California Today: Who are all the candidates running for L.A. County district attorney?

The incumbent George Gascón, who was first elected in 2020, faces 11 challengers, many of them from within his own office.
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California Today

January 5, 2024

It's Friday. George Gascón, the L.A. County district attorney, is facing 11 challengers as he runs for re-election. Plus, the police cleared protesters from People's Park in Berkeley in an overnight sweep.

George Gascón, wearing glasses, a dark jacket and a white button-down, smiling and standing in front of a group of people.
The incumbent George Gascón is one of 12 people fighting for the district attorney position. Morgan Lieberman/The New York Times

After the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis ignited protests across the country against police brutality, voters in Los Angeles County chose to take their criminal justice system in a new direction by electing George Gascón as district attorney.

A progressive former police chief who had also served as the top prosecutor in San Francisco, Gascón promised to reduce incarceration in the county, which is the nation's most populous, and to take a much tougher stance on police accountability than his predecessors had.

His election in 2020 was a major victory for the national movement to elect liberal prosecutors, which has gained steam in recent years, because Los Angeles has the nation's largest county jail system as well as its biggest office of prosecutors.

Four years later, Gascón is up for re-election, and the race is shaping up to be a much more traditional kind of contest — one animated by crime and what to do about it, rather than by how to reduce racial disparities and reign in the police.

And in a presidential year, the race is sure to be closely watched for signs of the national mood around crime and criminal justice policies.

"I think that this race now for 2024 has gone back to, for a lot of people, law and order, lock 'em up," Gascón, 69, told me in a recent interview.

Gascón faces 11 opponents, most of whom are running to the right of him and are challenging a number of his policies, including limiting the use of enhancements — for gang affiliations and for the use of firearms during a crime, among other things — that can add years to a sentence; declining in most cases to charge juveniles as adults; and limiting the use of cash bail and misdemeanor prosecutions.

Many candidates have offered voters a narrative of out-of-control crime in Los Angeles, fueled by lenient policies that allow criminals to go free.

Those narratives, however, are contradicted by data that shows a meaningful reduction in violent crime in recent years. In the city of Los Angeles, which accounts for about 40 percent of the county's population, homicide and rape were both down about 18 percent last year, compared with 2021, Gascón's first year in office.

Property crime, though, has risen substantially in some categories, including car thefts, burglaries and personal theft.

All of the candidates, including Gascón, are polling at low numbers so far, although Gascón is at the top. One survey, conducted by the union that represents sheriff's deputies, has him at 14 percent.

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The primary is in March, and unless one candidate receives more than 50 percent of the vote — a remote possibility — the top two contenders in the primary will advance to the general election in November.

Here are the candidates running against Gascón, several of them from within his own office:

  • Eric Siddall, a violent-crimes prosecutor who has received the endorsement of the union that represents assistant district attorneys.
  • Jonathan Hatami, a child-abuse prosecutor who frequently criticizes Gascón on the social media platform X and says he is opposed to Gascón's blanket policy of never seeking the death penalty.
  • Maria Ramirez, a veteran prosecutor who has sued Gascón, accusing him of retaliating against her for pushing back on his policies.
  • Nathan Hochman, a former U.S. assistant attorney general who was the Republican nominee for California attorney general in 2022, an election he lost.
  • Debra Archuleta, a longtime trial lawyer who is now an L.A. County Superior Court judge.
  • Jeff Chemerinsky, who headed the violent and organized crime section of the U.S. attorney's office in Los Angeles before leaving that post last year to enter the campaign.
  • Lloyd Masson, a prosecutor in Gascón's office.
  • Craig Mitchell, a former prosecutor turned judge who is known around Los Angeles for the Skid Row Running Club, which he established to help homeless people who were suffering from addiction.
  • David S. Milton, a retired judge who has presented himself as a "law and order" candidate, and has promised to seek tougher sentences and pursue the death penalty.
  • Dan Kapelovitz, a liberal criminal defense lawyer who is running on promises to tackle the root causes of crime, like poverty and addiction.

We hope you've enjoyed this newsletter, which is made possible through subscriber support. Subscribe to The New York Times.

A close-up photo of Gabriel Fernandez, looking at the camera.
The death of Gabriel Fernandez, 8, in 2013 prompted demands for reform of Los Angeles County's safety net to protect abused and neglected children. Family Photo

The rest of the news

  • The parenting classes that judges routinely order people who are charged with juvenile abuse or neglect to attend are largely unregulated in California, The Los Angeles Times reports.
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Southern California

  • The state Department of Transportation has posted security guards to keep an eye out for smoke or other problems at three storage sites beneath the I-10 viaduct in Los Angeles leased by the same businessman as the one where a fire on Nov. 11 badly damaged the freeway, The Associated Press reports.
  • The writer Walker Mimms explores the reimagined art museum Luna Luna — and its entry ticket prices.
  • Anthony Dias Blue, a longtime wine writer and radio personality whose love for California whites and reds helped elevate the reputation of American vintners, died on Dec. 25 at his home in Los Angeles. He was 82.

Central California

  • A Fresno man who admitted to killing his 56-year-old mother with a hammer in 2019 was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison.

Northern California

  • Work crews in Berkeley surrounded People's Park with a wall of empty shipping containers on Thursday after an overnight police sweep removed activists and homeless campers from the property, which is owned by U.C. Berkeley.
  • A Sacramento City Council member, Sean Loloee, who is fighting federal criminal charges related to his grocery business, resigned from his seat on Thursday, The Associated Press reports.

WHAT WE'RE EATING

Tell us

What are you looking forward to in 2024? Milestone birthdays, traveling to new places, picking up a new hobby?

Tell us your hopes for the new year at CAtoday@nytimes.com. Please include your full name and the city in which you live.

The marquee of the Aero Theater, reading
The Aero Theater in Santa Monica last year. Phillip Faraone/Getty Images for American Cinematheque

And before you go, some good news

After a challenging period of pandemic closures, followed by Hollywood's writers' and actors' strikes last year, Los Angeles's moviegoing scene is bouncing back.

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In a homage to the city's silver screens, The Los Angeles Times published a list of the best movie theaters in the county, according to its film writers and editors. The list spotlights 27 locations in Santa Monica, Burbank and beyond, including restored movie palaces, beloved neighborhood theaters and new venues, with recommendations suitable for film buffs, casual viewers and everyone in between.

The venues were chosen based on several factors including presentation, theater comfort and snack choices. Find the full list of locations here.

Thanks for reading. We'll be back on Monday. Enjoy your weekend.

P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword.

Soumya Karlamangla, Maia Coleman and Briana Scalia contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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