The bill would allow police to arrest for shoplifting without a warrant, even if they did not witness the crime. Los Angeles Assemblymember Wendy Carillo, who authored the bill with five Democratic and two Republican coauthors, said it is “in response to the alarming escalation of organized retail theft,” which has become a hot-button political issue.
But progressive Democrats, leery of increasing incarceration rates for minor offenses, were uncomfortable with the bill.
“Let’s be clear: AB 1990 will not stop retail theft,” Assemblymember Tina McKinnor, a Democrat from Inglewood, told her colleagues. “AB 1990 will increase the unnecessary harassment, detention, arrest and mass incarceration of Black and brown Californians.”
She concluded her speech: “I am asking all of you to please vote ‘no’ on AB 1990.”
McKinnor, however, did not vote on the bill.
Her office did not respond to CalMatters’ request for an explanation about why she did not vote despite her clear opposition.
Kalra, of San Jose, also did not respond to a request from CalMatters to explain why he cast the lone “no” vote.
But Kalra has been a longtime champion of progressive causes. He’s a former deputy public defender and the former chair of the Legislature’s Progressive Caucus. He has advocated for legislation that seeks to end systematic racism in the justice system.
For a time, it seemed Kalra would not be the lone Democrat to vote “no” on AB 1990.
Fellow Democratic Assemblymember Rick Chavez Zbur of Los Angeles was also listed as voting “no,” according to a video of the voting roll call captured by CalMatters’ Digital Democracy database.
But Zbur, who chairs the Assembly Democratic Caucus, changed his vote after the bill passed so that he would be formally listed as not voting. In the Assembly, members can change their vote on a bill after a hearing has concluded, as long as it doesn’t change the final outcome.
Asked to explain why he changed his vote, his spokesperson, Vienna Montague, said in an email that Zbur “does not have a comment at this time.”
While AB 1990 survived to advance to the Senate, despite so many lawmakers not voting, other bills haven’t fared as well.