Enacting Justice: 2008 Legislative Priorities

[Make sure to click on the link below to read the bill summaries and be able to access the additional information provided]

Enacting Justice: 2008 Legislative Priorities

As we enter the second year of a two-year legislative session, the ACLU’s top priorities reflect our sense that even in a tight budget year, we can gain ground in a number of our core areas. The following bills call for stemming wrongful convictions, ensuring access to disaster-relief services, and protecting Californians from increasing violations of personal privacy. Included below are new bills as well as familiar bills that stalled or failed in prior years.

    Stopping Wrongful Convictions

    These bills propose much needed reforms to minimize wrongful convictions by addressing the three leading causes of wrongful convictions in the United States: reliance on uncorroborated testimony from “in-custody” informants, false confessions, and erroneous eyewitness identifications. The California Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice sponsored the bills, which Gov. Schwarzenegger vetoed last year:

    SB 1589 (Romero, D-Los Angeles)
    Would prohibit conviction based on the uncorroborated testimony of an in-custody informant.
    ACLU-NC Position: Support
    Status: Passed Senate; pending vote on Assembly Floor

    SB 1590 (Alquist, D-San Jose)
    Would have required that police interrogations in cases involving homicides or other violent felonies be recorded electronically.
    ACLU-NC Position: Support
    Status: Placed on suspense in the Senate Appropriations Committee because of the state’s fiscal crisis and will not move forward

    SB 1591 (Ridley-Thomas, D-Los Angeles)
    Would have required the Department of Justice to develop voluntary guidelines for eyewitness identification procedures for all California law enforcement agencies.
    ACLU-NC Position: Support
    Status: Placed on suspense in the Senate Appropriations Committee because of the state’s fiscal crisis and will not move forward

    Providing Justice for the Wrongfully Convicted

    AB 2937 (Solorio, D-Santa Ana)
    Would ensure that exonerees have the same access to resources that ex-offenders receive; clarify the statute of limitations to file damages claims; ensure that criminal records relating to wrongful convictions are sealed; and adjust the amount of compensation for wrongful convictions to reflect federal standards. Also known as the Arthur Carmona Justice for the Wrongfully Convicted Act.
    ACLU-NC Position: Support
    Status: Passed Assembly; pending in Senate Appropriations Committee

    Championing Accurate, Un-Biased Sex Ed

    SB 1600 (Kuehl, D-Santa Monica)
    Would have required charter schools that choose to teach sex education to follow the same standards as public schools. (In 2003, the ACLU sponsored SB 71, which required sexual health education in California’s public schools to be medically accurate, age-appropriate, and unbiased.) Through negotiations with the charter schools, we have reached a non-legislative agreement that will require the charter schools to follow standards found in SB 71, which were recently adopted by the Board of Education. As a result, legislation is no longer needed to address this issue.
    ACLU-NC Position: Support
    Status: Per the agreement reached between sex-ed advocates and the charter schools, this bill has been placed on the inactive file

    Ensuring Access to Disaster-Relief Services

    AB 2327 (Caballero, D-Salinas)
    States that those providing disaster-related assistance and services will strive to provide all victims with the assistance and services they need and for which they are eligible. Additionally, public employees who assist victims would not be permitted to request information or documents that are not strictly necessary to determine eligibility for services under state or federal law. During last year’s wildfires in San Diego, evacuees were asked for identification documents to access emergency services. Many people did not have identity documents with them and were denied services.
    ACLU-NC Position: Support
    Status: Passed Assembly; pending on Senate Floor

    Protecting Identity Documents

    The ACLU is working to require basic privacy protections for government identity documents that are issued with RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) chips. Without privacy protections, RFID chips are susceptible to unauthorized reading and cloning. These three bills, co-sponsored by the ACLU, were held over from last year:

    SB 29 (Simitian, D-Palo Alto)
    Would set a three-year moratorium on the use of RFID chips in school identity documents while research is done to determine appropriate privacy protections.
    ACLU-NC Position: Support
    Status: Passed Senate; pending on Assembly Floor

    SB 30 (Simitian, D-Palo Alto)
    Would set minimum standards and protections for the use of RFID chips in any type of government-issued identity document.
    ACLU-NC Position: Support
    Status: Placed on the inactive file pending completion of a study by the California Research Bureau on appropriate privacy protections for the use of RFID chips

    SB 31 (Simitian, D-Palo Alto)
    Would impose penalties for skimming, spoofing, and other unauthorized accessing of information on the chip.
    ACLU-NC Position: Support
    Status: Passed Senate; passed Assembly Judiciary Committee; pending in Assembly Appropriations Committee

    Sending Real ID Back to the Drawing Board

    Formerly Assembly Joint Resolution 51 (Nava, D-Santa Barbara)
    Called on Congress to repeal the Real ID Act of 2005 -- a law creating a de facto national ID card that concentrates the personal data of all U.S. drivers into one giant DMV database.
    ACLU-NC Position: Support
    Status: The author rewrote this bill on June 26 and it is now a resolution on a different topic. We have no position on the revised bill.

    Promoting Cell Phone Privacy

    AB 3011 (Huffman, D-San Rafael)
    Would have amended the Public Utilities Code to extend the privacy protections for residential land line consumers to cell phone users. Would have prohibited telephone companies from disclosing the calling patterns, financial information, and demographic information of consumers to other companies or persons without first receiving the written consent of the consumer.
    ACLU-NC Position: Support
    Status: Failed on Assembly Floor

    Pressing to Restore Public Oversight of Police Agencies

    SB 1019 (Romero, D-Los Angeles)
    Originally sought to overturn the 2006 California Supreme Court decision in Copley Press v. Superior Court, which effectively shut off public access to information about police misconduct. The measure, a major focus of the ACLU-NC in 2007, stalled in the Assembly Public Safety Committee last year and this year has been significantly narrowed. Because the amended bill does not provide substantial relief in our region, the ACLU-NC is neutral on the current version of the legislation. However, it is possible that future modifications will improve it.
    ACLU-NC Position: Neutral
    Status: Passed Senate; pending in Assembly Public Safety Committee

http://www.aclunc.org/legislation/enacting_justice_2008_legislative_prio...