6 minute read
Publisher's Desk
EASY PICKINGS EASY PICKINGS
THEFT HAS NO CONSEQUENCE UNDER PROP. 47
As I was checking out of the neighborhood Rite Aid the other day, I noticed a young man fi ll a small cart mostly with liquor bottles and walk past the waiting line and out the door. A man in line loudly pointed this out to the clerk. She shrugged and said, “Yep, it happens all day long, every day. They know they can steal without any penalty. They fi re us if we try to do anything about it.”
A reader had just written me about witnessing the same situation at the same J Street store while eating ice cream cones with his kids. He said his children were aghast. He noted three nearby Rite Aid stores face closure. The locations on Folsom Boulevard and in Midtown have already closed. The
CH CH
By Cecily Hastings Publisher’s Desk
Alhambra location was in the process of shutting down. And the J Street location just had an armed robbery.
My son, who lives in San Francisco near his law school in the Tenderloin, says the local drug store has everything under lock and key in plastic cases. A clerk walks around and unlocks items customers wish to buy. In San Francisco, retail theft drove fi ve Walgreens out of business last October. A total of 23 drug stores have closed in the city.
Big-city pharmacies display merchandise in locked plastic cases. Dishwasher pods, shaving cream, even shampoo bottles are locked up to reduce losses from a shoplifting epidemic.
My friend Sheree Johnston, who used to own East Sac Hardware, said after the arrival of Prop. 47 thieves would fi ll carts with merchandise and determine the value using a calculator, making sure it was under $950 in case they were caught. She had a convenient back door to the parking lot but closed it when thieves walked out with stolen merchandise all day long.
Two recent national reports show the scope of theft. Business.org found a 54-percent increase in shoplifting last year among 700 small businesses. Twenty-three percent said it happens daily. The National Retail Federation surveyed 61 medium to large retailers and found organized retail crime cost an average of more than $700,000 per $1 billion in sales in 2020.
A spokesman for CVS says, “Our stores have experienced a 300-percent increase in retail theft incidents since the pandemic began in 2020.”
In California, this trend began with the passage of Prop. 47 in 2014. Looking back, it’s hard to believe election offi cials allowed this proposition to be called “The Safe Neighborhoods and Schools Act.” Talk about misleading voters!
Prop. 47 implemented three broad changes to felony sentencing laws. First, it reclassifi ed certain theft and drug possession from felony to misdemeanor.
Second, it authorized defendants serving sentences for felony offenses that would have qualifi ed as misdemeanors under the proposition to petition for resentencing as a misdemeanor.
Third, it authorized defendants who completed sentences for felony convictions that would have qualifi ed as misdemeanors under the proposition to apply to reclassify those convictions as misdemeanors.
The proposition created a new misdemeanor called “shoplifting,” punishable by up to six months in county jail. Shoplifting would be defi ned as “entering a commercial establishment with intent to commit larceny while that establishment is open during regular business hours” where the value of the property does not exceed $950.
Prop. 47 reclassifi ed forgery of specifi ed instruments involving $950 or less as exclusively a misdemeanor.
Petty theft was redefi ned by Prop. 47 as “obtaining any property by theft where the value of the money, labor, real or personal property taken” does not exceed $950.
The crime of receiving stolen property was redefi ned that if the value of the property doesn’t exceed $950, the district attorney can specify the offense as a misdemeanor “in the interests of justice.”
Sacramento'spremierAvedaLifestyleSalons NamedBestSalonin2021bySacramentoMagazine
Treattheguysyoulovewithveganhair, bodyandskincarethisFather'sDay.
Newguests—ReceiveacomplimentaryBotanical RepairorHydratingTreatmentwithyourfirstservice!
QUAILPOINTE,FAIROAKS—916.631.7151 Q FOUNTAINSATROSEVILLE—916.774.9772 F LOEHMANN'SPLAZA,SACRAMENTO—916.282.4700 L ELKGROVECOMMONS,ELKGROVE—916.686.6785 E WILLOSALONS.COM W
Doyouknowthevalueofyourhome?
StephanieValentine RealEstate DRE#02056206 916-519-4910
Wedo!
Giveusacall tomaximizethereturn
onyourmostimportant investment
ShellyHaines Sr.LoanOfficer NMLS#257787 916-709-2340
svalentine@golyon.com SHaines@prmg.net
In practice, most misdemeanor (and often felony) thieves get away with their crimes. National retailers are targeted because expensive and confrontational loss-prevention strategies of the past are gone today. It’s easier to write off loses as a cost of doing business. No wonder prices on everything have risen dramatically.
But smaller local retailers suffer. With thieves walking in and helping themselves, a sole owner or a clerk cannot do a damn thing about it, despite in-store videos witnessing the attacks.
Jobs that are already hard to fi ll become a scary way to earn a living. The pandemic lockdowns shuttered many small businesses, as customers fl ocked online and owners racked up losses.
The political assault on police through defunding reduced the number of cops across the country, even as homicides, shootings and other violent crimes surged. That leaves fewer cops to address theft.
As our governor reduced prison populations in response to the pandemic, is it any wonder lower-level, easy-access crimes such as shoplifting skyrocketed? Not even a gun is needed to commit the crime. It’s more effi cient than shopping as there’s no waiting in line!
In California counties with progressive prosecutors, including San Francisco and Los Angeles, habitual thieves are often freed without legal consequences. In San Francisco, people camp near stores to make stealing more convenient.
Where does this end? After all this is a breakdown of order, decency, private property and commerce—all underpinnings of our civilization. I suspect that if voters had a chance, they might have a change of heart seeing what was promised and what was delivered.
A Republican-led effort to repeal Prop. 47 failed in the Assembly Public Safety Committee last month. Assembly Bill 1599, authored by Republican lawmakers Kevin Kiley, James Gallagher and Jim Patterson, would have repealed changes made by Prop. 47.
That’s a sad commentary on a state dominated by one political party that seems tone-deaf to criminality right under our noses.
Cecily Hastings can be reached at publisher@insidepublications.com. Previous columns can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram: @ insidesacramento. n
Congratulations, Class of 2022!
This fall, Sacramento Country Day School’s Class of 2022 will join top colleges and universities, including Stanford University, United States Military Academy at West Point, Purdue University, Duke University, UC Berkeley, UC Davis, UC Irvine, UC Santa Cruz, University of Washington, Lewis & Clark College, Bennington College, and McGill University in Canada, among many others. Our seniors have been offered more than $1,000,000 in merit aid as well as numerous awards and scholarships. All of our seniors have been accepted to college, and members of our graduating class have been admitted to every campus in the UC system.
Seniors, you each have demonstrated extraordinary dedication and resilience, and an incredible ability to “think critically, live creatively, and act compassionately.” We are so proud of everything you’ve accomplished with us and everything you will accomplish in the future!
See the full list of college acceptances for the Class of 2021 and learn more about our unparalleled one-to-one college counseling program at www.saccds.org/college-counseling.