The Briefing Room
General Category => Crime And Punishment => Topic started by: rangerrebew on January 27, 2024, 07:47:54 pm
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THE FIFTY
Former San Francisco DA Chesa Boudin on the city’s ‘hard turn to the right’
POLITICO sat down with Boudin in Berkeley, where he leads a new University of California criminal justice center, to talk about lessons from his downfall and the broader outlook for the causes he championed.
Chesa Boudin addresses supporters.
The larger progressive approach to criminal justice Chesa Boudin embodied endures, pursued by district attorneys around the country. | Noah Berger/AP
By JEREMY B. WHITE
01/24/2024 05:00 AM EST
Chesa Boudin was San Francisco’s top prosecutor for less than three years. In that short time he became a potent symbol of a movement to rethink crime and punishment’s promise — and its perils.
The public defender and son of leftist radicals who spent years in prison for their roles in a deadly armed robbery was elected district attorney on a platform of cutting incarceration and cracking down on rogue cops. It didn’t last long. He was ousted in a 2022 recall election fomented by a potent blend of crime fears fanned by increases in homicides and property crimes, Covid-era frustration and Boudin’s practice of diverting offenders.
Yet the larger progressive approach to criminal justice Boudin embodied endures, pursued by district attorneys around the country. At the same time, public safety has become a politically volatile issue that Republicans eagerly and often effectively use as a bludgeon. Some wary Democrats in blue states like New York and California have begun to retreat by reversing changes to bail and the discovery process and mulling tougher property crime penalties, marking yet another turn in a decadeslong push and pull.
https://www.politico.com/news/2024/01/24/chesa-boudin-san-francisco-interview-00137358
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I doubt I would believe that SF took a hard turn to the right if I was actually there to see it as it happened.
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I suppose he’s right
San Francisco was so far to the left that they couldn’t go any further that any movement to the right, however small, would be considered a hard right turn
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I suppose he’s right
San Francisco was so far to the left that they couldn’t go any further that any movement to the right, however small, would be considered a hard right turn
Agree! A hard turn to the right just makes them radical.