State Senate OKs bill barring grand juries in police deadly force cases - Los Angeles Times
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State Senate OKs bill barring grand juries in police deadly force cases

State Sen. Holly J. Mitchell listens to speakers during a hearing by the state and federal legislators on women and inequality on October 22, 2014. Mitchell's bill prohibiting the use of grand juries in cases of police-involved deaths passed the Senate on Thursday.

State Sen. Holly J. Mitchell listens to speakers during a hearing by the state and federal legislators on women and inequality on October 22, 2014. Mitchell’s bill prohibiting the use of grand juries in cases of police-involved deaths passed the Senate on Thursday.

(Cheryl A. Guerrero / Los Angeles Times)
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The state Senate on Thursday approved a measure that would prohibit grand juries from weighing in on cases of deadly shootings or excessive force by police.

Sen. Holly Mitchell (D-Los Angeles) said her bill aims to “increase confidence of Californians in the judicial process,†adding the current process is “a non-transparent process that is really antiquated and it calls into question whether the grand jury system is relevant anymore.â€

The system been under increased scrutiny in recent months after grand juries declined to pursue charges in high-profile police killings in Staten Island, N.Y. and Ferguson, Mo. In March, a federal investigation into the Ferguson shooting largely agreed with the decision not to indict Officer Darren Wilson for the slaying of Michael Brown.

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Mitchell, in an interview, cited several concerns about grand juries, including “their lack of transparency, the lack of opposing counsel, [and] no judge present.â€

Los Angeles and Santa Clara counties do not use grand juries when an officer’s actions may be the cause of a person’s death.

“That’s a sound policy that should be applied across the state,†Mitchell said.

The California District Attorneys Assn. opposes the bill, arguing the state’s system already has controls for fairness in place.

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Republican Sen. Jim Nielsen of Gerber defended grand juries as “a very long-established and respected process.â€

He opposed Mitchell’s measure, which is among a series of bills dealing with police use of force that lawmakers are considering this year.

“There is a deluge at this time of legislation that’s inarguably going to put more handcuffs on law enforcement,†Nielsen said.

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Mitchell’s bill, SB 227, passed on a 23-12 vote. It now heads to the Assembly.

Follow @melmason for more on California government and politics.

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