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California Proposition 6

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Youth Imprisonment & Gang Activity ... Law enforcement can sue members of street gangs ... Violation of gang injunctions is a new and separate crime punishable ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: California Proposition 6


1
California Proposition 6
  • San Francisco Youth Commission Staff
    Presentation on Provisions of California
    Proposition 6 Appearing on the November 2008
    Ballot

2
Main Impact Youth Imprisonment Gang Activity
  • Youth at 14-years-old would be tried as adults in
    the adult criminal system
  • no longer eligible to be tried in the juvenile
    court system for gang related crimes
  • Increases penalties from term imprisonment to
    life sentences for gang affiliated crimes
  • resulting in higher prison population
  • more inmates serving longer prison terms
  • Law enforcement can sue members of street gangs
  • can serve any three members as a means to sue
    the whole
  • ambiguous as to who can be served or identified
    as a gang members

3
Main Impact Gang Activity
  • Violation of gang injunctions is a new and
    separate crime punishable by fines, prison or
    jail time
  • Offenses committed in furtherance of gang
    activity are subject to life imprisonment
  • no longer required to be convicted of a felony,
    as long as you are booked for committing
  • includes threats to witnesses, prosecutors,
    police, judges, sheriffs
  • failing to disclose gang activity will become a
    felony offence
  • More than one act of vandalism is aggregated for
    punishment purposes
  • 10 acts of graffiti would result in a fine of
    100,000 or state imprisonment or both, if the
    damage caused exceeds 400
  • if the graffiti work is gang related it may
    result in an enhancement to a life sentence

4
Main Impact Public Housing New Jails
  • Will force landlords to evict tenants from
    residences where they suspect criminal conduct
    by gang members
  • buildings suspected of such activity will be
    labeled a public nuisance and are subject to
    civil penalty
  • no longer need to know for sure that such
    activity is occurring
  • no need for a 30 day notice
  • Requires agencies such as HUD to conduct criminal
    background checks of all Section 8 and Public
    Housing residents at least once per year
  • Creates temporary jails to house offenders when
    the existing jails become overcrowded
  • possible locations include empty schools, rec.
    centers and gyms

5
Main Impact Gang Registry, GPS, Undocumented
Youth
  • Requires anyone convicted of any crime that is
    associated with gang activity to register in a
    Gang Database with the Sheriffs office
  • This includes gang affiliated graffiti
  • Failure to register is considered a FELONY or
    misdemeanor conviction
  • Registration will stay on record for 5 years, may
    show up on background checks
  • Removal of a GPS device worn for parole or
    probation would be considered a FELONY or
    misdemeanor
  • Undocumented youths and persons can no longer be
    released on their own recognizance if booked for
    criminal activity

6
Main Impact Community Input Rehabilitative
Services
  • Removes Community Based Organizations (CBOs)
    from juvenile justice coordinating councils
  • CBOs would no longer be able to sit on councils
    that determine how prevention funding is spent
  • CBOs that provide mental health counseling, drug
    and alcohol treatment programs are explicitly
    taken out of the preventative funding process
  • Existing CBOs could be removed at discretion of
    the County Probation System
  • probation may no longer be required to provide
    treatment services for offenders with drug and
    alcohol problems, or who need mental treatment

7
Main Impact Funding
  • Requires state spending of at least 965 million
    for new criminal justice programs beginning in
    200910
  • Money would come directly from the General Fund
    not Revenue spending
  • this means funding that would otherwise go to
    Education or Economic Development (to provide
    better schooling, or jobs)
  • Increases net annual State and City costs of more
    than 500 million within first few years, which
    would grow by tens of millions of dollars
    annually in subsequent year
  • Money would mostly go to prison spending
  • amount projected to increase by 100 million
    annually since Prop 6 requires funding to be
    adjusted for inflation

8
Funding Distribution Overview
9
Useful Facts to Consider San Francisco Youth
Drug Convictions
  • Youth under 18 made up less than 15 per cent of
    the San Francisco population as of 2000
  • Between 2000 - 2006 the number of youth in SF
    between the age of 15-24 declined by 15 per cent
  • 4 of every 5 youth arrestees in state juvenile
    justice systems
  • Are under the influence of alcohol or drugs while
    committing their crimes
  • Test positive for drugs
  • Are arrested for committing an alcohol or drug
    offense
  • Admit having substance abuse and addiction
    problems, or share some combination of these
    characteristics
  • without CBOs and programs to help ...

10
Useful Facts to Consider San Francisco Youth
Juvenile Justice
  • SF JPD admits approximately 150 youth to Juvenile
    Hall per month
  • approximately 250 referrals to probation per
    month since Jan 2008
  • Since January 2008 approximately 1300 SF youth
    have been admitted to Juvenile Hall
  • African American and Hispanic males make up 84
    per cent of the population of Juvenile Hall
    detainees in 2008
  • have made up the highest population in the past 5
    years
  • The majority of these youth are between the ages
    of 14-18
  • The majority of youth detained in SF Juvenile
    Hall come from Bayview Hunters Point, Mission
    (inner outer) and the Western Edition

11
Some Useful Facts to ConsiderSan Francisco Youth
Public Housing
  • SF Housing Authority reports there are 40 active
    Public Housing developments in San Francisco
  • there are approximately 19,000 residents on
    Section 8in San Francisco
  • The Following Housing Projects have the highest
    populations of youth living beneath federal
    poverty guidelines
  • Hunters View, Alice Griffith, Double Rock,
    Sunnydale/Velasco, Potrero Terrace, Westside
    Courts, Westbrook, Hunters Point AE W

12
Useful Facts to Consider San Francisco
Undocumented Youth
  • Crime rates are the lowest among communities with
    higher percentages of immigrant families in CA
  • US born citizens have institutionalization rates
    10 times higher than immigrants for the same age
    group (18-40)
  • From 2000 to 2005 violent crime rates tended to
    decrease in CA cities with large inflows of
    recent immigrants







13
New Crimes Penalties Created
14
California Proposition 6
  • San Francisco Youth Commission Staff
    Presentation on Provisions of California
    Proposition 6 Appearing on the November 2008
    Ballot
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