Pubdate: Sun, 14 Dec 2014 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2014 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.utsandiego.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/386 Note: Seldom prints LTEs from outside it's circulation area. Authors: Kristina Davis and Dana Littlefield PROP 47 JOLTS JUSTICE SYSTEM Superior Court has received nearly 10,000 petitions to reduce felonies to misdemeanors; more in wings Alisa Griego still had two weeks to serve on her sentence. She had spent half a year in a county jail for stealing from a store, one of a handful of convictions in a past filled with unhealthy relationships and drug addiction. But when she appeared before a judge late last month, she was told her felony conviction was now a misdemeanor, that she'd served her time. She was out of custody by the next morning, one of more than a dozen offenders in San Diego County who have been resentenced and released in the wake of Proposition 47. On the books for more than a month now, the measure has jolted California's criminal justice system as judges, prosecutors and defense attorneys strain under the weight of reducing the low-level felony convictions of potentially millions of people across the state within the next three years. The law allows people convicted of certain felonies to ask for their crimes to be downgraded to misdemeanors, no matter when they were committed. Those crimes include simple drug possession and some property crimes valued at less than $950, such as shoplifting, theft, bad check writing and forgery. "The retroactivity makes it so huge, it creates a dramatic amount of work for the public defender and district attorney for the next three years," said Randy Mize, a chief deputy in the county Public Defender's Office. "It's an amazing proposition in terms of changing the criminal justice system." The law's intent is to put fewer low-level, nonviolent offenders behind bars, and to instead funnel those prison costs - up to $200 million annually - to treatment and prevention programs to reduce the underlying causes of such crimes. The law, passed by voters on Nov. 4, took effect immediately. By last week, the San Diego Superior Court had received about 9,800 petitions requesting misdemeanor reductions - the vast majority representing some 2,600 offenders in jail and prison or on probation. That group has been the first priority, and those requests could be sorted out as early as the end of January, prosecutors say. So far, about 250 cases have been settled, and about a dozen, maybe two dozen, offenders have been released from custody, authorities estimate. The requests are usually screened first by the Public Defender's Office, sent to the presiding judge's downtown courtroom, then referred to the District Attorney's Office for further evaluation. The District Attorney's Office must go through each petition and research the offender's background to verify if the person is even qualified for relief under Proposition 47. To be eligible for resentencing, an offender can't have a criminal history that includes any from a list of about 80 serious crimes, such as murder, sex crimes against children, torture and kidnapping for ransom. Thus far, only about half of the requests for resentencing that prosecutors have reviewed have been eligible under Proposition 47, officials said. "This is a big dump on the DA. They are working very hard to get through these petitions," Mize said. Prosecutors are also looking to see if certain offenders appear so likely to commit another offense that they should remain behind bars under the original sentence - challenges allowed under the law. There have been no challenges on those grounds yet. However, prosecutors have identified at least two convicts whose backgrounds have raised concern and will be further assessed for danger, said Chief Deputy District Attorney David Greenberg. One is a convict who has been deemed a so-called "mentally disordered offender" - an offender who has served his time in jail but has remained locked up at the state mental hospital because the court considers him dangerous, Greenberg said. The man had originally been charged with robbery, but he was allowed in 1998 to plead down to grand theft against a person - a charge that is now eligible for a misdemeanor reduction under Proposition 47. Once the requests from those in custody are dealt with, there's another much larger group of ex-convicts who have served their sentences but want their records changed to show they are convicted of misdemeanors rather than felonies. That number is as high as 198,000 people countywide who might qualify for misdemeanor reductions dating back to 1990. "That's mind-boggling," Mize said of the volume. The law gives people three years to file their requests. Presiding San Diego Superior Court Judge David Danielsen, who is shepherding the cases through the court, said he expects to receive 3,000 cases every Tuesday for the foreseeable future before the volume starts to taper off. "We're taking a little bit of time every day to process whatever comes through," Danielsen said. He said 350 hours of staff time were devoted to Proposition 47 cases last month. That's quite a burden, considering the courts are already strained for money and manpower. "I have a court that needs 1,700 employees to do its job well," the judge said. "We have historically done it with 1,600. We're now looking at under 1,200 this year because of budget cuts." Danielsen said he and others are still trying to figure out what resources will be needed to handle the workload. The squeeze is being felt across the state, with each county developing its own system to process the misdemeanor reduction requests. Some have been able to respond to the workload more quickly than others, said Shelley Curran, senior manager in the Judicial Council's Criminal Justice Service Office. "We are having conversations in earnest with the Department of Finance in the hopes that we'll be able to secure funds for the trial courts," Curran said, explaining that money would be used to pay staffing costs. However, neither the governor nor the Legislature is under any obligation to provide additional funding to implement Proposition 47. "The courts are going to do the work but the fact of the matter is other work is not going to get done," Curran said. Authorities are also grappling with how to make sure certain offenders get the supervision they need after release. Just because their crimes are now a misdemeanor doesn't make them less at risk for reoffending or need less help transitioning to the real world, public safety officials say. Griego was among the first inmates to be released under Proposition 47 in the county. Because she falls into a group of offenders affected by the separate public safety realignment law - offenders who served their prison time in county jail - she will be supervised by probation officers for a year after her release. It also means she will be provided treatment options to rebuild her life, paid for by probation under state realignment funds. It's a huge relief, she said. "I did my time, but in my mind and thoughts, I'm not ready (to be released). I feel like I'm being thrown out there to the wolves," the 38-year-old mother of three said in an interview. "I need those services." She enrolled herself in McAlister Women's Recovery Center for outpatient care and is four months away from graduating from cosmetology school. She hopes to work as a hairstylist. Many of the other offenders who will get resentenced and get out early won't have the same opportunities and instead will be released with no supervision whatsoever - a concern that public safety officials raised before voters approved the law. "Those offenders who may be high risk and high needs," said Chief Probation Officer Mack Jenkins. "... I no longer can supervise them nor make sure they're engaged in the services they need." The law calls for the money saved in prison population reductions to help fund such services, but those savings won't be realized for at least another year, and it will take some time after that to distribute the money among programs. For years, many lower-level offenders have been able to get rehabilitative services by participating in one of the specialty courts: drug court, re-entry court, mandatory supervision court and veteran's court. Judge Peter Gallagher, who runs drug court at the central courthouse in downtown San Diego, said about 80 percent of the people who graduate from the 18-month program remain clean and sober for the next five years. Judges have expressed concern that the passage of Proposition 47 would depopulate some of those programs by taking away some of the incentive for participants to stick with it. Those with felony convictions know that if they fail to follow the treatment plan, they could be sent to jail or prison. If that felony becomes a misdemeanor, there's less of a hammer hanging over the participant's head. "The word on the street is, 'Oh, OK. It's just going to be a misdemeanor now. That's no big deal,' " the judge said. Since Proposition 47 passed, Gallagher said he's lost five or six participants who quit the program. And about 10, who had been screened but not yet accepted into drug court, decided not to enroll. "I expect to lose a few more in the next couple of weeks," he said. [sidebar] Effects of Proposition 47 County jail inmates and probationers: About 1,800 have filed requests for certain felonies to be reduced to misdemeanors and have asked to be resentenced so far. About a dozen of those have been released in the past few weeks. State inmates: About 800 from the county have filed similar requests, although state prison officials estimate only about 242 of those currently in custody are eligible. Public Defender's Office: Lawyers are continuing to file requests for misdemeanor reductions from inmates, as well as people who have long completed their sentences but want their records changed. District Attorney's Office: Prosecutors must review each petition to make sure the offender is eligible and doesn't have a serious criminal background. City Attorney's Office: With certain felonies now misdemeanors, such as simple drug possession and some property crimes under $950, deputy city attorneys in San Diego are expecting 3,000 more misdemeanor cases a year. Superior courts: Judges must approve each misdemeanor reduction and resentence each offender - each of whom might have multiple cases - and are concerned about the workload given continued budget cuts. Sources: District Attorney's Office; Public Defender's Office; City Attorney's Office; California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation; San Diego Superior Court - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom