New Los Angeles prosecutor ends cash bail for many offenses
Incoming Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón has been sworn in and immediately announced he will end cash bail for many offenses and reevaluate sentencing thousands of cases
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Your support makes all the difference.New Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón, seeking to revamp the nation’s largest prosecutor’s office with progressive policies said Monday after taking office that cash bail will be ended for many offenses and sentences in thousands of cases will be reevaluated.
Gascón, in remarks Monday after taking his oath of office, took aim at his predecessors in recent decades, calling Los Angeles “a poster child for the failed tough-on-crime approach.”
“The status quo hasn't made us safer,” he said during a livestreamed ceremony.
A former San Francisco district attorney and assistant Los Angeles police chief, Gascón has already drawn the ire of prosecutors in his own office, as well as members of the Los Angeles Police Department. His first major meeting upon winning his race was with Black Lives Matter organizers, who were critical of outgoing District Attorney Jackie Lacey.
He beat Lacey, the first woman and Black person to run the office, in a fraught election last month as part of a wave of progressive prosecutors elected nationwide. The position is among the most powerful in the state and nationwide.
Gascón also said his office would reevaluate and potentially resentence defendants who had been convicted with enhancements or California’s three-strike law, which requires a state prison term of 25 years to life. Gascón estimated such a move could affect at least 20,000 cases.
Gascón additionally vowed to stop charging juveniles as adults, cease using sentencing enhancements, prohibit prosecutors from seeking the death penalty — including withdrawing capital punishment filings in current prosecutions — and reopen at least four investigations of controversial shootings by police in which Lacey's office had declined prosecutions.
The new district attorney said his prosecutors would no longer request cash bail for any misdemeanor crimes, as well as any felony offenses that weren't serious and violent.
Defendants currently awaiting trial in jail “because they can’t afford to purchase their freedom” may request a new court hearing to be released, Gascón said.
The Association of Deputy District Attorneys, the union that represents the office's prosecutors, and the Los Angeles Police Protective League, which is for rank-and-file police officers, did not immediately comment Monday on Gascón's changes.
The district attorney's office will also work to divert people into behavior health services if they have been arrested on low-level offenses related to poverty, addiction, mental illness and homelessness.