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California鈥檚 jail population will rise thanks to Prop. 36. So will inmate deaths, advocates say

Jennifer Schmidt reacts during a listening session hosted by the In-Custody Death Review Division with the Board of State and Community Corrections in Escondido on Dec. 14, 2024. Schmidt鈥檚 father, Gilbert Gil, died in Vista jail in 2022.
Kristian Carreon
/
CalMatters
Jennifer Schmidt reacts during a listening session hosted by the In-Custody Death Review Division with the Board of State and Community Corrections in Escondido on Dec. 14, 2024. Schmidt鈥檚 father, Gilbert Gil, died in Vista jail in 2022.

California recorded historically high numbers of deaths in county jails for the past six years. Now, counties expect to house more prisoners as Prop. 36 takes effect.

According to Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes, California doesn鈥檛 have a crisis in its jails, where record numbers of people have died even as the state鈥檚 jail population shrank.

鈥淪aying people died in jails is a little bit of a misnomer,鈥 said Barnes, who is also the president of the California State Sheriffs鈥 Association. 鈥淧eople who are dying in our care, and I can鈥檛 say this any other way, they鈥檙e not dying because they鈥檙e in jail. They are dying from things that are life choices, narcotics issues, poor health, cancer, other things.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not that the numbers are going up because they鈥檙e just dying from issues that are related to the jail.鈥

So Barnes said he鈥檚 not concerned that , a newly passed crime measure, is expected to reverse the trend of declining jail populations and put more people in jail, and he does not believe that the increase in headcount will lead to more in-custody deaths.

Outside observers, academics and the families of people who died in jail argue the opposite: that California is about to witness a wave of jail deaths even worse than the last four years.

Prop. 36, passed overwhelmingly by voters in November, will likely by stiffening penalties for certain crimes and allowing district attorneys to charge some misdemeanors as felonies, according to the Legislative Analyst鈥檚 Office.

Yusef Miller, who leads a group of families whose relatives died in San Diego jails, said more incarcerated people will put pressure on jail systems that are already ill-equipped to handle more inmates.

鈥淲e鈥檝e been claiming that Prop. 36 is going to increase the jail population, of course, but they鈥檙e increasing it into an already failed and broken system where people鈥檚 lives are lost from neglect. If you put more pressure and more activity on this, it鈥檚 gonna fail even more,鈥 Miller said.

According to , a surge in overdoses drove the trend of increasing jail deaths. The other leading causes were suicide and the catch-all term 鈥渘atural causes.鈥

Jails are responsible for inmates鈥 health care, but former jail medical staff have complained of overwork and burnout, Many jail prisoners require complex care. More than half of them , according to a 2023 study by the Public Policy Institute of California.

In 2019, when 156 people died in the custody of California jails, pledged that the state would take a stronger hand to prevent deaths in the 57 jail systems run by California county sheriffs.

In each of the following four years, more people died in California jails than when Newsom made that pledge 鈥 hitting a high of 215 in 2022. Tulare, San Diego, Kern, Riverside and San Bernardino counties鈥 jails set records.

As of July, 68 people had died in California jails this year, according to the most recent data available from the Justice Department, which declined to provide CalMatters with updated numbers.

Californians for Safety and Justice, a nonprofit that seeks to reduce prison and jail spending, estimated that to California jails each year, about 100,000 of them held in jail before trial and about 30,000 serving one-year sentences after their convictions.

Not all of those people would be held at the same time. In June 2024, the average daily jail population statewide was 56,795 people.

Michele Deitch, director of the Prison and Jail Innovation Lab at the University of Texas at Austin, said it鈥檚 likely, if not a certainty, that more people will die in jails as jail populations grow. And, she said, there will be cumulative effects to counties as the expenses pile up from additional inmates.

鈥淗aving more people means a more overcrowded situation, which means that the dynamics inside change,鈥 Deitch said. 鈥淚t could lead to more deaths. And the counties are going to very quickly realize how expensive it is to keep that number of people in jail. They鈥檙e going to have to develop strategies like (pre-trial diversion programs) to keep overcrowding down.鈥

Why voters backed Prop. 36

Prop. 36 was a rightward swing of the California political pendulum 鈥 a decade ago, voters eased criminal penalties for certain crimes under 2014鈥檚 Proposition 47, which was pitched as both a cost-saving measure and a more effective way to combat crime by focusing dollars on treatment instead of incarceration.

Then, during the pandemic, the rate of shoplifting and commercial burglaries skyrocketed, especially in Los Angeles, Alameda, San Mateo and Sacramento counties. Statewide, reported shoplifting of merchandise worth up to $950 , according to the Public Policy Institute of California. That鈥檚 the highest observed level since 2000.

A security guard stands by the front entrance of a luxury retail storefront in downtown San Francisco on April 15, 2024. Retail theft has plagued the area, and numerous storefronts sit vacant.
Loren Elliott
/
CalMatters
A security guard stands by the front entrance of a luxury retail storefront in downtown San Francisco on April 15, 2024. Retail theft has plagued the area, and numerous storefronts sit vacant.

Combining shoplifting with commercial burglaries, the institute鈥檚 researchers found that total reported thefts were 18% higher than in 2019.

Prosecutors, law enforcement and big-box retailers and successfully urged the public to vote for Prop. 36.

Barnes鈥 jail system in Orange County had a record 18 people die inside in 2021. In 2023, that number was down to six. This year, so far, eight people have died in Orange County jails.

鈥淚n Orange County, we have several thousand available (jail) beds,鈥 Barnes said. 鈥淥ther counties may be impacted because they may not have capacity. They may just have to release people earlier because they don鈥檛 have the space for an incoming population to change.

鈥淪o it鈥檚 not as simple as saying that populations go up and, I guess (given) the law of averages, that more people will die, I don鈥檛 think that鈥檚 true.鈥

California gradually increases jail oversight

In 2011, California 鈥 as it thinned severely overcrowded state prisons by sending tens of thousands of recently convicted offenders to county-run jails 鈥 created an oversight board for prisons and jails. This 13-member Board of State and Community Corrections is composed mostly of people with law enforcement and probation experience.

CalMatters reported earlier this year that a civilian member of the oversight board felt that their work amounted to sanctioning the actions of sheriffs and their deputies when people died in their custody.

DeAna Serna displays poster boards of loved ones who died in jail at a listening session hosted by the In-Custody Death Review Division with the Board of State and Community Corrections in Escondido on Dec. 14, 2024. Serna鈥檚 sister, Elisa Serna, died in a San Diego jail in 2019.
Kristian Carreon
/
CalMatters
DeAna Serna displays poster boards of loved ones who died in jail at a listening session hosted by the In-Custody Death Review Division with the Board of State and Community Corrections in Escondido on Dec. 14, 2024. Serna鈥檚 sister, Elisa Serna, died in a San Diego jail in 2019.

The board has responded to public and legislative pressure by conducting more unannounced jail inspections, when it would visit jails just once every two years and tell jail authorities in advance when inspectors were coming.

A new law that went into effect this year adds a staff position to . That staffer is hosting with the public in at least two cities.

A spokesperson for the oversight board said the board had not talked to local law enforcement about a potential increase in county jail populations as a result of Prop. 36 nor has it done a 鈥渇ormal analysis for impact.鈥 But the board will make in-custody death data statewide available to the public next year, the spokesperson said.

Miller, who works with the San Diego families whose relatives died in jails, doubts that the state oversight board or the counties will raise the alarm if people continue to die in jails at the rate they have been since the pandemic.

鈥淎s it鈥檚 rolling out in their big promises that it鈥檚 not gonna be as terrible as we know it鈥檚 going to be, we still have to hold them accountable and make sure that a microscopic eye is on what they do,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the only hope I see.鈥

Nigel Duara is a multi-media journalist for CalMatters, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics, and a JPR news partner..
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