This is an archive of a past election. See http://www.smartvoter.org/ca/scl/ for current information. |
League of Women Voters of California Education Fund
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Candidates Answer Questions on the Issues Judge - Superior Court; County of Santa Clara; Office 7 | |||
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The questions were prepared by the the League of Women Voters of Los Altos-Mtn. View Area and asked of all candidates for this office. See below for questions on
Sentencing,
Juvenile Probation Department,
Juvenile Crime Act
Click on a name for other candidate information. See also more information about this contest.
Answer from Griffin Bonini:
It is also critically important that a judge treat each case individually and not pre-judge the defendant. In each case a probation report is produced for the judge to consider before sentencing. It may contain a personal history, family history, and criminal history of the defendant. Also, the California Rules of Court list factors in "Aggravation" and factors in "Mitigation" that the court must evaluate. Such factors relate to the serious or violent nature of the crime, the level of participation in the crime (i.e. was the defendant a "leader" in the crime or more of a passive participant), the amount of financial loss from the crime, any injuries to the victims, etc. A judge that does not take into account all of these facotrs is remiss in his/her duties to give each and every person that comes before the court a fair and thorough hearing.
Finally, the sentencing law in California can be extremely complicated. Part of my professional experience has been as a law instructor statewide on a variety of topics (trial techniques, evidence, cross-examination, etc.). I have been an instructor on sentencing law for new prosecutors. It is vital that a candidate for judge be knowledgeable about California criminal sentencing law (after all there are over 45,000 criminal cases filed in Santa Clara County each year). I am that candidate. Thank you for taking the time to read my statement. Answer from Enrique Colin:
Answer from Enrique Colin:
Answer from Griffin Bonini:
Answer from Enrique Colin:
Answer from Griffin Bonini:
Under Proposition 21, the elected District Attorney (acting through his/her Deputy District Attorneys) may exercise his/her discretion in deciding whether certain individuals that have committed certain crimes should be treated as adults because of the severity of their crimes. Importantly, all this means is that the case is now prosecuted as any other adult case. The accused defendant now has all the guaranteed rights of an accused adult. For example, juvenile court proceedings are confidential proceedings entirely before the court -- juveniles do not have the right to a jury trial. Once in adult court, however, the defendant has the absolute right to a speedy and public jury trial where twelve members of our community must unanimously find him/her guilty in order to be convicted.
Importantly, long before Proposition 21, certain juvenile offenders were already being tried and sentenced in adult court. In what is called a "fitness" hearing the juvenile court judge determines whether the juvenile should be treated as a juvenile or as an adult. "Fitness" hearings are still the law and are still routinely used in Santa Clara County.
The District Attorney in each county in California is elected, in large part, to exercise his/her discretion in determining what charges are to be filed against which individuals. For example, the District Attorney determines on which cases to seek the death penalty, which cases to be charged as "three strikes," etc. Proposition 21 extends that discretion to certain juvenile offenders and crimes.
Finally, it is important to note that Proposition 21 is the law. As a judge I will follow that law -- whether I agree with it or not. I am seeking election to be a judge, not a legislator. Issues such as three-strikes, the death penalty, and juvenile offenders are hotly debated political (as well as legal) issues. As a judge my job will NOT be to determine whether I agree or disagree with the law, but to fairly and impartially apply the law we have in an intelligent matter. Judges have great discretion in how they handle the cases and individuals that come before them. That discretion, however, is JUDICIAL discretion based on well-established guidelines, statutes and appellate court opinions; it is not POLITICAL discretion based on personal political views. That is why, in part, judicial elections are non-partisan elections and the candidates are prohibited from lisitng political party, affiliations or issues in their ballot statements. Again, thank you for spending the time to become an informed voter.
The order of the candidates is random and changes daily. |