California’s legal justice system appears totally different in a really tangible means in comparison with when Gov. Gavin Newsom took workplace seven years in the past.
It has fewer prisons because of a dramatic decline within the variety of folks the state is incarcerating. It’s directing extra assets to rehabilitation applications. And, on the jail that used to carry loss of life row, incarcerated individuals are in a position to see the San Francisco Bay from a new training middle that’s meant to assist them put together for all times outdoors.
That raises the query, will the subsequent governor proceed Newsom’s emphasis on rehabilitation for incarcerated folks or transfer in a unique route?
CalMatters not too long ago hosted a panel dialogue on what’s subsequent for legal justice in California that included Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Nathan Hochman, Heidi Rummel of the Submit-Conviction Justice Challenge and Dave Lewis, a longtime corrections division chief who oversaw amenities planning and building for state prisons.
CalMatters reporter Joe Garcia moderated the panel. He’s a previously incarcerated journalist who was represented on the parole board by Rummel.
In numerous methods, every panelist has a hand in offering justice to crime victims and shaping alternatives for folks in jail who wish to develop.
“The ability of hope actually can transfer mountains and I’ve seen it in so many individuals I’ve labored with,” stated Rummel, who has represented incarcerated folks in parole hearings. She favors insurance policies that present incentives for prisoners to pursue rehabilitation and earn an opportunity for freedom.
“It’s my agency perception that there are lots of folks in our prisons trapped there due to Eighties sentencing regimes, truthfully racist sentencing regimes, who may very well be safely launched,” she stated.
Hochman took workplace final 12 months after defeating progressive prosecutor George Gascón. Hochman’s victory was seen as a vote for more durable sentences because of voters’ frustration with crime after the COVID-19 pandemic.
He pressured that the system should present a way of justice and retribution to crime victims, though he stated that doesn’t essentially hinge on prolonged jail sentences.
Hochman has visited San Quentin to see the adjustments Newsom directed after suspending the loss of life penalty and ordering the dismantling of loss of life row. The prosecutor stated he met prisoners who took rehabilitation critically and acknowledged the damage they precipitated their victims.
“I anticipated to return out and simply suppose we should always throw away the important thing and never give anyone — particularly these folks — a second likelihood,” Hochman stated. “I got here away with this sense that even individuals who have executed stuff that they need to stay in jail the remainder of their lives, that doesn’t imply we shouldn’t put money into them whereas in they’re in jail so that they perhaps can do one thing productive whereas they’re there.”
Lewis had a job in designing the brand new San Quentin training middle. It’s meant to evoke a unique really feel than what he described as bleak correctional settings marked by grime fields and excessive partitions.
Rethinking prisons to assist somebody’s development can deter crime, he stated.
“There’s very a lot a way of ‘Criminals don’t have anything coming to them,’” he stated, describing conversations with family and friends. “I’m like, OK, however what about their neighborhood? And the neighborhood they’re coming again to? What does their neighborhood have coming to them?
“If we simply ship them proper again, you’re recycling the issue,” he stated. “We are able to forestall the subsequent sufferer from taking place by offering alternatives.”
Adam Ashton writes for CalMatters.

