Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a invoice into legislation Wednesday that will increase the penalty for some offenders who solicit 16- and 17-year-olds for intercourse.
The brand new legislation will permit prosecutors to cost suspects who’re a minimum of three years older than the minor they solicit for intercourse with a felony as an alternative of a misdemeanor on a primary offense — usually referred to as a “wobbler” since prosecutors have discretion. The availability targets older “johns” and avoids charging all youthful offenders with a felony.
All minors underneath 16 and people 18 who’re victims of human trafficking are already thought-about wobbler circumstances underneath present legislation.
The invoice, AB 379, bumped into controversy within the spring when Democrats pressured amendments to Assemblymember Maggy Krell’s (D-Sacramento) invoice in committee, arguing that permitting prosecutors to decide on whether or not to cost an offender with a felony or a misdemeanor on a primary offense might doubtlessly hurt victims.
Newsom joined with a refrain of Republican and public pushback to the change, an unusual transfer earlier than a invoice hits his desk. “The legislation ought to deal with all intercourse predators who solicit minors the identical — as a felony, whatever the meant sufferer’s age,” Newsom mentioned in an announcement. “Full cease.”
Democrats had different issues a couple of provision of the brand new legislation that will make it a misdemeanor to loiter with the intent to buy business intercourse, arguing that it might doubtlessly be used to focus on minorities and the poor.
“When legal guidelines are imprecise, they’re ripe for profiling,” Assemblymember LaShae Sharp-Collins (D-San Diego) mentioned when the invoice handed the Meeting in Could, after legislators struck a deal so as to add the three-year stipulation.
The brand new legislation additionally creates a survivors assist fund, to be backed by elevated fines for offenders and hoteliers who don’t report intercourse trafficking on their premises.