California Assembly passes bill on child trafficking
CA Assembly passes child sex trafficking bill
The California Assembly passed a child sex trafficking bill. FOX 11's Gina Silva spoke with a sex trafficking survivor to get her reaction.
Democrats in the California Legislature on Thursday revived a bill that would increase penalties for child traffickers following pressure from the public and Gov. Gavin Newsom.
The bill by Republican state Sen. Shannon Grove would add child trafficking to a list of serious felonies in California. Anyone convicted of at least three serious felonies faces a prison sentence of between 25 years to life in prison under the state’s three strikes law.
Earlier this week, Democrats on the Assembly Public Safety Committee chose not to advance the bill because they opposed longer prison sentences, which they say is not an effective deterrent of crime.
PREVIOUS COVERAGE: State assembly committee blocks bill that would increase penalties for trafficking minors
But Democrats quickly changed course on Thursday amid a chorus of concern from the public and Newsom, who took the unusual step of publicly supporting the proposal against members of his own political party.
PREVIOUS COVERAGE: State committee blocks child sex trafficking bill
The California Assembly Committee on Public Safety blocked a bill Tuesday that would make sex trafficking of minors a serious crime in the state. Supporters of the bill and survivors of human trafficking were both shocked and outraged.
The Assembly Public Safety Committee met Thursday morning to advance the bill with no amendments. Four Democratic committee members, including committee chair Reggie Jones-Sawyer, joined Republicans in supporting the bill after they voted down the bill earlier this week. The bill must now be vetted by the Appropriations Committee before heading to vote on the Assembly floor.
Even with the reversal, Republicans were still not happy. The Appropriations Committee process is mysterious, where even bills with lots of support are often gutted or rejected. Republicans attempted to bypass the Appropriations Committee on Thursday by forcing the full Assembly to vote on the bill.
"Today we have a choice to make. You can choose a team, pick pedophiles or children," Republican Assemblymember Heath Flora said.
Democrats rejected the Republican request, with Assembly Majority Leader Isaac Bryan, a Democrat from Los Angeles, chastising Flora for insinuating some Democrats supported pedophiles.