Monthly Archive: August 2021
by Kent Scheidegger · Aug 13, 2021 3:16 pm
In May, the California Dept. of Corrections and Rehabilitation put into effect regulations that greatly increased the credits that violent criminals can earn to shorten their sentences. Sam Stanton of the Sacramento Bee has this article on a lawsuit by 45 district attorneys (out of 58 in the state) to invalidate these regulations.
I will have more to say about this suit later, but right now I want to focus on a statement by a supporter of the regulations that illustrates the kind of pseudoscientific posturing that is rampant in policy debates today. Continue reading . . .
by Kent Scheidegger · Aug 12, 2021 3:49 pm
Did California’s marijuana legalization initiative (Prop. 64 of 2016) legalize possession in state prison? No, said the California Supreme Court today in People v. Raybon, S256978, although the path to that conclusion was more bumpy than one might have thought. Continue reading . . .
by Michael Rushford · Aug 12, 2021 3:12 pm
If you read major U.S. newspapers or watch the network news lately you have been informed that while homicides increased in some American cities over the past two years, overall crime is down. This Associated Press story by David Klepper and Gary Fields is a typical example of this narrative. Nationally homicides last year increased by 25% with roughly 20,000 people killed. Preliminary data from police departments suggests that the homicide spikes were much higher in urban centers last year and will increase even more this year. We have also been told that these increases have occurred in some places that did not defund their police, so we can’t blame the anti-police progressives or politicians like President Biden who, last year labeled police as racists. The problem with this narrative is that it is false. Two years of double-digit increases in murder is evidence of a serious breakdown in law enforcement. In urban centers the homicide increases are much higher than national numbers reflect. Murders in Los Angeles County are up by 95% over last year’s decade high. In Chicago murders were up 22%, in Minneapolis 56% and in Portland an astounding 800% according to the AP article. Other crimes went up as well.
Continue reading . . .
by Michael Rushford · Aug 6, 2021 2:43 pm
A 23-year-old vagrant in the Los Angeles County community of Glendale was allowed to go on a crime spree this week thanks to the county’s zero bail policy. Zero bail was instituted last year to somehow address the Covid-19 pandemic by releasing drug dealers and thieves without bail shortly after their arrest. Under District Attorney George Gascon, LA County is continuing the zero bail policy. Louis Casiano of Fox News reports that Kaelun Scharrer was first arrested Monday evening in a stolen car containing drug paraphernalia. Six hours later he was released without bail. Scharrer then proceeded to the American Brand Shopping Mall and stole a tip jar and fled on foot. He was later arrested, charged with a misdemeanor and released again without bail. He walked out of the police station and immediately stole a flatbed truck. He was later arrested with the truck in the city of LaVerne. This time the thief is being held in jail on $25,000 bail. The LA County Police Chief told reporters that crimes like car theft have increased under zero bail. Duh. Progressives want to make zero bail permanent.
by Kent Scheidegger · Aug 6, 2021 2:22 pm
Joshua Crawford of the Pegasus Institute has this op-ed on the horrific rates of shootings and homicides in Louisville, Kentucky and the city council’s reaction.
Louisville Metro Council recently took significant measures that could help save lives and stop the out-of-control bloodshed. They passed a budget with notable measures including allocating $620,000 to expand the ShotSpotter gunshot detection system, $500,000 to help with the implementation of Group Violence Intervention (GVI), and millions that can be used to increase officer pay in the hopes of improving recruitment and retention. They also admirably resisted calls from radicals to defund LMPD.
Continue reading . . .
by Michael Rushford · Aug 5, 2021 10:52 am
A poll commissioned by the campaign to recall progressive Los Angeles District Attorney George Gascón found that 61.4% of registered voters support replacing him. James Varney of the Washington Times reports that Gascón did not respond to a request for comment. Gascón’s policies of releasing property offenders without bail, declining to fully charge serious offenders, and seeking to reduce the sentences of even violent criminals, has contributed to an epidemic of crime an violence in Los Angeles, sparking the effort to remove him from office. The poll, conducted between July 23-28, involved 650 LA County voters of which 53% were Democrat and 17% Republican, with the rest either declined to state or independent. The poll also found that 41.5% of respondents are willing to sign the recall petition, with translates into 2,331,653. The campaign needs to gather signatures from 579,062 registered LA Country voters by October 27 to put the question on the ballot.
by Kent Scheidegger · Aug 4, 2021 5:16 pm
A new poll has the vote to recall Cal. Gov. Newsom at 46-48 ± 3. The Hill has this story by Joseph Choi. The report of Emerson Polling is here.
Among potential replacements, radio talk show host Larry Elder has a double-digit lead against other actual candidates at 23%, but “someone else” is closer at 14% and “undecided” is way out in front with 40%. Continue reading . . .
by Michael Rushford · Aug 2, 2021 1:28 pm
There were nearly three times as many homicides in Washington, DC last month than there were deaths due to Covid-19, and as reported by Greg Norman of Fox News, some of the city’s government leaders think a change in priorities is in order. “We’re in a pandemic right now when it comes to crime in this community and we got to start acting it,” City Councilman Trayon White told reporters, following the death of the six-year-old girl killed while riding her scooter in a shooting that also injured her mother and several others. Ten people were shot at one incident in Queens New York over the weekend, while five people were shot on Bourbon Street, in New Orleans Saturday night. In Chicago, seven were killed and 48 were wounded over the weekend.
Continue reading . . .