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California

Good luck getting your money! LA Mayor Eric Garcetti signs order criminalizing homelessness, with violators facing possible fines of up to $1,000 By BRIAN STIEGLITZ FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti on Thursday signed into law an ordinance that criminalizes homelessness in most parts of the city

  • The law specifies certain times and locations where it will be ‘unlawful for a person to sit, lie, or sleep, or to store, use, maintain, or place personal property’ 
  • Individuals who refuse to comply will either face a misdemeanor charge, six months in the LA county jail and/or a fine of up to $1,000
  • There were 66,433 homeless people living on the streets of LA County in 2020, a 12.7 percent increase from the previous year
  • Meanwhile, the morning Garcetti signed the law, authorities cleared dozens of homeless encampments dotting Venice Beach
  • About 50 protesters descended on Garcetti’s home on Friday, covering it with graffiti and toilet paper before riot police broke up the crowds 
  • Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti recently signed into law an ordinance that criminalizes homelessness in most parts of the city, a motion that has drawn just as much fierce support by some as it has opposition by others.

    The law specifies certain times and locations where it will be ‘unlawful for a person to sit, lie, or sleep, or to store, use, maintain, or place personal property in the public right-of-way’.

    The ordinance, which will go into effect 30 days from last Thursday, makes it illegal to sit, lie, sleep, or set up encampments within 500 feet from ‘sensitive use’ properties, which include schools, parks, libraries, overpasses, underpasses, freeway ramps, tunnels, bridges, pedestrian bridges, subways, washes, spreading grounds and active railways.

  • The ordinance also makes it a crime to sit, lie, sleep, or set up encampments within 1,000 feet of or on a ‘street, sidewalk, or other public right-of-way’.

    Individuals who violate the law will be issued a citation from the City’s Administrative Citation Enforcement Program.

    However, individuals who refuse to comply or obstruct a city employee from enforcing the law will either face a misdemeanor charge, imprisonment for up to six months in the LA County jail and/or a fine of up to $1,000, as laid out in Section 11 of the Los Angeles Municipal Code.

    Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti recently signed into law an ordinance that criminalizes homelessness in most parts of the city

    Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti recently signed into law an ordinance that criminalizes homelessness in most parts of the city

    The law specifies certain times and locations where it will be ¿unlawful for a person to sit, lie, or sleep, or to store, use, maintain, or place personal property in the public right-of-way,¿ the ordinance reads

    The law specifies certain times and locations where it will be ‘unlawful for a person to sit, lie, or sleep, or to store, use, maintain, or place personal property in the public right-of-way,’ the ordinance reads

    Garcetti and other proponents of the law say that its intentions are not to punish unhoused individuals, but to promote public safety and cleanliness.

    ‘The homeless crisis has reached epic proportions across the City of Los Angeles,’ the ordinance reads. ‘It is the obligation of the City to keep its public rights of way clean and available for public use, and to protect the public health, safety, and access by City constituents.’

    Garcetti signed the law Thursday, following a 13-2 vote in favor by the Los Angeles City Council.

    The following night, about 50 protesters rallied outside Garcetti’s house with some leaving protest placards on the sidewalk and others vandalizing the exterior with toilet paper and graffiti.

    Police in riot gear responded to the protest and cleared the area, but no arrests were made, according to Fox News.

    According to the Greater L.A. Homeless Count, there were 66,433 homeless people living on the streets of LA County in 2020, a 12.7 percent increase from the previous year.

    The night after Garcetti signed the law, about 50 protesters rallied outside his house

    The night after Garcetti signed the law, about 50 protesters rallied outside his house

    Some left protest placards on the sidewalk and others vandalizing the exterior with toilet paper and graffiti

    Some left protest placards on the sidewalk and others vandalizing the exterior with toilet paper and graffiti

    Police in riot gear responded to the protest and cleared the area, but no arrests were made

    Police in riot gear responded to the protest and cleared the area, but no arrests were made

    Los Angeles crews remove homeless camp at Venice Beach

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    Over the last decade, Los Angeles County has seen the number of homeless double from about 40,000 to about 80,000, according to the Los Angeles County Homeless Count.

    Mike Bonnin, one of two city council members who voted against the ordinance, said at Wednesday’s city council meeting, ‘There are far more people who want housing than we have sufficient resources for.

    He added that the city only has enough shelter beds for 39percent of the unhoused population, but ‘What about the other 61%? Where can they go? Where can they sleep?’

    Bonnin previously spoke out against the motion and gave a personal anecdote about his experience with homelessness, as reported by Spectrum News.

    ‘Some of those nights I slept in the car, some of those nights, when my car was in the shop, I slept on the beach,’ he said.

    ‘I cannot tell you how much turmoil is in your heart when the sun is setting and you don’t know where to sleep. I cannot tell you how demoralizing and dehumanizing and defeating that experience is when you don’t know where you’re going to sleep.

    ‘That’s what it comes down to for me … where can people go, where can people sleep when they do not have an alternative.’

    Ricci Sergienco, of the LA People’s City Council, spoke at Wednesday’s meeting against the ordinance and said that it’s ‘basically saying that poor people just existing will be criminalized’.

    He added, ‘This law unfairly paints unhoused people as a threat to children and the public. The lack of appropriate housing is the real threat to public safety.

    ‘I’ve been down on the Venice boardwalk in the middle of the night for the past month or so and the cops are moving people from 2 to 5am. How the city is handling the homelessness crisis is not appropriate. And if you all think that you’re all doing a good job, you should take a long look in the mirror.’

    Many took to Twitter to express their dissent for the new law. Yoonj Kim, an MTV News correspondent, tweeted, ‘So instead of responsible policy reform around affordable housing, zoning, or even rent control, Los Angeles—the epicenter of the housing crisis—has officially criminalized the act of sitting and sleeping outside. Context by @ananyaUCLA @BryantOdegaLA’

    A left-leaning podcaster called Lefty-Desiree McLefty Face, Milkshake Whisperer, tweeted, ‘The City Council in Los Angeles is pretty much outlawing homeless instead of addressing the very real structural issues that cause it. Minimum wage should be around 30 an hour for starters. Tonight protesters will be heading to Garcetti’s house to press the issue.’

    But some residents were just as passionate about their support for the law. Sulman Mancus, who’s on the board of a local condominium association, spoke in favor of the motion and said that when it comes to seeing dozens of homeless people camped on public streets, ‘we all feel our hands our tied to do anything about it.’

    ‘Children are feeling unsafe, people are feeling unsafe in my building to walk around the neighborhood,’ he added. ‘Previous speakers do not speak for most Angelenos. We are a compassionate city, the city council members are compassionate as well, but there has to be a balance between a full heart for people that do not have homes and also a full heart for our community and our sense of neighborhood and safety.’

    Councilman Paul Krekorian, who voted in favor of the law, told The Independent  earlier this month that the law does not make it illegal to be homeless. ‘It does not make any conduct that is fundamental to being human illegal,’ he said.

    ‘What it does do is it guarantees that we will reestablish passable sidewalks. It protects the users of our public infrastructure and the unhoused residents of our city from being put into positions of interaction with automobiles, around loading docks, driveways and so forth. It guarantees access to our fire hydrants, entrances to buildings.’

    A statement the mayor’s office sent to The Independent describes the city’s attempt to find a balance between public safety and the homeless crisis.

    It reads, ‘We don’t need to choose between keeping our public spaces clean and safe, and connecting Angelenos experiencing homelessness with the housing and services they so desperately need.

    ‘We can and will do both, and I support the council action because it will help achieve that goal in a way that is humane, compassionate, and responsive to the urgent needs in our communities.’

    Meanwhile, the morning Garcetti signed the law, authorities cleared dozens of homeless encampments dotting Venice Beach

    Meanwhile, the morning Garcetti signed the law, authorities cleared dozens of homeless encampments dotting Venice Beach

    There were 66,433 homeless people living on the streets of LA County in 2020, a 12.7 percent increase from the previous year

    The homeless encampments have become a virtual tent city with violent crime and rampant drug use, pushing tourists and families out

    City workers began the process of tearing down homeless camps along Venice Beach ahead of the July 4 weekend this year

    City workers began the process of tearing down homeless camps along Venice Beach ahead of the July 4 weekend this year

    LAPD and sanitation workers remove homeless encampments

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    Meanwhile, the morning Garcetti signed the law, authorities cleared dozens of homeless encampments dotting Venice Beach and, starting last Friday, camping is no longer be permitted in the area.

    The homeless encampments have become a virtual tent city with violent crime and rampant drug use, pushing tourists and families out. City workers began the process of tearing down homeless camps along Venice Beach ahead of the July 4 weekend this year.

    The move followed the discovery of a dead homeless man in his tent on the boardwalk, according to Fox News. And another homeless man was arrested in connection with the killing.

    Fox News reported that Venice had a 132 percent increase in assaults in which a homeless person was a suspect in 2021 and a 126 percent increase in cases in which a homeless person was a victim as of the end of May.

    Meanwhile, robberies in which a homeless person was the victim increased by 1,100 percent while robberies in which homeless person was a suspect increased by 160 percent.

    Felony arrests have increased by 81 percent so far this year, the outlet reported.

    ——————————————————————————-Amazing that as soon as Our Fearless Mayor gets nominated to be Ambassador to India. That he starts to do the right thing with these Bums. Yes they are bums not Homeless! Grumpy

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Born again Cynic! California

Todays Weather here behind the Lines in the Peoples Republic of California

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Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends" Born again Cynic! California

How my California Tax Money is spent – California’s Gun Confiscation Program Has Been an Abject Failure by JORDAN MICHAELS on JULY 21, 2021

Newsom hasn’t been able to turn the 20-year failure around. (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)

In 2001, California passed a first-of-its-kind law to create a database of residents who had become prohibited from owning firearms. Whether through criminal conduct or mental health issues, these individuals would be included on a list dubbed the “Armed and Prohibited Persons System” (APPS).

The database is made possible by the state’s firearm registration and universal background check systems, and the California Department of Justice hoped local law enforcement and state agents would be able to use APPS to confiscate firearms from those deemed unfit.

Unfortunately for Golden State gun grabbers, the program has been an abject failure—and its problems are only getting worse.

The news outlet CalMatters published this week a lengthy article highlighting the program’s worst failings, and they sum it up like this: “…what seemed at the time like a straight-forward approach to the enforcement of existing gun laws has instead become mired in chronic shortcomings, failing for years to make good on its potential.”

The full piece is worth a read, but CalMatters revealed (sometimes unintentionally, it seems) how the APPS system is used to harass gun owners and violate their privacy rights.

Since government agencies maintain the APPS list, CalMatters was able to obtain personal information of some of the current and former gun owners included in the database. But as CalMatters admits, not everyone on the list is supposed to be there.

SEE ALSO: New California Law Imposes Court Process for Confiscating Guns

Some people who appear in the APPS database have already surrendered their firearms. Others are only there due to administrative errors.

“Even when the information is correct, some people might be on the list because of an apparent misunderstanding or paperwork issue, not because they’re trying to illegally keep their guns,” the outlet reports.

Law enforcement agents sometimes devote time and resources to confiscating firearms only to find that the database has given them faulty information.

“The work-intensive process and outmoded technology has led some in law enforcement to question the database’s reliability. They say they’ve discovered errors during field operations and that investigations based on the list are a waste of resources,” according to CalMatters.

And then there’s simple bureaucratic incompetence. Some officials estimate that there are 24,000 people in the APPS database who have not surrendered their firearms. But CalMatters reports (towards the bottom of the article) that even this number is mostly guesswork.

“As it stands now, the department can’t even determine the precise breadth of the backlog, including how many cases have remained unresolved for more than six months,” they say.

There are multiple causes for the backlog. CalMatters discovered that many local police departments do not even know about the database. They also note that judges often do not ensure that their gun confiscation orders are carried out, and agents at the California DOJ can’t keep up with the constant stream of new prohibited persons.

SEE ALSO: CA Gov. Gavin Newsom: ‘We have the ability to do martial law…if necessary’

What many gun owners may not know is that just being on the list doesn’t give law enforcement the right to confiscate firearms. According to CalMatters, agents must acquire probable cause that a person still possesses a gun in order to obtain a search warrant. If an individual simply denies owning a firearm, the investigation may end right there.

One agency told CalMatters that they gave up on confiscating firearms after one night of work, calling it “a waste of resources that could be directed toward more pressing violent crime problems.” Some people provided proof that their guns had been sold long ago, while others claimed they had gotten rid of them but could provide no evidence.

“There was just no way to verify,” one agent said, adding that the state “has no idea who has guns and who’s turned them in.”

The program’s sorry track record has made it difficult for anti-gun advocates to justify its continued existence. According to CalMatters, “Gun control advocates struggled to identify shootings that might have been prevented had authorities successfully retrieved firearms,” and the outlet did not report on any specific instances.

One spokesperson for the anti-gun group Giffords may have unintentionally summed up how most law-abiding gun owners feel about gun control efforts.

“It’s very frustrating to see that we have such a hard time implementing firearms removals in situations where we have all the information in front of us,” she said. “It doesn’t give the public a lot of confidence in our ability to tackle a lot of these more complex firearm issues.”

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All About Guns Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends" California

The Report from behind Enemy Lines

NEWSOM RECALL PUTS
RIGHTS OF THE LAWFUL CENTER STAGE
With less than 60 days until the special election, the recall of Governor Gavin Newsom is the biggest political story in California, if not the country.  Sure, legal fights and several anti-2A bills are still pending, but there is no question that the recall represents a historic opportunity.

Gavin Newsom took office promising to go further than Jerry Brown in curtailing gun rights and he has done just that.  In the wake of his election, multiple legislators whose anti-gun rights bills were vetoed by Brown were more than happy to re-introduce those measures.  These attacks on the rights of safe and responsible gun owners will only continue if the recall fails.

In a special installment of CRPA TV, Kevin and Rick discuss the reasons behind the recall.  Spoiler alert: it is not just the Governor’s record on gun rights that has brought him to the brink of losing his seat.

Click here to watch “Let’s Talk About The Recall” on CRPA TV

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California Dear Grumpy Advice on Teaching in Today's Classroom

My Old Home Town! Pasadena California 1945 AD

This was what it looked like when America was at its Zenith in my humble Opinion!

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California

Amen Brother!

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Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends" Born again Cynic! California Grumpy's hall of Shame This great Nation & Its People

Think about this so called Independence Day

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All About Guns California Good News for a change!

Hog Hunting on the California Coast (Some of the Prettiest Areas in the USofA!)

If you get the chance, go down the Pacific Coast highway in Big Sur. Because it is easily one of the best places to go to get in touch with nature. For me at least it also helps my Soul and Heart to go there just to unwind.

Also while it is getting expensive just like everything in this crazy state of mine. The cost of doing a Hog Hunt is not as bad as you would think. Just do a proper job of research and you will find the right Hunting Outfit for you and your Pocketbook.

The other Good News is that on Thursday. San Luis Obispo has a farmers market. Which is a whole lot of fun. Plus SLO as the locals call it has some of the best Tri Tip steak sandwich’s around.

Grumpy

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California

Battle of Palmdale California (This place always seems to attract strange Folks and Things even in the 1950's)

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All About Guns Allies Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends" California Cops

WHAT HAPPENS NOW IN CA’S ASSAULT WEAPON BAN!!! Miller v. Bonta