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SACRAMENTO — One year later, Sacramento’s deadliest mass shooting continues to shape discussions in the California Capitol. They revolve around one question: would lives have been saved if one of the suspects had served out his full prison sentence?
California voters in 2016 created the opportunity for inmates to reduce their time behind bars. They passed Proposition 57, a ballot measure intended to draw down the state’s prison population. It allowed inmates convicted of violent and nonviolent crimes to more quickly earn credits through rehabilitative programs and leave custody sooner.
The program received fresh attention in 2022.
That’s because Smiley
Martin – one of the suspects facing charges in the April 2022 shooting that killed six people at 10th and K streets – was able to combine these credits to cut his 10-year domestic violence sentence to about five years.
Now, lawmakers want more transparency around sentence-trimming programs. There are calls to make creditearning records public and to gather data on outcomes for inmates who get out early after participating in rehabilitative programs. GOP Assemblyman Joe Patterson is pushing to reclassify some crimes as violent, making it harder for those inmates to earn early-exit credits.
He echoed the argument Republicans have been making for the past year – that the shooting could have been prevented if the suspect was still in prison.
“I don’t know what the individual in the Sacramento shooting would have done once he got out if he served his actual full term,” Patterson told The Sacramento Bee. “All I know is that, for sure, he would not have killed those six people, those particular six people, on that night.”
During the bill’s hearing in March, Democratic Assemblyman Isaac Bryan called Patterson’s argument “absolutely ludicrous.”
Free monarch friendly garden workshop set for April 16
DIXON — Solano Resource Conservation District experts will offer a free workshop on Monarch Friendly Gardens from 1 to 3 p.m. April 16 in Dixon.
The workshop will include information on monarch butterflies and other pollinators and suggest appropriate native plants that will attract these butterflies, as well as a demonstration on planting.
Registration is required to get the location. Send an email to Katherine Holmes at katherine.holmes@ solanorcd.org.
For information, contact Holmes by email or call 707-678-1655, Ext. 107.


LAFCO takes up budget, work plan at Monday meeting
FAIRFIELD — The Local Agency Formation Commission will review the proposed 2023-24 budget and work plan when it meets Monday.
It also will take up the new contract for Solano Irrigation District Municipal Service Review and Sphere of Influence Study.
Paul Kitagaki Jr./The Sacramento Bee/TNS file (2022) Sacramento County District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert, left, and Sacramento Police Department Chief Katherine Lester announce at the Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office on May 3, 2022, that murder charges have been filed against Smiley Martin, Dandrae Martin and Mtula Payton for the April 3 gang shooting in downtown Sacramento.

“So, what’s appropriate?” Bryan asked. “You get charged (with) domestic violence, you get sentenced to 10 years. You serve five. You come home. If 10, there would have been no shooting? Fifteen, no shooting? Twenty, no shooting?” The credit-earning system that accelerated Martin’s release stems from efforts to reduce overcrowding in California prisons.
The state’s prison population increased dramatically during the 1980s and 1990s, a result of the war on drugs and new sentencing policies that kept people incarcerated longer. This included the Three Strikes Law, which requires sentences of 25 years to life in prison for those previously convicted of two serious crimes.
Another factor was the introduction of determinate sentences – meaning those that end on a date certain – which former Gov. Jerry Brown signed into law in the 1970s.
Before the changes initiated by Brown, more inmates received indeterminate sentences, which set an earliest-possible release date but an open-ended maximum. Sentences like 25 yearsto-life gave more power to parole boards to decide when prisoners were ready for release.
Subsequent legislation added more prison time for factors like firearm use or gang affiliation. It meant prisoners spent even longer locked up, contributing to crowded facilities. Eventually, severe over- crowding led to dangerous conditions, prompting lawsuits against the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
By 2011, the system’s population was at about 180% of design capacity. That was the year the U.S. Supreme Court upheld an order by a panel of federal judges in California to lower the number of inmates to 137.5% of capacity. It meant cutting the population by more than 30,000 prisoners, according a Legislative Analyst’s Office report.
As part of the state’s response, California voters approved Proposition 57. The measure, in combination with other legislation and early releases because of the Covid-19 pandemic, drew the inmate population down to 110.9% of capacity, or 90,934 people as of March 8, according to the Department of Corrections.
Proposition 57 allows inmates convicted of certain nonviolent crimes to appear before the parole board more quickly. The board is not required to let them out – members could still force prisoners to remain behind bars.
The measure also gives the Department of Corrections the ability to change the rate at which inmates convicted of violent and nonviolent crimes can earn credits for participating in prison programming, such as drug rehabilitation, work training or educational classes.
As California has changed the way it incarcerates people, Republicans have contin- ually pushed back, citing concerns about upticks in crime and suggesting Proposition 57 needs to be amended.
5.87-acre parcel, 7717 W. Ranch Lane, into the Rural North Vacaville Water District for drinking water service. The commission also will consider adopting a new project type and associated fee regarding requests for fire protection services contracts.
The calls for change only increased after the Sacramento shooting. Sacramento Bee reporting showed Martin, one of the three suspects in the incident, received credits that allowed him to leave prison in February 2022 after serving five years for attacking his girlfriend.
Martin received some of his credits before sentencing, but he also earned “a variety of additional post-sentencing credits,” according to the Department of Corrections.
His case captured a major concern about Proposition 57: that it results in violent criminals being released from prison too quickly.
The Department of Corrections allows those convicted of nonviolent crimes to earn credits more quickly than those convicted of violent crimes. But domestic violence, Martin’s previous conviction, is not on California’s list of violent felonies. That means he was able to earn credits at a quicker rate.
The shooting also occurred as the Department of Corrections was in the midst of updating its credit system to allow both nonviolent and violent inmates to earn them faster.
Prisoners convicted of violent crimes can now reduce their sentences by one-third through credit-earning. Those convicted of nonviolent crimes can cut their sentences by half.
A yea r later, See Reforms, Page A10
Republic Staff
DRNEWS@DAILYREPUBLIC.NET
“California Duck Days is a family-oriented, community-based outdoor festival with activities for people of all ages. On-site activities for families include interactive exhibits, wetland themed arts and crafts, and much more,” Visit California stated.
The event, touted as Northern California’s wetlands and wildlife festival, runs from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. April 29 at the Yolo Bypass Wild- life Area headquarters, 45211 County Road 32B, in rural Davis. The wildlife area encompasses 17,770 acres, and offers an abundance of bird habitats and wildlife viewing opportunities. In the same newsletter, Berryessa Brewing of Winters, was noted as one of the 141 “amazing beers” in California. There are more than 1,100 breweries that operate in the state. The California Visitor’s Guide, which is free to the public, features a photo of 141 of the craft beers. Berryessa Brewing’s beer is found in the 10th row. The newsletter offers a link to the brewery’s website.