soros.

The nonpartisan Legislative Analyst's Office projects that reducing sentences through Proposition 47 could affect about 40,000 offenders a year. An estimated 4,000 currently go to state prison, while the rest serve their time at the county level.

The initiative also would allow an estimated 10,000 offenders to petition judges for reduced sentences because they already are serving felony sentences for covered offenses.

Since misdemeanors carry a maximum penalty of less than a year in custody, the measure is projected to save hundreds of millions of dollars. The savings will be diverted to school programs, victims' services, and mental health and drug treatment.

Advocates, led by San Francisco District Attorney George Gascon, said diverting incarceration money to treatment programs will help break a long cycle of crime. They said felony convictions make it more difficult to get jobs and housing assistance, increasing the pressure on offenders to commit more crimes.

"We must devote our resources to keeping violent criminals off the streets, not cycling addicts in and out of jail," Gascon said in a statement after the measure passed.

More at link.
 
look at their Billion dollar budget for water.....,maybe the tax farm needs more cattle to graze
 
I'm curious. They say resentencing... but would this retroactively change the conviction from a felony to a misdemeanor? That's very important for voting, firearms, etc.
 
look at their Billion dollar budget for water.....,maybe the tax farm needs more cattle to graze

Interesting that Arizona is criticizing California water. Of the "Ten Biggest American Cities That Are Running Out Of Water" Arizona has two- same as California. http://finance.yahoo.com/news/pf_article_111186.html Phoenix (#3) imports their water from the Colorado River.

3. Phoenix

Major Water Supply: Colorado River Basin
Population (U.S. rank): 1,593,659 (5th)
Population Growth Rate: 21.2% since 2000
Average annual rainfall: 8.3 in.

Like many of the other western cities on this list, Phoenix is extremely dependent on water imported from the Colorado River- which is also LA's main source. This is because nearly half of the water the city's residents use comes from this significant source. As the Colorado River Basin enters the eleventh year of its drought, the city's reliance on the river may soon become a serious problem. If the drought continues, water deliveries to Arizona could potentially be cut back. To keep up a sufficient water supply, Phoenix is adopting an aggressive campaign to recycle water, replenish groundwater and try to dissuade over-consumption. Time will tell if it these measures will be enough.

In an article from 2008:

Meanwhile, some wealthier countries are just beginning to understand the depth of their own crises. Many parts of the United States are experiencing severe water shortages. Pressure is mounting on the governors in the Great Lakes region to open up access to the lakes to the burgeoning mega-cities around the basin. In 2007, Lake Superior, the world's largest freshwater lake, dropped to its lowest level in 80 years. Florida is in trouble, trying to keep its fast-spreading lawns and golf courses green. California has a 20-year supply of freshwater left. New Mexico has only 10. And Arizona is out: It now imports all of its drinking water. Experts assert that this is more than a cyclical "drought": Major parts of the United States are running out of water. In fact, the Environmental Protection Agency warns that if current water use continues unchecked, 36 states will suffer water shortages within the next five years.
http://prospect.org/article/where-has-all-water-gone

As for those cows, you are probably eating them. Along with our tomatoes and garlic and avocados and other produce. If the California cows go away, you will be complaining about the price of meat soaring.
 
I'm curious. They say resentencing... but would this retroactively change the conviction from a felony to a misdemeanor? That's very important for voting, firearms, etc.
Not sure how far back, but yes, it is retroactive meaning hundreds of prisoners will be eligible for release once they are resentenced.

https://cavotes.org/vote/election/2014/november/4/ballot-measure/proposition-47

Prop. 47 would reduce the penalty for most nonviolent wobblers and felonies to misdemeanors, unless the defendant has prior convictions for violent and serious crimes. Prop. 47 would permit resentencing for anyone currently serving a prison sentence for any of the offenses reclassified in Prop. 47 as misdemeanors, and certain offenders who have already completed a sentence for one of those felonies may apply to the court to have their convictions changed to misdemeanors.

State savings from Prop. 47 would go to a newly created fund, “Safe Neighborhoods and Schools Fund,” for truancy and drop-out prevention programs in schools, victims’ services, and mental health and drug treatment services designed to keep individuals out of prison and jail.

It will probably tie up the courts for a while to try to get all the resentensing completed.
 
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California: ‘Walking out of jail’ Prop 47 frees felons

http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2014/11/14/california-feloniestomisdemeanors.html

‘Walking out of jail’: Prop 47 frees felons with downgraded charges

After California voters approved measure reducing many crimes to misdemeanors, convicts and suspects reap benefits
November 14, 2014 5:00AM ET
by Haya El Nasser @hayaelna

LOS ANGELES — Within days of Californians’ overwhelming approval of an initiative that knocks low-level felonies down to misdemeanors, life behind bars is ending for hundreds of felons and felony suspects.

Public defenders throughout the state kicked into overtime, working even on Veterans Day to handle thousands of cases of people awaiting verdicts or already doing time.

More than 4,700 state prison inmates are eligible for resentencing and possible release under the new law, according to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. Thousands more serving time in county jails or awaiting trial could end up with lighter sentences and walk free.

Under Proposition 47, California is the first state to reduce a wide array of nonviolent crimes from felonies to misdemeanors — including drug possession, theft, possession of stolen goods, forgery, shoplifting and check or credit card fraud involving less than $950. Defendants with histories of violence or sex offenses are not eligible for more lenient charges.

“After the election, those crimes are no longer felonies,” said Allen Hopper, criminal justice and drug policy director for the American Civil Liberties Union of California. The national ACLU contributed $3.5 million in support of Prop 47.

“In many cases, prosecutors are just dismissing the charges or working out a plea. People incarcerated waiting for trial are walking out of jail with no conviction,” Hopper said.

Thirteen other states classify simple drug possession as a misdemeanor; California is the first to reduce such charges across the board.

The proposition was backed by an interesting array of conservatives (Republican former House Speaker Newt Gingrich) and liberals (rapper Jay-Z). It was also strongly opposed — mostly by law enforcement, prosecutors and other groups arguing that easing penalties would increase crime. But in a state that’s still struggling to comply with a 2011 Supreme Court ruling to reduce prison overcrowding, releasing low-level offenders made sense to 59 percent of voters.
‘In many cases, prosecutors are just dismissing the charges or working out a plea. People incarcerated waiting for trial are walking out of jail with no conviction.’

Allen Hopper

criminal justice director, California ACLU

The move is a remarkable reversal. California led the nation at the ballot box 20 years ago for the opposite reason. That’s when voters approved the harsh three-strikes law for defendants who had two or more prior convictions; if subsequently convicted of any felony, they faced a sentence of 25 years to life in prison, even if the third offense was nonviolent. In 2012 voters eased the punishment. They approved amending the law to apply the stiffest sentencing only to serious or violent felons. Those who were sentenced under the old law could petition the court for lighter sentences.

“And now here’s California reversing itself again,” said Jody David Armour, a law professor at the University of Southern California and expert on gun control and racial profiling. “In some ways, I feel heartened that the electorate itself has taken this issue to heart.”

He worries, however, that the change may have the unintended consequence of resulting in harsher treatment of those who don’t qualify for lighter sentences. “It can demonize those who don’t qualify,” he said.

With Prop 47, the California Legislative Analyst’s Office estimates “state and county criminal justice savings potentially in the high hundreds of millions of dollars annually.” The money the state saves from not having to incarcerate these offenders will fund school truancy and dropout prevention, mental health and substance abuse treatment, victim services and other programs designed to keep offenders out of jail and prison.

Supporters herald the change as an important step toward reforming the criminal justice system by spending less on incarceration and more on prevention and rehabilitation.

“It’s the first time that criminal justice reform of this nature has been endorsed by public referendum,” said Will Matthews of the ACLU. It shows that the public is awakening to the fact that “simply locking up as many people as we can is not the smartest or most fiscally prudent way of approaching crime and punishment,” he said.

At the ACLU, phone calls from advocacy organizations are coming in from across the country, which may portend changes coast to coast. Even in California, “Prop 47 is only the beginning of sentencing reform,” Hopper said. The hope is that the voter mandate will launch a comprehensive review of the state’s penal and sentencing codes. “This is what voters want.”

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department is going through the process of identifying who may qualify among those awaiting trial.

“We do not have an exact number of pretrial felons who are being held solely on one of the crimes impacted by Prop 47,” said department spokeswoman Nicole Nishida. “A large percentage of inmates have multiple charges, so this will take time to evaluate.”
‘Here’s California reversing itself again. In some ways, I feel heartened that the electorate itself has taken this issue to heart.’

Jody David Armour

law professor, University of Southern California

The change is good news for defendants but a nightmare for city attorneys, who are inheriting thousands of cases that, when they were felonies, would have been handled by district attorneys. Now that many have been downgraded to misdemeanors, they land in city attorneys’ laps.

The day after the election, Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer asked the City Council for more than half a million dollars to hire 15 more lawyers and assistants to handle a projected 13,500 new cases a year. But until the money comes in, the city attorney’s office struck a deal with district attorneys.

“The D.A. will continue to handle the caseload with misdemeanors,” said Rob Wilcox, director of community engagement and outreach at the Los Angeles City Attorney’s office. “They’re already staffed up, and they would just now prosecute them as misdemeanors until Jan. 31, 2015.”

Public defenders, who supported Prop 47, are now dealing with thousands of cases that are pending or must be refiled for resentencing. In Contra Costa County, public defenders have been working nights and weekends to review cases of prisoners serving time in state prisons and county jails. Every Friday until the docket is cleared, they will dedicate court time to those cases.

On Nov. 7, the first Friday after the initiative passed, there were 100 cases on the calendar. They got through 80. “They were either awaiting trial or sentenced to local custody.” said Robin Lipetzky, a public defender for the county. “Thirty-five walked out of jail.”

Others will soon, including a 47-year-old man who was sentenced to six years in state prison in Solano County for possession of a small amount of cocaine. He has served four years. “He was ordered released last Friday,” Lipetzky said. Another who served more than a year of a five-year sentence for possession of a small amount of methamphetamine was also ordered released.

In Alameda County, a few dozen inmates have been released in less than a week, said Brian Bloom, an assistant public defender. “Within a couple of weeks, we hope to bring in all the folks serving sentences on felonies that are now misdemeanors,” he said. “That’s probably between 100 and 150.”

How is the office handling the workload? “We’re just doing what public defenders always do,” he said. “Most of us were in on Veterans Day.”
 
The California legislature sabotaged Proposition 47 after it passed by redefining various violent felonies as non-violent misdemeanors.

Because of course they did.

Gavin Newsom CRUSHES Democracy
https://odysee.com/@actualjusticewarrior:2/gavin-newsom-crushes-democracy:a
{Actual Justice Warrior | 28 June 2024}

In this video I discuss the recent leaked emails obtained by a California CBS local affiliate that show that Gavin Newsom has been trying to kill a ballot initiative on Prop 47 in order to preserve his legacy for a potential 2028 presidential run.

Sources:

 
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