“I recognize for many this is a new path… Whether you are a protester, a police officer, or a prosecutor, I ask you to walk with me.”
by Brett Wilkins, staff writer
Monday, December 7

On his first day in office on Monday, Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón unveiled a sweeping set of plans for criminal justice reform in the nation’s most populous county, including moving to phase out cash bail for all misdemeanor and some felony offenses.
Among the other campaign promises included in Gascón’s reform agenda are prohibiting prosecutors from seeking the death penalty and no longer trying minors as adults.
“I recognize for many this is a new path… Whether you are a protester, a police officer, or a prosecutor, I ask you to walk with me,” Gascón said at the first press conference of his new job. “I ask you to join me on this journey. We can break the multigenerational cycles of violence, trauma, and arrest and recidivism that [have] led America to incarcerate more people than any other nation.”
Those experiences taught me the criminal justice system is fundamentally broken.
Today, we will usher in a new era of criminal justice, and transform the largest criminal justice jurisdiction in America.
— George Gascón (@GeorgeGascon) December 7, 2020
Gascón, a native of Havana, Cuba, championed many of the reforms he is now set to implement while serving first as police chief and then district attorney of San Francisco. In 2016 the then-San Francisco DA introduced an algorithmic risk assessment tool to determine who is eligible for pre-trial release without bail.
However, the system—although well-intentioned—was plagued by bias that could be every bit as harmful as the prejudices of the humans who designed it.
As Los Angeles County's new DA George Gascón was sworn in Monday, he promised drastic reform.
Some of the reforms include: eliminating cash bail, no longer pursuing the death penalty, and eliminating all sentencing enhancements. https://t.co/Su19yBC9Qq
— Sentencing Project (@SentencingProj) December 7, 2020
This whole thread is a head-spinner. Gascon. Day One. No more cash bail. No sentencing enhancements. Three strikes cases to be re-evaluated. Police shooting cases re-opened. Diversion for youth, poverty, mentally ill cases. Witness services for cases of murder by police. Change. https://t.co/WFQrM3Wun2
— Ava DuVernay (@ava) December 7, 2020
Gascón was also sharply criticized during his tenure in San Francisco—which followed that of Vice President-elect Kamala Harris—for his failure to hold police accountable during a period which saw numerous high-profile officer killings of Black and Brown men including Mario Woods, Luis Gongora Pat, Amilcar Perez-Lopez, and Alex Nieto.
Still, Gascón was also widely hailed—especially outside San Francisco—for his progressive policies and actions, including his decision in 2018 to wipe clean the records of thousands of individuals who had been charged with marijuana-related misdemeanors and felonies over the preceding decades.
Some incredible L.A. County criminal justice news in James's thread here: juveniles no longer to be tried as adults(!), death of cash bail, no sentencing enhancements(!), & more. Wow. This feels massive. https://t.co/OmKvh0TFNf
— Ryan Gattis (@Ryan_Gattis) December 7, 2020
More people will see the justice they deserve soon. @GeorgeGascon
— Kim Kardashian West (@KimKardashian) December 7, 2020
San Francisco has since moved to eliminate cash bail. Shortly after taking office, current San Franisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin fulfilled his campaign promise to no longer request money bail as a condition for defendants’ pre-trial release.
In 2018, outgoing California Gov. Jerry Brown signed into law a bill ending cash bail in the nation’s most populous state. However, the bail bond industry challenged the measure, and a 2020 state ballot initiative that would have upheld the law failed to secure sufficient support.
This article published by Common Dreams on December 7, 2020, here…
Our work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License. Feel free to republish and share widely.