Author Topic: Why you’ll no longer find ‘convicted felons’ in San Francisco  (Read 677 times)

Dos Equis

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This kind of stuff is just plain stupid.

Why you’ll no longer find ‘convicted felons’ in San Francisco
By Jackie Salo August 22, 2019

“Convicted felons” may be getting a makeover in San Francisco.

Under a new resolution by the city’s Board of Supervisors — which voted to use “person-first” language in the criminal justice system — they’ll be referred to as “justice-involved persons,”  the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

The guidelines nix other terms too, such as  “prisoner,” “convict” and “inmate,” along with any words that “obstruct and separate people from society and make the institutionalization of racism and supremacy appear normal.”

As part of the guidelines, a drug addict or substance abuser will become a “person with a history of substance abuse.”

And a “juvenile delinquent” will instead be referred to as a “young person with justice system involvement.”

“We want them ultimately to become contributing citizens, and referring to them as felons is like a scarlet letter that they can never get away from,” Supervisor Sandra Lee Fewer said, according to the outlet.

The resolution is nonbinding but has been endorsed by the district attorney, the paper reported.

San Francisco Mayor London Breed didn’t sign off on the new language, but said she’s “always happy to work with the board on issues around equity and criminal justice reform.”

https://guy-find-convicted-felons-in-san-francisco/

jude2

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Re: Why you’ll no longer find ‘convicted felons’ in San Francisco
« Reply #1 on: August 22, 2019, 08:06:16 PM »
That city is getting crazier by the day.

Moontrane

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Re: Why you’ll no longer find ‘convicted felons’ in San Francisco
« Reply #2 on: August 22, 2019, 09:50:19 PM »
The Obama admin started using the term "justice-involved" in 2016.   ::)

https://www.investors.com/politics/editorials/obamas-justice-dept-now-calls-young-criminals-justice-involved-youth/

One of the first things Obama did as president was relabel the “war on terror” as an “overseas contingency operation,”
which can literally mean anything, so long as the operation takes place overseas and is contingent on something.

Then there were ObamaCare’s much-hated insurance mandate penalties, which were rechristened as “individual shared
responsibility payments.” Who could object to that?

The problem is Obama’s people aren’t aggressive enough in their renaming project. So, as a public service, we offer our help.

Those committing voter fraud could be termed “abundantly enthusiastic political participants.”

Looters? How about “non-banked retail consumers.”

Ex-convicts? Try “returning citizens.”

What about illegal immigrants? A better label would be “undocumented workers.” Oh, right, that’s already in use.

The problem with euphemisms is that in short order they end up as a pejorative. Then again, a pejorative word can also
turn into a euphemism.

So don’t be surprised if someday down the road a politician is excoriated for calling someone a “justice-involved youth”
when everyone knows the proper term is “thug.”


IroNat

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Re: Why you’ll no longer find ‘convicted felons’ in San Francisco
« Reply #3 on: August 23, 2019, 03:54:26 AM »
F*cking loony bin.

Princess L

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Re: Why you’ll no longer find ‘convicted felons’ in San Francisco
« Reply #4 on: August 23, 2019, 06:26:43 AM »
Thanks to Prop 47 & 57, many 'convicted felons' are no longer felons and out on the streets.  BTW ~ Kamala Harris had a big hand in the mess.

https://www.laadda.com/lies-behind-selling-prop-47-57/


The Lies Behind the Selling of Prop 47 & 57

By Michele Hanisee

Politics will never exist without spin doctors. Yet, as cynical as our political system has become, recent ballot measures sold to the public as “public safety” measures have gone beyond the pale. Nearly every soft on crime law enacted in the last half decade included the words “safe” or “safety” in the description. No two better examples exist than Propositions 47 and 57.

Prop 47 advocates called it the “Safe Neighborhoods and Schools Act.” Prop 47 did nothing for neighborhoods except to dramatically increase property crime. It did nothing for schools except for making undelivered promises to increase funding.

Last week, the California Supreme Court delivered some common sense reality to Prop 47 in People v. Valencia. At issue were “third strikers” — criminals who have two or more prior convictions for serious or violent crimes. Under the “three strikes” law, a criminal who had two or more prior “strike” convictions and who then committed any new felony offense would receive a sentence of 25 years to life. As originally written and implemented, that sentence was mandatory unless a judge used her discretion to “strike” one or more of the prior convictions at sentencing. But the public became disillusioned with a sentencing scheme that was, at times, perceived as inflexibly harsh.

In 2012, Proposition 36 was passed, limiting the 25 years to life sentence to cases where the new felony offense was also a serious or violent crime. It also allowed inmates sentenced under the old rules to petition for resentencing. Crucially, however, a judge could deny a petition to reduce the sentence if the court, in its discretion, determined that the inmate “would pose an unreasonable risk of danger to public.”

Enter Prop 47. It reduced certain drug and theft felonies to misdemeanors. Prop 47 also had a resentencing provision which allowed inmates to petition for a reduction in their felony sentence if that crime had since been reduced to a misdemeanor. Like Prop 36, Prop 47 gave the court discretion to deny a reduction if resentencing “would result in an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety. But the discretion granted was so limited as to be illusory. Under Prop 47, a judge could only refuse to reduce the sentence if he or she found an unreasonable risk that the inmate would commit one of eight specific types of violent crime: homicide, attempted homicide, murder, solicitation to commit murder, sexual assault on a child under age 14, assault with a machine gun on a police officer or firefighter, possession of a weapon of mass destruction, or any offense normally punishable by life or death.

Based on the overlap in these different provisions, two third-strike inmates petitioned for resentencing, arguing that the language contained in Prop 47 should apply to them.
The California Supreme Court observed that if the petitioners’ argument was correct, it would make it easier “for recidivist serious or violent offenders to have their life sentences vacated, and render them more likely to be released.”

The California Supreme Court wisely rejected the inmate’s appeal, holding that there was nothing in Prop 47 that suggested it was intended to apply to serious and violent third strikers seeking resentencing. “[N]either the initiative’s text nor its supporting materials describe any intention to amend the criteria for the resentencing of recidivist or violent felons. . ..” Nor, said the court, was such a result predicted by the Attorney General or the Legislative Analyst in their summary of the measure, or discernable to the voting public.

Most illuminating, however, was the dissent of Justice Liu, who in blasting the majority for the decision wrote: “The court today concludes that the drafters (Harris) of Proposition 47 pulled a fast one on an uninformed public.” Truer words have never been spoken. With their deliberately misleading title referencing “safe schools” and platitudinal language about public safety, the drafters of Prop 47 fooled the public to accomplish their goal of decriminalizing property crimes and releasing convicted criminals from custody.

Those behind Prop 57 took their cues from Prop 47, selling the public with assurances that its early parole provision only applied to “non-violent” offenders. That’s news to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, whose published regulations on early parole explicitly include inmates sentenced to prison for violent offenses. This week, was an example of that regulation in effect, with the Fresno DA’s office highlighting an inmate who attempted to stab two people being paroled two years into an eleven year sentence thanks to Prop 57.

Lawyers can pore over the Valencia opinion for its lessons on the intricacies of statutory construction. The big takeaway from Valencia was contained in the dissent, which inadvertently highlighted a truth worthy of repeating: “The court today concludes that the drafters of Proposition 47 pulled a fast one on an uninformed public.”

As Attorney General, Harris was responsible for giving official titles to Propositions 47 (passed 2014) and Proposition 57 (passed 2016). Voters rely on these titles and the short summaries, which are also the responsibility of the Attorney General.

Kamala Harris told voters in 2014 that Proposition 14 was "The Safe Neighborhoods and Schools Act." Among other reductions in penalties, the law "requires misdemeanor sentence instead of felony


 But this was how Harris framed the proposed law. In her words, with that title, it sounded like a good thing, reasonable, and a way to clear room in prison for the truly "violent" offenders. The Proposition passed.

It did not create safe neighborhoods. Instead, it has kept thieves and drug addicts out on our streets instead of locked up in prison. In our neighborhoods, they can now rob us, act out their anti-social behaviors, and erect tent cities with the associated trash and disease.

Harris used similarly disingenuous language two years later, when another prison-emptying proposal was put before voters, Proposition 57. This case was actually far worse. Harris called the proposal "The California Parole for Non-Violent Criminals and Juvenile Court Trial Requirements Initiative." In the summary, Harris told voters "A 'yes' vote supported increasing parole and good behavior opportunities for felons convicted of nonviolent crimes..."

 What Harris did not tell voters was that she considered the following crimes to be "nonviolent":

- Rape by intoxication of an unconscious person (think Stanford swimmer Brock Turner)

- Human trafficking involving a sex act with minors

- Arson causing great bodily harm

- Drive-by shooting

- Assault with a deadly weapon

- Hostage taking
https://www.smobserved.com/story/2019/06/29/crime/sen-kamala-harris-proposing-crime-and-homelessness-for-the-entire-country/3812.html

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falco

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Re: Why you’ll no longer find ‘convicted felons’ in San Francisco
« Reply #5 on: August 23, 2019, 08:31:58 AM »
A pedophile will be called a "children involved gentleman"

Thin Lizzy

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Re: Why you’ll no longer find ‘convicted felons’ in San Francisco
« Reply #6 on: August 23, 2019, 08:37:42 AM »
That’s just dicking around with names, but this is actually fucking with peoples lives. If I knew anyone who lives in San Francisco I would tell them to get the fuck out of there.


BART Withholding Surveillance Videos Of Crime To Avoid ‘Stereotypes’ – CBS San Francisco

https://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2017/07/09/bart-withholding-surveillance-videos-of-crime-to-avoid-stereotypes/

Sissysquats

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Re: Why you’ll no longer find ‘convicted felons’ in San Francisco
« Reply #7 on: August 24, 2019, 06:36:26 AM »
Relax......it’s just the liberal way of making it appear on paper that the crime rate is going down....they hope.
 Redefine something so that the stats improve