California 2021-2022 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB2418 Compare Versions

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1-Assembly Bill No. 2418 CHAPTER 787An act to add Article 9 (commencing with Section 13370) to Chapter 2 of Title 3 of Part 4 of the Penal Code, relating to crimes. [ Approved by Governor September 29, 2022. Filed with Secretary of State September 29, 2022. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2418, Kalra. Crimes: Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act.Existing law requires the Department of Justice to compile criminal offender record information, defined as the records and data compiled by criminal justice agencies, for purposes of identifying criminal offenders and of maintaining as to each offender a summary of certain information, including arrests, pretrial proceedings, sentencing, and release. Existing law requires a reporting agency to report specified information to the department concerning each arrest, including applicable identification and arrest data, as specified. Existing law requires the superior court that disposes of a case for which an arrest was made to report specified data to the department, including the disposition of the case and specified data elements.This bill would require state and local prosecution offices to collect and transmit data elements, as defined, for each criminal case to the department, including, but not limited to, data about basic case information of each case, including the case number and the date of the crime and arrest, data about the charges, including each charge, enhancement, and special circumstance filed, data about the initial appearance, custody, and bail, including the date of the initial appearance and bail set, whether defendant posted bail, and the date of release from custody, data about plea bargains, including the date and the terms, data about diversion and collaborative court programs, including whether the defendant was offered a diversion program, whether the defendant was eligible for a collaborative court program, and whether there was opposition by the prosecuting agency for either program, data about the case disposition and postconviction proceedings, and data about the victim and the defendant charged. The bill would also require the department to collect specified data, including the number of prior felony arrests and convictions of a defendant.The bill would require the department to be responsible for collecting data elements from agencies, as specified, and aggregating, as specified, these data elements by, including, but not limited to, developing consistent definitions and formats for data elements and providing consistent and clear guidelines to agencies transmitting data elements to the department.The bill would, beginning March 1, 2027, require every agency to collect data elements for cases in which a decision to reject charges or to initiate criminal proceedings by way of complaint or indictment has been made by that agency from that date forward. The bill would, beginning June 1, 2027, require every agency to begin transmitting data elements to the department with this transmission occurring on a quarterly basis until June 1, 2028, after which data elements are transmitted monthly. The bill would authorize the department to require any agency to transmit data before any deadline for specified reasons, including quality control purposes and compliance with standardized formats.The bill would require the department, by October 1, 2023, to establish the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board for the purpose of ensuring transparency, accountability, and equitable access to prosecutorial data. The bill would require specified individuals and representatives of specified organizations, or their designees, including the Attorney General, the president of the California Public Defenders Association, a university professor who specializes in criminal justice data, and 2 individuals who have direct experience being prosecuted in the criminal legal system, to serve on the board. The bill would require the board to provide guidance to the department on draft rules, regulations, policies, plans, reports, and other decisions made by the department. The bill would require the department, by July 1, 2024, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, to develop a data dictionary that includes standardized definitions for each data element.The bill would require the department, beginning June 1, 2027, to begin collecting data elements from all agencies statewide and to aggregate data from all agencies and publish this data by June 1, 2028, with the publication continuing on a quarterly basis for one year and then on a monthly basis thereafter.The bill would create an exception for the data provided by the agencies to the department to any sealing or expungement of a case, as specified, or any rule of confidentiality or otherwise prohibiting disclosure provided by law. The bill would make the operation of its provisions contingent upon an adequate appropriation by the Legislature, as specified.Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.By imposing additional duties on local agencies, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Article 9 (commencing with Section 13370) is added to Chapter 2 of Title 3 of Part 4 of the Penal Code, to read: Article 9. Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act13370. (a) (1) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a workable system of criminal justice data transparency whereby law enforcement prosecution agencies will gather complete, accurate, and timely data in a uniform format, and make that data available to the public in a modern, open, electronic format that is machine-readable and readily accessible through an application program interface. In order that meaningful discussions can occur regarding criminal justice and its most challenging issues, including those regarding criminal caseloads, plea bargaining, race, mass incarceration, equity, and homelessness, the Legislature finds that it is an important state interest to implement a data collection, aggregation, and publishing process for criminal prosecutions to promote criminal justice data transparency. This data would be comprised of publishable statistics and other data from statewide prosecution offices. This section shall be referred to as the Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act, the Act, or JDATA.(2) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a reliable and robust methodology that is consistent county-to-county so that statewide data and trends may be accurately tracked. Further, the legislation shall set low technological and resource barriers so that every affected office may meaningfully participate to the fullest intent of this article.(3) The expediency and accuracy of the data is best served by the Department of Justice as a single data aggregator and repository unit. The participation of the department as the final point of collection, aggregation, and publishing of this data is more efficient, will ensure the uniformity and accuracy of the data, and, by providing the technological resources and aggregation and publication of all data, will allow offices that lack adequate technology or resources to comply with the mandate. As used in this paragraph, technological resources means providing the basic systems and support necessary to receive the case data described in this article in standard formats from prosecution agencies statewide and aggregate that data using appropriate means developed by the department, and then publish the data in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require, for example, on an internet website.(b) (1) The department shall have the following objectives and mandate: (A) Collection of the data described in subdivision (e), hereinafter referred to as data elements, within the timeframes described in this section from all state and local prosecutor offices that prosecute misdemeanors or felonies or both, including county district attorney offices, city attorney offices, and the Attorney General, hereinafter referred to as agencies. Collection of data elements includes providing cooperation and assistance to participating agencies and developing consistent and clear guidelines for how agencies are to define data elements transmitted to the department. The department shall develop consistent definitions and formats for data elements to ensure success of comparing metrics created using said data elements between jurisdictions.(B) Transmission of data elements, defined as the method designated by the department for the participating agency to provide collected data elements to the department.(C) Aggregation of data elements, defined as collecting data elements gathered from multiple agencies in such a way that they can support metrics, defined as the combination of data elements used to track outcomes on any given process or decision point, developed by the department, that may be compared between jurisdictions.(D) Development of metrics, defined as using industry-appropriate methods and technology and cooperation with participating agencies to create accurate, actionable, and digestible metrics using data elements submitted by the agencies. The methods implemented must ensure that the metrics developed can be compared between jurisdictions.(E) Consistent with subdivision (g), publication of metrics, defined as using appropriate technology, methods, and interface design to make metrics available to the public, which may include the use of web publishing, the use of interactive portals or other applications to not only display metrics, but to allow metrics to be compared and filtered so that each metric may be analyzed and dissected by multiple factors, including other metrics and filters including, but not limited to, defendant, victim, and case characteristics. This publication shall be made using a modern, open, and electronic format, such as comma-separated values (CSV) or similar file format, that will allow the user to download the data sets and conduct their own analyses. The public interface for metrics shall also make raw, case-level data available for download so that independent analyses can be conducted using the data. The department shall also ensure that personal identifying information is not published except as allowed by law, and the use of anonymized data may be employed for this purpose.(F) By October 1, 2023, the department shall establish the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board for the purpose of ensuring transparency, accountability, and equitable access to prosecutorial data. The primary responsibilities of the board shall be providing guidance to the department on any and all draft rules, regulations, policies, plans, reports, or other decisions made by the department in regard to this Act. The board shall include the following members: (i) The Attorney General, or their designee.(ii) The president of the California Public Defenders Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California Public Defenders Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(iii) The president of the California District Attorneys Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California District Attorneys Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(iv) An advisory committee member of the Prosecutors Alliance of California, or their designee, who shall consult with other advisory committee members and members of the Prosecutors Alliance of California to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(v) The chairperson of the Committee on Revision of the Penal Code, or their designee.(vi) A university professor who specializes in criminal justice data.(vii) A data scientist who specializes in criminal justice data.(viii) Two representatives of human or civil rights tax-exempt organizations who specialize in civil or human rights.(ix) Two representatives of community organizations who specialize in civil or human rights and criminal justice.(x) Two representatives of tax-exempt organizations who specialize in criminal justice data.(xi) Two individuals who have direct experience being prosecuted in the states criminal legal system.(xii) Two individuals who have direct experience being a victim of a crime or the spouse, parents, children, siblings, or guardian of a crime victim, if the victim is deceased, a minor, or physically or psychologically incapacitated.(xiii) Two representatives of organizations that provide services to crime victims.(G) (i) By July 1, 2024, the department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop a data dictionary that includes standardized definitions for each data element in subdivision (e) so that data elements transmitted to the department are uniform across all jurisdictions, taking into account any technical and practical limitations on the collection of that data element. (ii) Upon completion of the data dictionary, the department shall share the data dictionary with all agencies statewide.(2) The department shall assess and develop its capabilities in carrying out its functions using the following guidelines. The department shall do all of the following in carrying out its objectives and mandate:(A) Use standardized practices in developing web pages, using what is commonly referred to as open web standards or standard best practices such as those recommendations published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) or those published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).(B) Employ appropriate security measures and best practices for data elements transmitted and stored to account for personal identifying information and other sensitive information as governed by state and federal law. These processes shall include the remote backing-up of all data, including data elements and metrics, as well as the logging and detection of data-related events.(C) Use technology that is scalable so as to accommodate large increases in volume of data.(D) Staff personnel familiar with web user-interface coding and web service coding.(E) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data available, including raw data elements and metrics, in a machine readable format with open format, nonproprietary file formats that will allow for download of complete data sets.(F) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data, including data elements and metrics, available in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require using modern web Application Programming Interfaces that allow access to data directly through programs in addition to internet website publishing.(G) Assess and create processes to collect, aggregate, and validate data elements transmitted by an agency, to include methods to identify duplicate, overlapping, or missing data and processes for the rejection and retransmission of invalid data.(H) Test data quality to facilitate the dissemination of accurate, valid, reliable, and complete criminal justice data.(I) Develop methods for archiving data, retrieving archived data, and data editing.(c) (1) The operation of this article is contingent upon an adequate appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute for purposes of this article.(2) Any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall be used only for the purpose of administering this article.(3) The recipient of any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall provide a full public accounting of all of those funds.(d) (1) Beginning March 1, 2027, every agency statewide shall collect every data element in subdivision (e) for cases in which a decision to reject charges or to initiate criminal proceedings by way of complaint or indictment has been made by that agency from that date forward. Each data element shall be collected according to the definitions provided in this section with any ambiguities to be resolved by the department in the data dictionary described in clause (i) of subparagraph (I) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) for uniform application statewide. Each data element shall be submitted in a format designated by the department to be the most appropriate and cost effective to carry out the objectives of this article. Any ambiguities regarding the substance or timing of the collection described in this paragraph shall be resolved by the department by letter guidelines issued to all prosecution agencies upon consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board.(2) Beginning June 1, 2027, every agency statewide, at the direction of the department, shall begin transmitting its required data elements to the department. The transmission shall occur on a quarterly basis until June 1, 2028, after which data elements shall be transmitted on a monthly basis. The department may require any agency to transmit data to the department before the deadlines stated in this paragraph for quality control purposes, including to ensure data consistency, compliance with standardized formats as determined by the department, and to ensure the agencies are ready to fully comply with this section as required for their deadlines.(3) Beginning June 1, 2027, the department shall begin collecting data elements from all agencies statewide according to the timetable in paragraph (2). The department shall aggregate data elements for all agencies in order to publish this data from those agencies by June 1, 2028. This publication shall continue on a quarterly basis for one year, and then the publication shall occur on a monthly basis thereafter.(4) It shall be an express exception to any sealing of a case or expungement of a case, whether by court order or by operation of law, or any rule of confidentiality or rule otherwise prohibiting disclosure provided by law that all data, pursuant to this section, shall be provided by the agencies to the department.(e) Agencies shall collect and transmit to the department the following data elements in accordance with this section and under direction from the department. The department shall have discretion to resolve ambiguities in this subdivision consistent with the purposes of this section, including the development of uniform definitions for the required data elements. The department shall also have discretion to determine the form and format in which data elements shall be captured and transmitted.Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), for each case, the following data elements shall be gathered and published as described in this section. For purposes of this article, a case is defined as a collection of charges filed by an agency on a particular date to initiate a criminal prosecution for a felony or a misdemeanor. A case dismissed and later refiled shall only be counted as one case. The collection of charges filed by an agency against multiple defendants in a single charging document shall each be an individual case for each such defendant.(1) The court case number used by the court to identify a case. The court case number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency.(2) The Internal Case Number (ICN) assigned to each case by the Case Management System (CMS). This number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency. If the agency does not currently use an ICN, the agency shall create and apply an ICN as directed by the department.(3) Whether the case is pending, has concluded, is on appeal, or is inactive, such as when a defendant is in warrant status.(4) The ZIP Code where most of the acts comprising the crimes charged occurred.(5) The date of the crime. If multiple crime dates are alleged, the date of the crime shall be the earliest date alleged in the charging document. (6) The name and Originating Agency Identifier (ORI), as designated by the National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System, of the law enforcement agency that investigated the case for submission to the prosecutor.(7) The ZIP Code of the arrest.(8) The date of the arrest.(9) Each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation, referred by law enforcement, including a uniform description, statute number, and level, either felony or misdemeanor.(10) The date on which charges were filed, the case was discharged, or the case was returned for further investigation.(11) Each charge, enhancement, and special circumstance or special allegation filed by the agency in the initial charging document.(12) For each case declined to prosecute, each charge that the agency declined to prosecute.(13) The county in which the case was filed.(14) The date on which the defendant initially entered a plea to the charges.(15) The date on which the defendant first appeared in a case, whether or not an arraignment took place.(16) The date on which bail or bond was set by the court in open court and the amount of bail set.(17) The agency pretrial release recommendation for each case, as stated in open court, as described in standardized terms developed by the department.(18) The prosecution bail recommendation for each case stated in open court according to standardized terms developed by the department.(19) The court pretrial detention determination at arraignment as described in standardized terms developed by the department.(20) Whether the defendant posted bail.(21) The date of any release from custody, the reason for release, and the terms of that release. The department shall develop standardized terms for this data element.(22) The start and end date for every period of pretrial detention for a defendant in a case and the reason for that detention as described in standardized terms provided by the department.(23) The date of any amendments adding charges or enhancements to a charging document, including a complaint, indictment, or information.(24) The charges, enhancements, special circumstances, or special allegations added to a charging document by amendment.(25) The date on which the first plea bargain offer was made by the agency to each defendant. For purposes of this section, plea bargain offer is defined as the terms of resolution of a case made by the agency that are ultimately transmitted to the defendant by their counsel for consideration, which is commonly called a bona fide offer or, if the defendant is in propria persona, the first offer to resolve a case transmitted to the defendant on any given date.(26) The terms of the initial plea bargain offer communicated to the defendant or the defendants counsel. The department shall develop a standardized method to capture the terms of the initial plea bargain offer according to uniform definitions.(27) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for diversion. For purposes of this section, diversion is defined as a program, either as created and defined by state law or an agency, by which charges are reduced or dismissed as part of participation in alternatives to prosecution such as counseling, therapy, restorative justice principles, or periods of noncriminality.(28) Whether the defendant was offered a diversion program by the agency.(29) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for diversion as allowed by law, if such a motion was made.(30) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a diversion program.(31) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for diversion, if that request was made in open court, and the reason for the opposition, if given in open court, using standardized terms, including the following:(A) Public safety.(B) Criminal history.(C) Failure of the defendant to consent.(D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior diversion program terms.(E) Statutory ineligibility.(F) Discretion.(G) Other.(32) The type of diversion according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following: (A) Mental health diversion pursuant to Section 1001.36.(B) Veteran diversion pursuant to Section 1001.80.(C) Misdemeanor diversion pursuant to Section 1001.95.(D) Drug diversion pursuant to Section 1000.(E) Other diversion.(33) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for collaborative court. For purposes of this section, collaborative court is a program wherein the prosecution of the case is stayed in order to engage in any collaborative process, such as by the agency, the public defender, and the court, to address underlying issues such as chemical dependency or mental health issues.(34) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for collaborative court, if such a motion was made.(35) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a collaborative court program.(36) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for collaborative court, if that request was made in open court, and the reason, if given in open court, for the opposition, using standardized terms, including the following:(A) Public safety.(B) Criminal history.(C) Failure of the defendant to consent.(D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior collaborative court program terms.(E) Statutory ineligibility.(F) Discretion.(G) Other.(37) The type of collaborative court according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following:(A) Mental health collaborative court.(B) Veteran collaborative court.(C) Drug or DUI collaborative court.(D) Community or homeless collaborative court.(E) Other collaborative court.(38) The date on which a charge was resolved, whether by dismissal, acquittal, conviction, or other grounds.(39) The disposition of each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation. Specifically, whether the charge or enhancement was resolved by dismissal, acquittal or not true finding, or conviction. If conviction, whether the conviction was by plea or by trial.(40) For any special circumstance alleged in the charging document, whether the defendant was alleged to be the actual killer as defined by paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of Section 189.(41) The date a sentence was imposed by the court.(42) The sentence imposed by the court, including any restitution, fines, and period of incarceration imposed.(43) Whether or not the agency engaged in any postconviction resentencing, defined for purposes of this section as any resentencing where, after judgment and sentencing on a case, the agency revisited the sentence, including, but not limited to, proceedings under Section 1172.1, and the outcome of that resentencing.(44) Whether or not the agency engaged in any parole proceedings, the formal recommendation of the agency during that proceeding, and the outcome of that proceeding.(45) Whether or not the agency engaged in any commutation or pardon proceedings, the official recommendation of the agency for those proceedings, and the outcome of those proceedings.(46) Whether a motion was made by a party under Section 231.7 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the party making the motion, and the result of that motion.(47) Whether a criminal informant was used and whether that informant was used in a custodial or noncustodial setting. This paragraph shall apply only if the existence and nature of the informant was disclosed as part of the public proceedings of the case.(48) Whether competency proceedings were initiated under Section 1368, 1368.1, or 1369 and the result of those proceedings.(49) Whether the last attorney of record at the conclusion of the case was private, publicly retained, or whether the defendant was in propria persona.(50) Whether the defendant pled not guilty by reason of insanity.(51) Whether conservatorship proceedings were instituted.(52) For each defendant charged in a case, all of the following:(A) Their name.(B) The Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned by the department.(C) The date of birth.(D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency. If the agency does not currently use an anonymized identifier created by CMS, the agency shall create and apply an anonymized identifier as directed by the department.(E) The defendants age at the time of the crime.(F) The defendants race as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.(G) The source of the information regarding the defendants race. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants race, including, but not limited to, defendants advocate or record of arrests and prosecution.(H) The defendants ethnicity as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.(I) The source of the information regarding the defendants ethnicity. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants ethnicity.(J) Whether the defendant or their counsel has identified in open court or in a filing with the court that the defendant has a physical disability or a disability as described in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.(K) The type of disability so identified, if any.(L) The defendants gender.(M) Whether the defendant has disclosed to the prosecution that they identify as transgender, nonbinary, or intersex.(N) The defendants county of residence, if reflected in the court record, including, if the defendant is unhoused, an approximation of the county of residence as determined from direction by the department.(O) Whether the defendant was on probation at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(P) Whether the defendant was on parole at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(Q) Whether or not the defendant was required to register as a sex offender under Sections 290 to 290.024, inclusive, at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(53) For each victim, all of the following:(A) Whether there was a victim identified.(B) The race.(C) The ethnicity.(D) The age at the time of the crime.(E) Gender identification.(F) Whether the victim made a request to the court to drop the charges or indicated to the court that they would not be willing to testify or that they would be willing to testify.(54) For each agency or division, if only select divisions perform criminal prosecution within an agency, all of the following data shall be reported by July 1 each year:(A) The number of full-time or full-time equivalent attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.(B) The number of part-time attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.(C) The number of investigators employed by the office as of the reporting date.(D) The number of personnel dedicated to providing victim services employed by the office as of the reporting date.(E) The average annual felony caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.(F) The average annual misdemeanor caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.(G) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of felony cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.(H) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of misdemeanor cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.(I) The number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit contacted, and number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit provided services to during the reporting period. For purposes of this section, services are defined as tangible resources or assistance with recovering tangible resources including, but not limited to, seeking reimbursement from the California Victim Compensation Board, residence relocation, or application for a U visa. Services do not include informing victims of court dates and relaying case information or offers to plea a case.(f) (1) All of the following data shall be collected by the department from the appropriate division within the department with respect to each defendant in the cases identified and reported by a prosecuting agency pursuant to subdivision (e):(A) The number of prior felony convictions and statutory charges comprising prior felony convictions.(B) The number of prior felony arrests.(C) The number of misdemeanor arrests and convictions and statutory charges comprising prior misdemeanor convictions.(D) Whether an appeal was filed following the disposition of the case, the basis for the appeal, whether the appeal was contested by the prosecuting agency, and the resolution of the appeal.(2) The division shall include the Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned to each defendant with the data provided in paragraph (1).(g) (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and (3) and notwithstanding any other law, the department shall publish the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f).(2) The following information shall not be published:(A) The defendants name.(B) The defendants date of birth.(C) The criminal identification and information/state identification number assigned to each defendant.(D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency.(E) The ICN assigned to each case by the agency CMS.(F) The court case number used by the court to identify a case.(G) Any other personally identifying information or information that could reasonably lead to reidentification of an individual charged with a crime or an individual who is the victim of a crime, as defined by the department in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board through regulations. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop protocols and regulations to protect personally identifying information and privacy while maximizing the data available to the public.(3) Dissemination of data under subparagraph (Q) of paragraph (52) of subdivision (e) shall comply with Sections 290.45, 290.46, and 290.021.(h) Notwithstanding paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), subdivision (g) of Section 11105, and subdivision (a) of Section 13305, every bona fide research institution concerned with the quality of the criminal legal system may be provided with the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f), including the information described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), as required for the performance of its duties, including the conduct of research. The material identifying individuals shall only be provided for research and statistical activities and shall not be transferred, revealed, or used for purposes other than research or statistical activities. Reports or publications derived from this information shall not identify specific individuals. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop regulations consistent with this subdivision. SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 of this act, which adds Section 13370 to the Penal Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:The provisions set forth in Section 1 further the need to protect the privacy of individuals arrested for and prosecuted for crimes while balancing the publics right to access.SEC. 3. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
1+Enrolled September 01, 2022 Passed IN Senate August 29, 2022 Passed IN Assembly August 30, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 25, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 30, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 21, 2022 Amended IN Assembly March 31, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2418Introduced by Assembly Member KalraFebruary 17, 2022An act to add Article 9 (commencing with Section 13370) to Chapter 2 of Title 3 of Part 4 of the Penal Code, relating to crimes. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2418, Kalra. Crimes: Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act.Existing law requires the Department of Justice to compile criminal offender record information, defined as the records and data compiled by criminal justice agencies, for purposes of identifying criminal offenders and of maintaining as to each offender a summary of certain information, including arrests, pretrial proceedings, sentencing, and release. Existing law requires a reporting agency to report specified information to the department concerning each arrest, including applicable identification and arrest data, as specified. Existing law requires the superior court that disposes of a case for which an arrest was made to report specified data to the department, including the disposition of the case and specified data elements.This bill would require state and local prosecution offices to collect and transmit data elements, as defined, for each criminal case to the department, including, but not limited to, data about basic case information of each case, including the case number and the date of the crime and arrest, data about the charges, including each charge, enhancement, and special circumstance filed, data about the initial appearance, custody, and bail, including the date of the initial appearance and bail set, whether defendant posted bail, and the date of release from custody, data about plea bargains, including the date and the terms, data about diversion and collaborative court programs, including whether the defendant was offered a diversion program, whether the defendant was eligible for a collaborative court program, and whether there was opposition by the prosecuting agency for either program, data about the case disposition and postconviction proceedings, and data about the victim and the defendant charged. The bill would also require the department to collect specified data, including the number of prior felony arrests and convictions of a defendant.The bill would require the department to be responsible for collecting data elements from agencies, as specified, and aggregating, as specified, these data elements by, including, but not limited to, developing consistent definitions and formats for data elements and providing consistent and clear guidelines to agencies transmitting data elements to the department.The bill would, beginning March 1, 2027, require every agency to collect data elements for cases in which a decision to reject charges or to initiate criminal proceedings by way of complaint or indictment has been made by that agency from that date forward. The bill would, beginning June 1, 2027, require every agency to begin transmitting data elements to the department with this transmission occurring on a quarterly basis until June 1, 2028, after which data elements are transmitted monthly. The bill would authorize the department to require any agency to transmit data before any deadline for specified reasons, including quality control purposes and compliance with standardized formats.The bill would require the department, by October 1, 2023, to establish the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board for the purpose of ensuring transparency, accountability, and equitable access to prosecutorial data. The bill would require specified individuals and representatives of specified organizations, or their designees, including the Attorney General, the president of the California Public Defenders Association, a university professor who specializes in criminal justice data, and 2 individuals who have direct experience being prosecuted in the criminal legal system, to serve on the board. The bill would require the board to provide guidance to the department on draft rules, regulations, policies, plans, reports, and other decisions made by the department. The bill would require the department, by July 1, 2024, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, to develop a data dictionary that includes standardized definitions for each data element.The bill would require the department, beginning June 1, 2027, to begin collecting data elements from all agencies statewide and to aggregate data from all agencies and publish this data by June 1, 2028, with the publication continuing on a quarterly basis for one year and then on a monthly basis thereafter.The bill would create an exception for the data provided by the agencies to the department to any sealing or expungement of a case, as specified, or any rule of confidentiality or otherwise prohibiting disclosure provided by law. The bill would make the operation of its provisions contingent upon an adequate appropriation by the Legislature, as specified.Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.By imposing additional duties on local agencies, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Article 9 (commencing with Section 13370) is added to Chapter 2 of Title 3 of Part 4 of the Penal Code, to read: Article 9. Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act13370. (a) (1) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a workable system of criminal justice data transparency whereby law enforcement prosecution agencies will gather complete, accurate, and timely data in a uniform format, and make that data available to the public in a modern, open, electronic format that is machine-readable and readily accessible through an application program interface. In order that meaningful discussions can occur regarding criminal justice and its most challenging issues, including those regarding criminal caseloads, plea bargaining, race, mass incarceration, equity, and homelessness, the Legislature finds that it is an important state interest to implement a data collection, aggregation, and publishing process for criminal prosecutions to promote criminal justice data transparency. This data would be comprised of publishable statistics and other data from statewide prosecution offices. This section shall be referred to as the Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act, the Act, or JDATA.(2) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a reliable and robust methodology that is consistent county-to-county so that statewide data and trends may be accurately tracked. Further, the legislation shall set low technological and resource barriers so that every affected office may meaningfully participate to the fullest intent of this article.(3) The expediency and accuracy of the data is best served by the Department of Justice as a single data aggregator and repository unit. The participation of the department as the final point of collection, aggregation, and publishing of this data is more efficient, will ensure the uniformity and accuracy of the data, and, by providing the technological resources and aggregation and publication of all data, will allow offices that lack adequate technology or resources to comply with the mandate. As used in this paragraph, technological resources means providing the basic systems and support necessary to receive the case data described in this article in standard formats from prosecution agencies statewide and aggregate that data using appropriate means developed by the department, and then publish the data in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require, for example, on an internet website.(b) (1) The department shall have the following objectives and mandate: (A) Collection of the data described in subdivision (e), hereinafter referred to as data elements, within the timeframes described in this section from all state and local prosecutor offices that prosecute misdemeanors or felonies or both, including county district attorney offices, city attorney offices, and the Attorney General, hereinafter referred to as agencies. Collection of data elements includes providing cooperation and assistance to participating agencies and developing consistent and clear guidelines for how agencies are to define data elements transmitted to the department. The department shall develop consistent definitions and formats for data elements to ensure success of comparing metrics created using said data elements between jurisdictions.(B) Transmission of data elements, defined as the method designated by the department for the participating agency to provide collected data elements to the department.(C) Aggregation of data elements, defined as collecting data elements gathered from multiple agencies in such a way that they can support metrics, defined as the combination of data elements used to track outcomes on any given process or decision point, developed by the department, that may be compared between jurisdictions.(D) Development of metrics, defined as using industry-appropriate methods and technology and cooperation with participating agencies to create accurate, actionable, and digestible metrics using data elements submitted by the agencies. The methods implemented must ensure that the metrics developed can be compared between jurisdictions.(E) Consistent with subdivision (g), publication of metrics, defined as using appropriate technology, methods, and interface design to make metrics available to the public, which may include the use of web publishing, the use of interactive portals or other applications to not only display metrics, but to allow metrics to be compared and filtered so that each metric may be analyzed and dissected by multiple factors, including other metrics and filters including, but not limited to, defendant, victim, and case characteristics. This publication shall be made using a modern, open, and electronic format, such as comma-separated values (CSV) or similar file format, that will allow the user to download the data sets and conduct their own analyses. The public interface for metrics shall also make raw, case-level data available for download so that independent analyses can be conducted using the data. The department shall also ensure that personal identifying information is not published except as allowed by law, and the use of anonymized data may be employed for this purpose.(F) By October 1, 2023, the department shall establish the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board for the purpose of ensuring transparency, accountability, and equitable access to prosecutorial data. The primary responsibilities of the board shall be providing guidance to the department on any and all draft rules, regulations, policies, plans, reports, or other decisions made by the department in regard to this Act. The board shall include the following members: (i) The Attorney General, or their designee.(ii) The president of the California Public Defenders Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California Public Defenders Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(iii) The president of the California District Attorneys Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California District Attorneys Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(iv) An advisory committee member of the Prosecutors Alliance of California, or their designee, who shall consult with other advisory committee members and members of the Prosecutors Alliance of California to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(v) The chairperson of the Committee on Revision of the Penal Code, or their designee.(vi) A university professor who specializes in criminal justice data.(vii) A data scientist who specializes in criminal justice data.(viii) Two representatives of human or civil rights tax-exempt organizations who specialize in civil or human rights.(ix) Two representatives of community organizations who specialize in civil or human rights and criminal justice.(x) Two representatives of tax-exempt organizations who specialize in criminal justice data.(xi) Two individuals who have direct experience being prosecuted in the states criminal legal system.(xii) Two individuals who have direct experience being a victim of a crime or the spouse, parents, children, siblings, or guardian of a crime victim, if the victim is deceased, a minor, or physically or psychologically incapacitated.(xiii) Two representatives of organizations that provide services to crime victims.(G) (i) By July 1, 2024, the department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop a data dictionary that includes standardized definitions for each data element in subdivision (e) so that data elements transmitted to the department are uniform across all jurisdictions, taking into account any technical and practical limitations on the collection of that data element. (ii) Upon completion of the data dictionary, the department shall share the data dictionary with all agencies statewide.(2) The department shall assess and develop its capabilities in carrying out its functions using the following guidelines. The department shall do all of the following in carrying out its objectives and mandate:(A) Use standardized practices in developing web pages, using what is commonly referred to as open web standards or standard best practices such as those recommendations published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) or those published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).(B) Employ appropriate security measures and best practices for data elements transmitted and stored to account for personal identifying information and other sensitive information as governed by state and federal law. These processes shall include the remote backing-up of all data, including data elements and metrics, as well as the logging and detection of data-related events.(C) Use technology that is scalable so as to accommodate large increases in volume of data.(D) Staff personnel familiar with web user-interface coding and web service coding.(E) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data available, including raw data elements and metrics, in a machine readable format with open format, nonproprietary file formats that will allow for download of complete data sets.(F) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data, including data elements and metrics, available in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require using modern web Application Programming Interfaces that allow access to data directly through programs in addition to internet website publishing.(G) Assess and create processes to collect, aggregate, and validate data elements transmitted by an agency, to include methods to identify duplicate, overlapping, or missing data and processes for the rejection and retransmission of invalid data.(H) Test data quality to facilitate the dissemination of accurate, valid, reliable, and complete criminal justice data.(I) Develop methods for archiving data, retrieving archived data, and data editing.(c) (1) The operation of this article is contingent upon an adequate appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute for purposes of this article.(2) Any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall be used only for the purpose of administering this article.(3) The recipient of any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall provide a full public accounting of all of those funds.(d) (1) Beginning March 1, 2027, every agency statewide shall collect every data element in subdivision (e) for cases in which a decision to reject charges or to initiate criminal proceedings by way of complaint or indictment has been made by that agency from that date forward. Each data element shall be collected according to the definitions provided in this section with any ambiguities to be resolved by the department in the data dictionary described in clause (i) of subparagraph (I) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) for uniform application statewide. Each data element shall be submitted in a format designated by the department to be the most appropriate and cost effective to carry out the objectives of this article. Any ambiguities regarding the substance or timing of the collection described in this paragraph shall be resolved by the department by letter guidelines issued to all prosecution agencies upon consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board.(2) Beginning June 1, 2027, every agency statewide, at the direction of the department, shall begin transmitting its required data elements to the department. The transmission shall occur on a quarterly basis until June 1, 2028, after which data elements shall be transmitted on a monthly basis. The department may require any agency to transmit data to the department before the deadlines stated in this paragraph for quality control purposes, including to ensure data consistency, compliance with standardized formats as determined by the department, and to ensure the agencies are ready to fully comply with this section as required for their deadlines.(3) Beginning June 1, 2027, the department shall begin collecting data elements from all agencies statewide according to the timetable in paragraph (2). The department shall aggregate data elements for all agencies in order to publish this data from those agencies by June 1, 2028. This publication shall continue on a quarterly basis for one year, and then the publication shall occur on a monthly basis thereafter.(4) It shall be an express exception to any sealing of a case or expungement of a case, whether by court order or by operation of law, or any rule of confidentiality or rule otherwise prohibiting disclosure provided by law that all data, pursuant to this section, shall be provided by the agencies to the department.(e) Agencies shall collect and transmit to the department the following data elements in accordance with this section and under direction from the department. The department shall have discretion to resolve ambiguities in this subdivision consistent with the purposes of this section, including the development of uniform definitions for the required data elements. The department shall also have discretion to determine the form and format in which data elements shall be captured and transmitted.Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), for each case, the following data elements shall be gathered and published as described in this section. For purposes of this article, a case is defined as a collection of charges filed by an agency on a particular date to initiate a criminal prosecution for a felony or a misdemeanor. A case dismissed and later refiled shall only be counted as one case. The collection of charges filed by an agency against multiple defendants in a single charging document shall each be an individual case for each such defendant.(1) The court case number used by the court to identify a case. The court case number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency.(2) The Internal Case Number (ICN) assigned to each case by the Case Management System (CMS). This number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency. If the agency does not currently use an ICN, the agency shall create and apply an ICN as directed by the department.(3) Whether the case is pending, has concluded, is on appeal, or is inactive, such as when a defendant is in warrant status.(4) The ZIP Code where most of the acts comprising the crimes charged occurred.(5) The date of the crime. If multiple crime dates are alleged, the date of the crime shall be the earliest date alleged in the charging document. (6) The name and Originating Agency Identifier (ORI), as designated by the National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System, of the law enforcement agency that investigated the case for submission to the prosecutor.(7) The ZIP Code of the arrest.(8) The date of the arrest.(9) Each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation, referred by law enforcement, including a uniform description, statute number, and level, either felony or misdemeanor.(10) The date on which charges were filed, the case was discharged, or the case was returned for further investigation.(11) Each charge, enhancement, and special circumstance or special allegation filed by the agency in the initial charging document.(12) For each case declined to prosecute, each charge that the agency declined to prosecute.(13) The county in which the case was filed.(14) The date on which the defendant initially entered a plea to the charges.(15) The date on which the defendant first appeared in a case, whether or not an arraignment took place.(16) The date on which bail or bond was set by the court in open court and the amount of bail set.(17) The agency pretrial release recommendation for each case, as stated in open court, as described in standardized terms developed by the department.(18) The prosecution bail recommendation for each case stated in open court according to standardized terms developed by the department.(19) The court pretrial detention determination at arraignment as described in standardized terms developed by the department.(20) Whether the defendant posted bail.(21) The date of any release from custody, the reason for release, and the terms of that release. The department shall develop standardized terms for this data element.(22) The start and end date for every period of pretrial detention for a defendant in a case and the reason for that detention as described in standardized terms provided by the department.(23) The date of any amendments adding charges or enhancements to a charging document, including a complaint, indictment, or information.(24) The charges, enhancements, special circumstances, or special allegations added to a charging document by amendment.(25) The date on which the first plea bargain offer was made by the agency to each defendant. For purposes of this section, plea bargain offer is defined as the terms of resolution of a case made by the agency that are ultimately transmitted to the defendant by their counsel for consideration, which is commonly called a bona fide offer or, if the defendant is in propria persona, the first offer to resolve a case transmitted to the defendant on any given date.(26) The terms of the initial plea bargain offer communicated to the defendant or the defendants counsel. The department shall develop a standardized method to capture the terms of the initial plea bargain offer according to uniform definitions.(27) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for diversion. For purposes of this section, diversion is defined as a program, either as created and defined by state law or an agency, by which charges are reduced or dismissed as part of participation in alternatives to prosecution such as counseling, therapy, restorative justice principles, or periods of noncriminality.(28) Whether the defendant was offered a diversion program by the agency.(29) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for diversion as allowed by law, if such a motion was made.(30) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a diversion program.(31) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for diversion, if that request was made in open court, and the reason for the opposition, if given in open court, using standardized terms, including the following:(A) Public safety.(B) Criminal history.(C) Failure of the defendant to consent.(D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior diversion program terms.(E) Statutory ineligibility.(F) Discretion.(G) Other.(32) The type of diversion according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following: (A) Mental health diversion pursuant to Section 1001.36.(B) Veteran diversion pursuant to Section 1001.80.(C) Misdemeanor diversion pursuant to Section 1001.95.(D) Drug diversion pursuant to Section 1000.(E) Other diversion.(33) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for collaborative court. For purposes of this section, collaborative court is a program wherein the prosecution of the case is stayed in order to engage in any collaborative process, such as by the agency, the public defender, and the court, to address underlying issues such as chemical dependency or mental health issues.(34) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for collaborative court, if such a motion was made.(35) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a collaborative court program.(36) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for collaborative court, if that request was made in open court, and the reason, if given in open court, for the opposition, using standardized terms, including the following:(A) Public safety.(B) Criminal history.(C) Failure of the defendant to consent.(D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior collaborative court program terms.(E) Statutory ineligibility.(F) Discretion.(G) Other.(37) The type of collaborative court according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following:(A) Mental health collaborative court.(B) Veteran collaborative court.(C) Drug or DUI collaborative court.(D) Community or homeless collaborative court.(E) Other collaborative court.(38) The date on which a charge was resolved, whether by dismissal, acquittal, conviction, or other grounds.(39) The disposition of each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation. Specifically, whether the charge or enhancement was resolved by dismissal, acquittal or not true finding, or conviction. If conviction, whether the conviction was by plea or by trial.(40) For any special circumstance alleged in the charging document, whether the defendant was alleged to be the actual killer as defined by paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of Section 189.(41) The date a sentence was imposed by the court.(42) The sentence imposed by the court, including any restitution, fines, and period of incarceration imposed.(43) Whether or not the agency engaged in any postconviction resentencing, defined for purposes of this section as any resentencing where, after judgment and sentencing on a case, the agency revisited the sentence, including, but not limited to, proceedings under Section 1172.1, and the outcome of that resentencing.(44) Whether or not the agency engaged in any parole proceedings, the formal recommendation of the agency during that proceeding, and the outcome of that proceeding.(45) Whether or not the agency engaged in any commutation or pardon proceedings, the official recommendation of the agency for those proceedings, and the outcome of those proceedings.(46) Whether a motion was made by a party under Section 231.7 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the party making the motion, and the result of that motion.(47) Whether a criminal informant was used and whether that informant was used in a custodial or noncustodial setting. This paragraph shall apply only if the existence and nature of the informant was disclosed as part of the public proceedings of the case.(48) Whether competency proceedings were initiated under Section 1368, 1368.1, or 1369 and the result of those proceedings.(49) Whether the last attorney of record at the conclusion of the case was private, publicly retained, or whether the defendant was in propria persona.(50) Whether the defendant pled not guilty by reason of insanity.(51) Whether conservatorship proceedings were instituted.(52) For each defendant charged in a case, all of the following:(A) Their name.(B) The Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned by the department.(C) The date of birth.(D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency. If the agency does not currently use an anonymized identifier created by CMS, the agency shall create and apply an anonymized identifier as directed by the department.(E) The defendants age at the time of the crime.(F) The defendants race as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.(G) The source of the information regarding the defendants race. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants race, including, but not limited to, defendants advocate or record of arrests and prosecution.(H) The defendants ethnicity as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.(I) The source of the information regarding the defendants ethnicity. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants ethnicity.(J) Whether the defendant or their counsel has identified in open court or in a filing with the court that the defendant has a physical disability or a disability as described in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.(K) The type of disability so identified, if any.(L) The defendants gender.(M) Whether the defendant has disclosed to the prosecution that they identify as transgender, nonbinary, or intersex.(N) The defendants county of residence, if reflected in the court record, including, if the defendant is unhoused, an approximation of the county of residence as determined from direction by the department.(O) Whether the defendant was on probation at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(P) Whether the defendant was on parole at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(Q) Whether or not the defendant was required to register as a sex offender under Sections 290 to 290.024, inclusive, at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(53) For each victim, all of the following:(A) Whether there was a victim identified.(B) The race.(C) The ethnicity.(D) The age at the time of the crime.(E) Gender identification.(F) Whether the victim made a request to the court to drop the charges or indicated to the court that they would not be willing to testify or that they would be willing to testify.(54) For each agency or division, if only select divisions perform criminal prosecution within an agency, all of the following data shall be reported by July 1 each year:(A) The number of full-time or full-time equivalent attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.(B) The number of part-time attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.(C) The number of investigators employed by the office as of the reporting date.(D) The number of personnel dedicated to providing victim services employed by the office as of the reporting date.(E) The average annual felony caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.(F) The average annual misdemeanor caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.(G) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of felony cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.(H) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of misdemeanor cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.(I) The number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit contacted, and number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit provided services to during the reporting period. For purposes of this section, services are defined as tangible resources or assistance with recovering tangible resources including, but not limited to, seeking reimbursement from the California Victim Compensation Board, residence relocation, or application for a U visa. Services do not include informing victims of court dates and relaying case information or offers to plea a case.(f) (1) All of the following data shall be collected by the department from the appropriate division within the department with respect to each defendant in the cases identified and reported by a prosecuting agency pursuant to subdivision (e):(A) The number of prior felony convictions and statutory charges comprising prior felony convictions.(B) The number of prior felony arrests.(C) The number of misdemeanor arrests and convictions and statutory charges comprising prior misdemeanor convictions.(D) Whether an appeal was filed following the disposition of the case, the basis for the appeal, whether the appeal was contested by the prosecuting agency, and the resolution of the appeal.(2) The division shall include the Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned to each defendant with the data provided in paragraph (1).(g) (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and (3) and notwithstanding any other law, the department shall publish the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f).(2) The following information shall not be published:(A) The defendants name.(B) The defendants date of birth.(C) The criminal identification and information/state identification number assigned to each defendant.(D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency.(E) The ICN assigned to each case by the agency CMS.(F) The court case number used by the court to identify a case.(G) Any other personally identifying information or information that could reasonably lead to reidentification of an individual charged with a crime or an individual who is the victim of a crime, as defined by the department in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board through regulations. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop protocols and regulations to protect personally identifying information and privacy while maximizing the data available to the public.(3) Dissemination of data under subparagraph (Q) of paragraph (52) of subdivision (e) shall comply with Sections 290.45, 290.46, and 290.021.(h) Notwithstanding paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), subdivision (g) of Section 11105, and subdivision (a) of Section 13305, every bona fide research institution concerned with the quality of the criminal legal system may be provided with the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f), including the information described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), as required for the performance of its duties, including the conduct of research. The material identifying individuals shall only be provided for research and statistical activities and shall not be transferred, revealed, or used for purposes other than research or statistical activities. Reports or publications derived from this information shall not identify specific individuals. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop regulations consistent with this subdivision. SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 of this act, which adds Section 13370 to the Penal Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:The provisions set forth in Section 1 further the need to protect the privacy of individuals arrested for and prosecuted for crimes while balancing the publics right to access.SEC. 3. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
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3- Assembly Bill No. 2418 CHAPTER 787An act to add Article 9 (commencing with Section 13370) to Chapter 2 of Title 3 of Part 4 of the Penal Code, relating to crimes. [ Approved by Governor September 29, 2022. Filed with Secretary of State September 29, 2022. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2418, Kalra. Crimes: Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act.Existing law requires the Department of Justice to compile criminal offender record information, defined as the records and data compiled by criminal justice agencies, for purposes of identifying criminal offenders and of maintaining as to each offender a summary of certain information, including arrests, pretrial proceedings, sentencing, and release. Existing law requires a reporting agency to report specified information to the department concerning each arrest, including applicable identification and arrest data, as specified. Existing law requires the superior court that disposes of a case for which an arrest was made to report specified data to the department, including the disposition of the case and specified data elements.This bill would require state and local prosecution offices to collect and transmit data elements, as defined, for each criminal case to the department, including, but not limited to, data about basic case information of each case, including the case number and the date of the crime and arrest, data about the charges, including each charge, enhancement, and special circumstance filed, data about the initial appearance, custody, and bail, including the date of the initial appearance and bail set, whether defendant posted bail, and the date of release from custody, data about plea bargains, including the date and the terms, data about diversion and collaborative court programs, including whether the defendant was offered a diversion program, whether the defendant was eligible for a collaborative court program, and whether there was opposition by the prosecuting agency for either program, data about the case disposition and postconviction proceedings, and data about the victim and the defendant charged. The bill would also require the department to collect specified data, including the number of prior felony arrests and convictions of a defendant.The bill would require the department to be responsible for collecting data elements from agencies, as specified, and aggregating, as specified, these data elements by, including, but not limited to, developing consistent definitions and formats for data elements and providing consistent and clear guidelines to agencies transmitting data elements to the department.The bill would, beginning March 1, 2027, require every agency to collect data elements for cases in which a decision to reject charges or to initiate criminal proceedings by way of complaint or indictment has been made by that agency from that date forward. The bill would, beginning June 1, 2027, require every agency to begin transmitting data elements to the department with this transmission occurring on a quarterly basis until June 1, 2028, after which data elements are transmitted monthly. The bill would authorize the department to require any agency to transmit data before any deadline for specified reasons, including quality control purposes and compliance with standardized formats.The bill would require the department, by October 1, 2023, to establish the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board for the purpose of ensuring transparency, accountability, and equitable access to prosecutorial data. The bill would require specified individuals and representatives of specified organizations, or their designees, including the Attorney General, the president of the California Public Defenders Association, a university professor who specializes in criminal justice data, and 2 individuals who have direct experience being prosecuted in the criminal legal system, to serve on the board. The bill would require the board to provide guidance to the department on draft rules, regulations, policies, plans, reports, and other decisions made by the department. The bill would require the department, by July 1, 2024, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, to develop a data dictionary that includes standardized definitions for each data element.The bill would require the department, beginning June 1, 2027, to begin collecting data elements from all agencies statewide and to aggregate data from all agencies and publish this data by June 1, 2028, with the publication continuing on a quarterly basis for one year and then on a monthly basis thereafter.The bill would create an exception for the data provided by the agencies to the department to any sealing or expungement of a case, as specified, or any rule of confidentiality or otherwise prohibiting disclosure provided by law. The bill would make the operation of its provisions contingent upon an adequate appropriation by the Legislature, as specified.Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.By imposing additional duties on local agencies, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
3+ Enrolled September 01, 2022 Passed IN Senate August 29, 2022 Passed IN Assembly August 30, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 25, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 30, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 21, 2022 Amended IN Assembly March 31, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2418Introduced by Assembly Member KalraFebruary 17, 2022An act to add Article 9 (commencing with Section 13370) to Chapter 2 of Title 3 of Part 4 of the Penal Code, relating to crimes. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2418, Kalra. Crimes: Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act.Existing law requires the Department of Justice to compile criminal offender record information, defined as the records and data compiled by criminal justice agencies, for purposes of identifying criminal offenders and of maintaining as to each offender a summary of certain information, including arrests, pretrial proceedings, sentencing, and release. Existing law requires a reporting agency to report specified information to the department concerning each arrest, including applicable identification and arrest data, as specified. Existing law requires the superior court that disposes of a case for which an arrest was made to report specified data to the department, including the disposition of the case and specified data elements.This bill would require state and local prosecution offices to collect and transmit data elements, as defined, for each criminal case to the department, including, but not limited to, data about basic case information of each case, including the case number and the date of the crime and arrest, data about the charges, including each charge, enhancement, and special circumstance filed, data about the initial appearance, custody, and bail, including the date of the initial appearance and bail set, whether defendant posted bail, and the date of release from custody, data about plea bargains, including the date and the terms, data about diversion and collaborative court programs, including whether the defendant was offered a diversion program, whether the defendant was eligible for a collaborative court program, and whether there was opposition by the prosecuting agency for either program, data about the case disposition and postconviction proceedings, and data about the victim and the defendant charged. The bill would also require the department to collect specified data, including the number of prior felony arrests and convictions of a defendant.The bill would require the department to be responsible for collecting data elements from agencies, as specified, and aggregating, as specified, these data elements by, including, but not limited to, developing consistent definitions and formats for data elements and providing consistent and clear guidelines to agencies transmitting data elements to the department.The bill would, beginning March 1, 2027, require every agency to collect data elements for cases in which a decision to reject charges or to initiate criminal proceedings by way of complaint or indictment has been made by that agency from that date forward. The bill would, beginning June 1, 2027, require every agency to begin transmitting data elements to the department with this transmission occurring on a quarterly basis until June 1, 2028, after which data elements are transmitted monthly. The bill would authorize the department to require any agency to transmit data before any deadline for specified reasons, including quality control purposes and compliance with standardized formats.The bill would require the department, by October 1, 2023, to establish the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board for the purpose of ensuring transparency, accountability, and equitable access to prosecutorial data. The bill would require specified individuals and representatives of specified organizations, or their designees, including the Attorney General, the president of the California Public Defenders Association, a university professor who specializes in criminal justice data, and 2 individuals who have direct experience being prosecuted in the criminal legal system, to serve on the board. The bill would require the board to provide guidance to the department on draft rules, regulations, policies, plans, reports, and other decisions made by the department. The bill would require the department, by July 1, 2024, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, to develop a data dictionary that includes standardized definitions for each data element.The bill would require the department, beginning June 1, 2027, to begin collecting data elements from all agencies statewide and to aggregate data from all agencies and publish this data by June 1, 2028, with the publication continuing on a quarterly basis for one year and then on a monthly basis thereafter.The bill would create an exception for the data provided by the agencies to the department to any sealing or expungement of a case, as specified, or any rule of confidentiality or otherwise prohibiting disclosure provided by law. The bill would make the operation of its provisions contingent upon an adequate appropriation by the Legislature, as specified.Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.By imposing additional duties on local agencies, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
44
5- Assembly Bill No. 2418 CHAPTER 787
5+ Enrolled September 01, 2022 Passed IN Senate August 29, 2022 Passed IN Assembly August 30, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 25, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 30, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 21, 2022 Amended IN Assembly March 31, 2022
66
7- Assembly Bill No. 2418
7+Enrolled September 01, 2022
8+Passed IN Senate August 29, 2022
9+Passed IN Assembly August 30, 2022
10+Amended IN Senate August 25, 2022
11+Amended IN Senate August 11, 2022
12+Amended IN Senate June 30, 2022
13+Amended IN Assembly April 21, 2022
14+Amended IN Assembly March 31, 2022
815
9- CHAPTER 787
16+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION
17+
18+ Assembly Bill
19+
20+No. 2418
21+
22+Introduced by Assembly Member KalraFebruary 17, 2022
23+
24+Introduced by Assembly Member Kalra
25+February 17, 2022
1026
1127 An act to add Article 9 (commencing with Section 13370) to Chapter 2 of Title 3 of Part 4 of the Penal Code, relating to crimes.
12-
13- [ Approved by Governor September 29, 2022. Filed with Secretary of State September 29, 2022. ]
1428
1529 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1630
1731 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1832
1933 AB 2418, Kalra. Crimes: Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act.
2034
2135 Existing law requires the Department of Justice to compile criminal offender record information, defined as the records and data compiled by criminal justice agencies, for purposes of identifying criminal offenders and of maintaining as to each offender a summary of certain information, including arrests, pretrial proceedings, sentencing, and release. Existing law requires a reporting agency to report specified information to the department concerning each arrest, including applicable identification and arrest data, as specified. Existing law requires the superior court that disposes of a case for which an arrest was made to report specified data to the department, including the disposition of the case and specified data elements.This bill would require state and local prosecution offices to collect and transmit data elements, as defined, for each criminal case to the department, including, but not limited to, data about basic case information of each case, including the case number and the date of the crime and arrest, data about the charges, including each charge, enhancement, and special circumstance filed, data about the initial appearance, custody, and bail, including the date of the initial appearance and bail set, whether defendant posted bail, and the date of release from custody, data about plea bargains, including the date and the terms, data about diversion and collaborative court programs, including whether the defendant was offered a diversion program, whether the defendant was eligible for a collaborative court program, and whether there was opposition by the prosecuting agency for either program, data about the case disposition and postconviction proceedings, and data about the victim and the defendant charged. The bill would also require the department to collect specified data, including the number of prior felony arrests and convictions of a defendant.The bill would require the department to be responsible for collecting data elements from agencies, as specified, and aggregating, as specified, these data elements by, including, but not limited to, developing consistent definitions and formats for data elements and providing consistent and clear guidelines to agencies transmitting data elements to the department.The bill would, beginning March 1, 2027, require every agency to collect data elements for cases in which a decision to reject charges or to initiate criminal proceedings by way of complaint or indictment has been made by that agency from that date forward. The bill would, beginning June 1, 2027, require every agency to begin transmitting data elements to the department with this transmission occurring on a quarterly basis until June 1, 2028, after which data elements are transmitted monthly. The bill would authorize the department to require any agency to transmit data before any deadline for specified reasons, including quality control purposes and compliance with standardized formats.The bill would require the department, by October 1, 2023, to establish the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board for the purpose of ensuring transparency, accountability, and equitable access to prosecutorial data. The bill would require specified individuals and representatives of specified organizations, or their designees, including the Attorney General, the president of the California Public Defenders Association, a university professor who specializes in criminal justice data, and 2 individuals who have direct experience being prosecuted in the criminal legal system, to serve on the board. The bill would require the board to provide guidance to the department on draft rules, regulations, policies, plans, reports, and other decisions made by the department. The bill would require the department, by July 1, 2024, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, to develop a data dictionary that includes standardized definitions for each data element.The bill would require the department, beginning June 1, 2027, to begin collecting data elements from all agencies statewide and to aggregate data from all agencies and publish this data by June 1, 2028, with the publication continuing on a quarterly basis for one year and then on a monthly basis thereafter.The bill would create an exception for the data provided by the agencies to the department to any sealing or expungement of a case, as specified, or any rule of confidentiality or otherwise prohibiting disclosure provided by law. The bill would make the operation of its provisions contingent upon an adequate appropriation by the Legislature, as specified.Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.By imposing additional duties on local agencies, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
2236
2337 Existing law requires the Department of Justice to compile criminal offender record information, defined as the records and data compiled by criminal justice agencies, for purposes of identifying criminal offenders and of maintaining as to each offender a summary of certain information, including arrests, pretrial proceedings, sentencing, and release. Existing law requires a reporting agency to report specified information to the department concerning each arrest, including applicable identification and arrest data, as specified. Existing law requires the superior court that disposes of a case for which an arrest was made to report specified data to the department, including the disposition of the case and specified data elements.
2438
2539 This bill would require state and local prosecution offices to collect and transmit data elements, as defined, for each criminal case to the department, including, but not limited to, data about basic case information of each case, including the case number and the date of the crime and arrest, data about the charges, including each charge, enhancement, and special circumstance filed, data about the initial appearance, custody, and bail, including the date of the initial appearance and bail set, whether defendant posted bail, and the date of release from custody, data about plea bargains, including the date and the terms, data about diversion and collaborative court programs, including whether the defendant was offered a diversion program, whether the defendant was eligible for a collaborative court program, and whether there was opposition by the prosecuting agency for either program, data about the case disposition and postconviction proceedings, and data about the victim and the defendant charged. The bill would also require the department to collect specified data, including the number of prior felony arrests and convictions of a defendant.
2640
2741 The bill would require the department to be responsible for collecting data elements from agencies, as specified, and aggregating, as specified, these data elements by, including, but not limited to, developing consistent definitions and formats for data elements and providing consistent and clear guidelines to agencies transmitting data elements to the department.
2842
2943 The bill would, beginning March 1, 2027, require every agency to collect data elements for cases in which a decision to reject charges or to initiate criminal proceedings by way of complaint or indictment has been made by that agency from that date forward. The bill would, beginning June 1, 2027, require every agency to begin transmitting data elements to the department with this transmission occurring on a quarterly basis until June 1, 2028, after which data elements are transmitted monthly. The bill would authorize the department to require any agency to transmit data before any deadline for specified reasons, including quality control purposes and compliance with standardized formats.
3044
3145 The bill would require the department, by October 1, 2023, to establish the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board for the purpose of ensuring transparency, accountability, and equitable access to prosecutorial data. The bill would require specified individuals and representatives of specified organizations, or their designees, including the Attorney General, the president of the California Public Defenders Association, a university professor who specializes in criminal justice data, and 2 individuals who have direct experience being prosecuted in the criminal legal system, to serve on the board. The bill would require the board to provide guidance to the department on draft rules, regulations, policies, plans, reports, and other decisions made by the department. The bill would require the department, by July 1, 2024, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, to develop a data dictionary that includes standardized definitions for each data element.
3246
3347 The bill would require the department, beginning June 1, 2027, to begin collecting data elements from all agencies statewide and to aggregate data from all agencies and publish this data by June 1, 2028, with the publication continuing on a quarterly basis for one year and then on a monthly basis thereafter.
3448
3549 The bill would create an exception for the data provided by the agencies to the department to any sealing or expungement of a case, as specified, or any rule of confidentiality or otherwise prohibiting disclosure provided by law.
3650
3751 The bill would make the operation of its provisions contingent upon an adequate appropriation by the Legislature, as specified.
3852
3953 Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.
4054
4155 This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.
4256
4357 By imposing additional duties on local agencies, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
4458
4559 The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
4660
4761 This bill would provide that, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to the statutory provisions noted above.
4862
4963 ## Digest Key
5064
5165 ## Bill Text
5266
5367 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Article 9 (commencing with Section 13370) is added to Chapter 2 of Title 3 of Part 4 of the Penal Code, to read: Article 9. Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act13370. (a) (1) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a workable system of criminal justice data transparency whereby law enforcement prosecution agencies will gather complete, accurate, and timely data in a uniform format, and make that data available to the public in a modern, open, electronic format that is machine-readable and readily accessible through an application program interface. In order that meaningful discussions can occur regarding criminal justice and its most challenging issues, including those regarding criminal caseloads, plea bargaining, race, mass incarceration, equity, and homelessness, the Legislature finds that it is an important state interest to implement a data collection, aggregation, and publishing process for criminal prosecutions to promote criminal justice data transparency. This data would be comprised of publishable statistics and other data from statewide prosecution offices. This section shall be referred to as the Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act, the Act, or JDATA.(2) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a reliable and robust methodology that is consistent county-to-county so that statewide data and trends may be accurately tracked. Further, the legislation shall set low technological and resource barriers so that every affected office may meaningfully participate to the fullest intent of this article.(3) The expediency and accuracy of the data is best served by the Department of Justice as a single data aggregator and repository unit. The participation of the department as the final point of collection, aggregation, and publishing of this data is more efficient, will ensure the uniformity and accuracy of the data, and, by providing the technological resources and aggregation and publication of all data, will allow offices that lack adequate technology or resources to comply with the mandate. As used in this paragraph, technological resources means providing the basic systems and support necessary to receive the case data described in this article in standard formats from prosecution agencies statewide and aggregate that data using appropriate means developed by the department, and then publish the data in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require, for example, on an internet website.(b) (1) The department shall have the following objectives and mandate: (A) Collection of the data described in subdivision (e), hereinafter referred to as data elements, within the timeframes described in this section from all state and local prosecutor offices that prosecute misdemeanors or felonies or both, including county district attorney offices, city attorney offices, and the Attorney General, hereinafter referred to as agencies. Collection of data elements includes providing cooperation and assistance to participating agencies and developing consistent and clear guidelines for how agencies are to define data elements transmitted to the department. The department shall develop consistent definitions and formats for data elements to ensure success of comparing metrics created using said data elements between jurisdictions.(B) Transmission of data elements, defined as the method designated by the department for the participating agency to provide collected data elements to the department.(C) Aggregation of data elements, defined as collecting data elements gathered from multiple agencies in such a way that they can support metrics, defined as the combination of data elements used to track outcomes on any given process or decision point, developed by the department, that may be compared between jurisdictions.(D) Development of metrics, defined as using industry-appropriate methods and technology and cooperation with participating agencies to create accurate, actionable, and digestible metrics using data elements submitted by the agencies. The methods implemented must ensure that the metrics developed can be compared between jurisdictions.(E) Consistent with subdivision (g), publication of metrics, defined as using appropriate technology, methods, and interface design to make metrics available to the public, which may include the use of web publishing, the use of interactive portals or other applications to not only display metrics, but to allow metrics to be compared and filtered so that each metric may be analyzed and dissected by multiple factors, including other metrics and filters including, but not limited to, defendant, victim, and case characteristics. This publication shall be made using a modern, open, and electronic format, such as comma-separated values (CSV) or similar file format, that will allow the user to download the data sets and conduct their own analyses. The public interface for metrics shall also make raw, case-level data available for download so that independent analyses can be conducted using the data. The department shall also ensure that personal identifying information is not published except as allowed by law, and the use of anonymized data may be employed for this purpose.(F) By October 1, 2023, the department shall establish the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board for the purpose of ensuring transparency, accountability, and equitable access to prosecutorial data. The primary responsibilities of the board shall be providing guidance to the department on any and all draft rules, regulations, policies, plans, reports, or other decisions made by the department in regard to this Act. The board shall include the following members: (i) The Attorney General, or their designee.(ii) The president of the California Public Defenders Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California Public Defenders Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(iii) The president of the California District Attorneys Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California District Attorneys Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(iv) An advisory committee member of the Prosecutors Alliance of California, or their designee, who shall consult with other advisory committee members and members of the Prosecutors Alliance of California to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(v) The chairperson of the Committee on Revision of the Penal Code, or their designee.(vi) A university professor who specializes in criminal justice data.(vii) A data scientist who specializes in criminal justice data.(viii) Two representatives of human or civil rights tax-exempt organizations who specialize in civil or human rights.(ix) Two representatives of community organizations who specialize in civil or human rights and criminal justice.(x) Two representatives of tax-exempt organizations who specialize in criminal justice data.(xi) Two individuals who have direct experience being prosecuted in the states criminal legal system.(xii) Two individuals who have direct experience being a victim of a crime or the spouse, parents, children, siblings, or guardian of a crime victim, if the victim is deceased, a minor, or physically or psychologically incapacitated.(xiii) Two representatives of organizations that provide services to crime victims.(G) (i) By July 1, 2024, the department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop a data dictionary that includes standardized definitions for each data element in subdivision (e) so that data elements transmitted to the department are uniform across all jurisdictions, taking into account any technical and practical limitations on the collection of that data element. (ii) Upon completion of the data dictionary, the department shall share the data dictionary with all agencies statewide.(2) The department shall assess and develop its capabilities in carrying out its functions using the following guidelines. The department shall do all of the following in carrying out its objectives and mandate:(A) Use standardized practices in developing web pages, using what is commonly referred to as open web standards or standard best practices such as those recommendations published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) or those published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).(B) Employ appropriate security measures and best practices for data elements transmitted and stored to account for personal identifying information and other sensitive information as governed by state and federal law. These processes shall include the remote backing-up of all data, including data elements and metrics, as well as the logging and detection of data-related events.(C) Use technology that is scalable so as to accommodate large increases in volume of data.(D) Staff personnel familiar with web user-interface coding and web service coding.(E) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data available, including raw data elements and metrics, in a machine readable format with open format, nonproprietary file formats that will allow for download of complete data sets.(F) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data, including data elements and metrics, available in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require using modern web Application Programming Interfaces that allow access to data directly through programs in addition to internet website publishing.(G) Assess and create processes to collect, aggregate, and validate data elements transmitted by an agency, to include methods to identify duplicate, overlapping, or missing data and processes for the rejection and retransmission of invalid data.(H) Test data quality to facilitate the dissemination of accurate, valid, reliable, and complete criminal justice data.(I) Develop methods for archiving data, retrieving archived data, and data editing.(c) (1) The operation of this article is contingent upon an adequate appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute for purposes of this article.(2) Any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall be used only for the purpose of administering this article.(3) The recipient of any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall provide a full public accounting of all of those funds.(d) (1) Beginning March 1, 2027, every agency statewide shall collect every data element in subdivision (e) for cases in which a decision to reject charges or to initiate criminal proceedings by way of complaint or indictment has been made by that agency from that date forward. Each data element shall be collected according to the definitions provided in this section with any ambiguities to be resolved by the department in the data dictionary described in clause (i) of subparagraph (I) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) for uniform application statewide. Each data element shall be submitted in a format designated by the department to be the most appropriate and cost effective to carry out the objectives of this article. Any ambiguities regarding the substance or timing of the collection described in this paragraph shall be resolved by the department by letter guidelines issued to all prosecution agencies upon consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board.(2) Beginning June 1, 2027, every agency statewide, at the direction of the department, shall begin transmitting its required data elements to the department. The transmission shall occur on a quarterly basis until June 1, 2028, after which data elements shall be transmitted on a monthly basis. The department may require any agency to transmit data to the department before the deadlines stated in this paragraph for quality control purposes, including to ensure data consistency, compliance with standardized formats as determined by the department, and to ensure the agencies are ready to fully comply with this section as required for their deadlines.(3) Beginning June 1, 2027, the department shall begin collecting data elements from all agencies statewide according to the timetable in paragraph (2). The department shall aggregate data elements for all agencies in order to publish this data from those agencies by June 1, 2028. This publication shall continue on a quarterly basis for one year, and then the publication shall occur on a monthly basis thereafter.(4) It shall be an express exception to any sealing of a case or expungement of a case, whether by court order or by operation of law, or any rule of confidentiality or rule otherwise prohibiting disclosure provided by law that all data, pursuant to this section, shall be provided by the agencies to the department.(e) Agencies shall collect and transmit to the department the following data elements in accordance with this section and under direction from the department. The department shall have discretion to resolve ambiguities in this subdivision consistent with the purposes of this section, including the development of uniform definitions for the required data elements. The department shall also have discretion to determine the form and format in which data elements shall be captured and transmitted.Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), for each case, the following data elements shall be gathered and published as described in this section. For purposes of this article, a case is defined as a collection of charges filed by an agency on a particular date to initiate a criminal prosecution for a felony or a misdemeanor. A case dismissed and later refiled shall only be counted as one case. The collection of charges filed by an agency against multiple defendants in a single charging document shall each be an individual case for each such defendant.(1) The court case number used by the court to identify a case. The court case number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency.(2) The Internal Case Number (ICN) assigned to each case by the Case Management System (CMS). This number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency. If the agency does not currently use an ICN, the agency shall create and apply an ICN as directed by the department.(3) Whether the case is pending, has concluded, is on appeal, or is inactive, such as when a defendant is in warrant status.(4) The ZIP Code where most of the acts comprising the crimes charged occurred.(5) The date of the crime. If multiple crime dates are alleged, the date of the crime shall be the earliest date alleged in the charging document. (6) The name and Originating Agency Identifier (ORI), as designated by the National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System, of the law enforcement agency that investigated the case for submission to the prosecutor.(7) The ZIP Code of the arrest.(8) The date of the arrest.(9) Each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation, referred by law enforcement, including a uniform description, statute number, and level, either felony or misdemeanor.(10) The date on which charges were filed, the case was discharged, or the case was returned for further investigation.(11) Each charge, enhancement, and special circumstance or special allegation filed by the agency in the initial charging document.(12) For each case declined to prosecute, each charge that the agency declined to prosecute.(13) The county in which the case was filed.(14) The date on which the defendant initially entered a plea to the charges.(15) The date on which the defendant first appeared in a case, whether or not an arraignment took place.(16) The date on which bail or bond was set by the court in open court and the amount of bail set.(17) The agency pretrial release recommendation for each case, as stated in open court, as described in standardized terms developed by the department.(18) The prosecution bail recommendation for each case stated in open court according to standardized terms developed by the department.(19) The court pretrial detention determination at arraignment as described in standardized terms developed by the department.(20) Whether the defendant posted bail.(21) The date of any release from custody, the reason for release, and the terms of that release. The department shall develop standardized terms for this data element.(22) The start and end date for every period of pretrial detention for a defendant in a case and the reason for that detention as described in standardized terms provided by the department.(23) The date of any amendments adding charges or enhancements to a charging document, including a complaint, indictment, or information.(24) The charges, enhancements, special circumstances, or special allegations added to a charging document by amendment.(25) The date on which the first plea bargain offer was made by the agency to each defendant. For purposes of this section, plea bargain offer is defined as the terms of resolution of a case made by the agency that are ultimately transmitted to the defendant by their counsel for consideration, which is commonly called a bona fide offer or, if the defendant is in propria persona, the first offer to resolve a case transmitted to the defendant on any given date.(26) The terms of the initial plea bargain offer communicated to the defendant or the defendants counsel. The department shall develop a standardized method to capture the terms of the initial plea bargain offer according to uniform definitions.(27) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for diversion. For purposes of this section, diversion is defined as a program, either as created and defined by state law or an agency, by which charges are reduced or dismissed as part of participation in alternatives to prosecution such as counseling, therapy, restorative justice principles, or periods of noncriminality.(28) Whether the defendant was offered a diversion program by the agency.(29) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for diversion as allowed by law, if such a motion was made.(30) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a diversion program.(31) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for diversion, if that request was made in open court, and the reason for the opposition, if given in open court, using standardized terms, including the following:(A) Public safety.(B) Criminal history.(C) Failure of the defendant to consent.(D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior diversion program terms.(E) Statutory ineligibility.(F) Discretion.(G) Other.(32) The type of diversion according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following: (A) Mental health diversion pursuant to Section 1001.36.(B) Veteran diversion pursuant to Section 1001.80.(C) Misdemeanor diversion pursuant to Section 1001.95.(D) Drug diversion pursuant to Section 1000.(E) Other diversion.(33) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for collaborative court. For purposes of this section, collaborative court is a program wherein the prosecution of the case is stayed in order to engage in any collaborative process, such as by the agency, the public defender, and the court, to address underlying issues such as chemical dependency or mental health issues.(34) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for collaborative court, if such a motion was made.(35) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a collaborative court program.(36) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for collaborative court, if that request was made in open court, and the reason, if given in open court, for the opposition, using standardized terms, including the following:(A) Public safety.(B) Criminal history.(C) Failure of the defendant to consent.(D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior collaborative court program terms.(E) Statutory ineligibility.(F) Discretion.(G) Other.(37) The type of collaborative court according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following:(A) Mental health collaborative court.(B) Veteran collaborative court.(C) Drug or DUI collaborative court.(D) Community or homeless collaborative court.(E) Other collaborative court.(38) The date on which a charge was resolved, whether by dismissal, acquittal, conviction, or other grounds.(39) The disposition of each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation. Specifically, whether the charge or enhancement was resolved by dismissal, acquittal or not true finding, or conviction. If conviction, whether the conviction was by plea or by trial.(40) For any special circumstance alleged in the charging document, whether the defendant was alleged to be the actual killer as defined by paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of Section 189.(41) The date a sentence was imposed by the court.(42) The sentence imposed by the court, including any restitution, fines, and period of incarceration imposed.(43) Whether or not the agency engaged in any postconviction resentencing, defined for purposes of this section as any resentencing where, after judgment and sentencing on a case, the agency revisited the sentence, including, but not limited to, proceedings under Section 1172.1, and the outcome of that resentencing.(44) Whether or not the agency engaged in any parole proceedings, the formal recommendation of the agency during that proceeding, and the outcome of that proceeding.(45) Whether or not the agency engaged in any commutation or pardon proceedings, the official recommendation of the agency for those proceedings, and the outcome of those proceedings.(46) Whether a motion was made by a party under Section 231.7 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the party making the motion, and the result of that motion.(47) Whether a criminal informant was used and whether that informant was used in a custodial or noncustodial setting. This paragraph shall apply only if the existence and nature of the informant was disclosed as part of the public proceedings of the case.(48) Whether competency proceedings were initiated under Section 1368, 1368.1, or 1369 and the result of those proceedings.(49) Whether the last attorney of record at the conclusion of the case was private, publicly retained, or whether the defendant was in propria persona.(50) Whether the defendant pled not guilty by reason of insanity.(51) Whether conservatorship proceedings were instituted.(52) For each defendant charged in a case, all of the following:(A) Their name.(B) The Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned by the department.(C) The date of birth.(D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency. If the agency does not currently use an anonymized identifier created by CMS, the agency shall create and apply an anonymized identifier as directed by the department.(E) The defendants age at the time of the crime.(F) The defendants race as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.(G) The source of the information regarding the defendants race. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants race, including, but not limited to, defendants advocate or record of arrests and prosecution.(H) The defendants ethnicity as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.(I) The source of the information regarding the defendants ethnicity. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants ethnicity.(J) Whether the defendant or their counsel has identified in open court or in a filing with the court that the defendant has a physical disability or a disability as described in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.(K) The type of disability so identified, if any.(L) The defendants gender.(M) Whether the defendant has disclosed to the prosecution that they identify as transgender, nonbinary, or intersex.(N) The defendants county of residence, if reflected in the court record, including, if the defendant is unhoused, an approximation of the county of residence as determined from direction by the department.(O) Whether the defendant was on probation at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(P) Whether the defendant was on parole at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(Q) Whether or not the defendant was required to register as a sex offender under Sections 290 to 290.024, inclusive, at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(53) For each victim, all of the following:(A) Whether there was a victim identified.(B) The race.(C) The ethnicity.(D) The age at the time of the crime.(E) Gender identification.(F) Whether the victim made a request to the court to drop the charges or indicated to the court that they would not be willing to testify or that they would be willing to testify.(54) For each agency or division, if only select divisions perform criminal prosecution within an agency, all of the following data shall be reported by July 1 each year:(A) The number of full-time or full-time equivalent attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.(B) The number of part-time attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.(C) The number of investigators employed by the office as of the reporting date.(D) The number of personnel dedicated to providing victim services employed by the office as of the reporting date.(E) The average annual felony caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.(F) The average annual misdemeanor caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.(G) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of felony cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.(H) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of misdemeanor cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.(I) The number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit contacted, and number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit provided services to during the reporting period. For purposes of this section, services are defined as tangible resources or assistance with recovering tangible resources including, but not limited to, seeking reimbursement from the California Victim Compensation Board, residence relocation, or application for a U visa. Services do not include informing victims of court dates and relaying case information or offers to plea a case.(f) (1) All of the following data shall be collected by the department from the appropriate division within the department with respect to each defendant in the cases identified and reported by a prosecuting agency pursuant to subdivision (e):(A) The number of prior felony convictions and statutory charges comprising prior felony convictions.(B) The number of prior felony arrests.(C) The number of misdemeanor arrests and convictions and statutory charges comprising prior misdemeanor convictions.(D) Whether an appeal was filed following the disposition of the case, the basis for the appeal, whether the appeal was contested by the prosecuting agency, and the resolution of the appeal.(2) The division shall include the Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned to each defendant with the data provided in paragraph (1).(g) (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and (3) and notwithstanding any other law, the department shall publish the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f).(2) The following information shall not be published:(A) The defendants name.(B) The defendants date of birth.(C) The criminal identification and information/state identification number assigned to each defendant.(D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency.(E) The ICN assigned to each case by the agency CMS.(F) The court case number used by the court to identify a case.(G) Any other personally identifying information or information that could reasonably lead to reidentification of an individual charged with a crime or an individual who is the victim of a crime, as defined by the department in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board through regulations. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop protocols and regulations to protect personally identifying information and privacy while maximizing the data available to the public.(3) Dissemination of data under subparagraph (Q) of paragraph (52) of subdivision (e) shall comply with Sections 290.45, 290.46, and 290.021.(h) Notwithstanding paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), subdivision (g) of Section 11105, and subdivision (a) of Section 13305, every bona fide research institution concerned with the quality of the criminal legal system may be provided with the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f), including the information described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), as required for the performance of its duties, including the conduct of research. The material identifying individuals shall only be provided for research and statistical activities and shall not be transferred, revealed, or used for purposes other than research or statistical activities. Reports or publications derived from this information shall not identify specific individuals. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop regulations consistent with this subdivision. SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 of this act, which adds Section 13370 to the Penal Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:The provisions set forth in Section 1 further the need to protect the privacy of individuals arrested for and prosecuted for crimes while balancing the publics right to access.SEC. 3. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
5468
5569 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5670
5771 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5872
5973 SECTION 1. Article 9 (commencing with Section 13370) is added to Chapter 2 of Title 3 of Part 4 of the Penal Code, to read: Article 9. Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act13370. (a) (1) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a workable system of criminal justice data transparency whereby law enforcement prosecution agencies will gather complete, accurate, and timely data in a uniform format, and make that data available to the public in a modern, open, electronic format that is machine-readable and readily accessible through an application program interface. In order that meaningful discussions can occur regarding criminal justice and its most challenging issues, including those regarding criminal caseloads, plea bargaining, race, mass incarceration, equity, and homelessness, the Legislature finds that it is an important state interest to implement a data collection, aggregation, and publishing process for criminal prosecutions to promote criminal justice data transparency. This data would be comprised of publishable statistics and other data from statewide prosecution offices. This section shall be referred to as the Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act, the Act, or JDATA.(2) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a reliable and robust methodology that is consistent county-to-county so that statewide data and trends may be accurately tracked. Further, the legislation shall set low technological and resource barriers so that every affected office may meaningfully participate to the fullest intent of this article.(3) The expediency and accuracy of the data is best served by the Department of Justice as a single data aggregator and repository unit. The participation of the department as the final point of collection, aggregation, and publishing of this data is more efficient, will ensure the uniformity and accuracy of the data, and, by providing the technological resources and aggregation and publication of all data, will allow offices that lack adequate technology or resources to comply with the mandate. As used in this paragraph, technological resources means providing the basic systems and support necessary to receive the case data described in this article in standard formats from prosecution agencies statewide and aggregate that data using appropriate means developed by the department, and then publish the data in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require, for example, on an internet website.(b) (1) The department shall have the following objectives and mandate: (A) Collection of the data described in subdivision (e), hereinafter referred to as data elements, within the timeframes described in this section from all state and local prosecutor offices that prosecute misdemeanors or felonies or both, including county district attorney offices, city attorney offices, and the Attorney General, hereinafter referred to as agencies. Collection of data elements includes providing cooperation and assistance to participating agencies and developing consistent and clear guidelines for how agencies are to define data elements transmitted to the department. The department shall develop consistent definitions and formats for data elements to ensure success of comparing metrics created using said data elements between jurisdictions.(B) Transmission of data elements, defined as the method designated by the department for the participating agency to provide collected data elements to the department.(C) Aggregation of data elements, defined as collecting data elements gathered from multiple agencies in such a way that they can support metrics, defined as the combination of data elements used to track outcomes on any given process or decision point, developed by the department, that may be compared between jurisdictions.(D) Development of metrics, defined as using industry-appropriate methods and technology and cooperation with participating agencies to create accurate, actionable, and digestible metrics using data elements submitted by the agencies. The methods implemented must ensure that the metrics developed can be compared between jurisdictions.(E) Consistent with subdivision (g), publication of metrics, defined as using appropriate technology, methods, and interface design to make metrics available to the public, which may include the use of web publishing, the use of interactive portals or other applications to not only display metrics, but to allow metrics to be compared and filtered so that each metric may be analyzed and dissected by multiple factors, including other metrics and filters including, but not limited to, defendant, victim, and case characteristics. This publication shall be made using a modern, open, and electronic format, such as comma-separated values (CSV) or similar file format, that will allow the user to download the data sets and conduct their own analyses. The public interface for metrics shall also make raw, case-level data available for download so that independent analyses can be conducted using the data. The department shall also ensure that personal identifying information is not published except as allowed by law, and the use of anonymized data may be employed for this purpose.(F) By October 1, 2023, the department shall establish the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board for the purpose of ensuring transparency, accountability, and equitable access to prosecutorial data. The primary responsibilities of the board shall be providing guidance to the department on any and all draft rules, regulations, policies, plans, reports, or other decisions made by the department in regard to this Act. The board shall include the following members: (i) The Attorney General, or their designee.(ii) The president of the California Public Defenders Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California Public Defenders Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(iii) The president of the California District Attorneys Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California District Attorneys Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(iv) An advisory committee member of the Prosecutors Alliance of California, or their designee, who shall consult with other advisory committee members and members of the Prosecutors Alliance of California to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(v) The chairperson of the Committee on Revision of the Penal Code, or their designee.(vi) A university professor who specializes in criminal justice data.(vii) A data scientist who specializes in criminal justice data.(viii) Two representatives of human or civil rights tax-exempt organizations who specialize in civil or human rights.(ix) Two representatives of community organizations who specialize in civil or human rights and criminal justice.(x) Two representatives of tax-exempt organizations who specialize in criminal justice data.(xi) Two individuals who have direct experience being prosecuted in the states criminal legal system.(xii) Two individuals who have direct experience being a victim of a crime or the spouse, parents, children, siblings, or guardian of a crime victim, if the victim is deceased, a minor, or physically or psychologically incapacitated.(xiii) Two representatives of organizations that provide services to crime victims.(G) (i) By July 1, 2024, the department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop a data dictionary that includes standardized definitions for each data element in subdivision (e) so that data elements transmitted to the department are uniform across all jurisdictions, taking into account any technical and practical limitations on the collection of that data element. (ii) Upon completion of the data dictionary, the department shall share the data dictionary with all agencies statewide.(2) The department shall assess and develop its capabilities in carrying out its functions using the following guidelines. The department shall do all of the following in carrying out its objectives and mandate:(A) Use standardized practices in developing web pages, using what is commonly referred to as open web standards or standard best practices such as those recommendations published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) or those published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).(B) Employ appropriate security measures and best practices for data elements transmitted and stored to account for personal identifying information and other sensitive information as governed by state and federal law. These processes shall include the remote backing-up of all data, including data elements and metrics, as well as the logging and detection of data-related events.(C) Use technology that is scalable so as to accommodate large increases in volume of data.(D) Staff personnel familiar with web user-interface coding and web service coding.(E) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data available, including raw data elements and metrics, in a machine readable format with open format, nonproprietary file formats that will allow for download of complete data sets.(F) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data, including data elements and metrics, available in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require using modern web Application Programming Interfaces that allow access to data directly through programs in addition to internet website publishing.(G) Assess and create processes to collect, aggregate, and validate data elements transmitted by an agency, to include methods to identify duplicate, overlapping, or missing data and processes for the rejection and retransmission of invalid data.(H) Test data quality to facilitate the dissemination of accurate, valid, reliable, and complete criminal justice data.(I) Develop methods for archiving data, retrieving archived data, and data editing.(c) (1) The operation of this article is contingent upon an adequate appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute for purposes of this article.(2) Any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall be used only for the purpose of administering this article.(3) The recipient of any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall provide a full public accounting of all of those funds.(d) (1) Beginning March 1, 2027, every agency statewide shall collect every data element in subdivision (e) for cases in which a decision to reject charges or to initiate criminal proceedings by way of complaint or indictment has been made by that agency from that date forward. Each data element shall be collected according to the definitions provided in this section with any ambiguities to be resolved by the department in the data dictionary described in clause (i) of subparagraph (I) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) for uniform application statewide. Each data element shall be submitted in a format designated by the department to be the most appropriate and cost effective to carry out the objectives of this article. Any ambiguities regarding the substance or timing of the collection described in this paragraph shall be resolved by the department by letter guidelines issued to all prosecution agencies upon consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board.(2) Beginning June 1, 2027, every agency statewide, at the direction of the department, shall begin transmitting its required data elements to the department. The transmission shall occur on a quarterly basis until June 1, 2028, after which data elements shall be transmitted on a monthly basis. The department may require any agency to transmit data to the department before the deadlines stated in this paragraph for quality control purposes, including to ensure data consistency, compliance with standardized formats as determined by the department, and to ensure the agencies are ready to fully comply with this section as required for their deadlines.(3) Beginning June 1, 2027, the department shall begin collecting data elements from all agencies statewide according to the timetable in paragraph (2). The department shall aggregate data elements for all agencies in order to publish this data from those agencies by June 1, 2028. This publication shall continue on a quarterly basis for one year, and then the publication shall occur on a monthly basis thereafter.(4) It shall be an express exception to any sealing of a case or expungement of a case, whether by court order or by operation of law, or any rule of confidentiality or rule otherwise prohibiting disclosure provided by law that all data, pursuant to this section, shall be provided by the agencies to the department.(e) Agencies shall collect and transmit to the department the following data elements in accordance with this section and under direction from the department. The department shall have discretion to resolve ambiguities in this subdivision consistent with the purposes of this section, including the development of uniform definitions for the required data elements. The department shall also have discretion to determine the form and format in which data elements shall be captured and transmitted.Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), for each case, the following data elements shall be gathered and published as described in this section. For purposes of this article, a case is defined as a collection of charges filed by an agency on a particular date to initiate a criminal prosecution for a felony or a misdemeanor. A case dismissed and later refiled shall only be counted as one case. The collection of charges filed by an agency against multiple defendants in a single charging document shall each be an individual case for each such defendant.(1) The court case number used by the court to identify a case. The court case number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency.(2) The Internal Case Number (ICN) assigned to each case by the Case Management System (CMS). This number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency. If the agency does not currently use an ICN, the agency shall create and apply an ICN as directed by the department.(3) Whether the case is pending, has concluded, is on appeal, or is inactive, such as when a defendant is in warrant status.(4) The ZIP Code where most of the acts comprising the crimes charged occurred.(5) The date of the crime. If multiple crime dates are alleged, the date of the crime shall be the earliest date alleged in the charging document. (6) The name and Originating Agency Identifier (ORI), as designated by the National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System, of the law enforcement agency that investigated the case for submission to the prosecutor.(7) The ZIP Code of the arrest.(8) The date of the arrest.(9) Each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation, referred by law enforcement, including a uniform description, statute number, and level, either felony or misdemeanor.(10) The date on which charges were filed, the case was discharged, or the case was returned for further investigation.(11) Each charge, enhancement, and special circumstance or special allegation filed by the agency in the initial charging document.(12) For each case declined to prosecute, each charge that the agency declined to prosecute.(13) The county in which the case was filed.(14) The date on which the defendant initially entered a plea to the charges.(15) The date on which the defendant first appeared in a case, whether or not an arraignment took place.(16) The date on which bail or bond was set by the court in open court and the amount of bail set.(17) The agency pretrial release recommendation for each case, as stated in open court, as described in standardized terms developed by the department.(18) The prosecution bail recommendation for each case stated in open court according to standardized terms developed by the department.(19) The court pretrial detention determination at arraignment as described in standardized terms developed by the department.(20) Whether the defendant posted bail.(21) The date of any release from custody, the reason for release, and the terms of that release. The department shall develop standardized terms for this data element.(22) The start and end date for every period of pretrial detention for a defendant in a case and the reason for that detention as described in standardized terms provided by the department.(23) The date of any amendments adding charges or enhancements to a charging document, including a complaint, indictment, or information.(24) The charges, enhancements, special circumstances, or special allegations added to a charging document by amendment.(25) The date on which the first plea bargain offer was made by the agency to each defendant. For purposes of this section, plea bargain offer is defined as the terms of resolution of a case made by the agency that are ultimately transmitted to the defendant by their counsel for consideration, which is commonly called a bona fide offer or, if the defendant is in propria persona, the first offer to resolve a case transmitted to the defendant on any given date.(26) The terms of the initial plea bargain offer communicated to the defendant or the defendants counsel. The department shall develop a standardized method to capture the terms of the initial plea bargain offer according to uniform definitions.(27) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for diversion. For purposes of this section, diversion is defined as a program, either as created and defined by state law or an agency, by which charges are reduced or dismissed as part of participation in alternatives to prosecution such as counseling, therapy, restorative justice principles, or periods of noncriminality.(28) Whether the defendant was offered a diversion program by the agency.(29) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for diversion as allowed by law, if such a motion was made.(30) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a diversion program.(31) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for diversion, if that request was made in open court, and the reason for the opposition, if given in open court, using standardized terms, including the following:(A) Public safety.(B) Criminal history.(C) Failure of the defendant to consent.(D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior diversion program terms.(E) Statutory ineligibility.(F) Discretion.(G) Other.(32) The type of diversion according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following: (A) Mental health diversion pursuant to Section 1001.36.(B) Veteran diversion pursuant to Section 1001.80.(C) Misdemeanor diversion pursuant to Section 1001.95.(D) Drug diversion pursuant to Section 1000.(E) Other diversion.(33) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for collaborative court. For purposes of this section, collaborative court is a program wherein the prosecution of the case is stayed in order to engage in any collaborative process, such as by the agency, the public defender, and the court, to address underlying issues such as chemical dependency or mental health issues.(34) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for collaborative court, if such a motion was made.(35) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a collaborative court program.(36) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for collaborative court, if that request was made in open court, and the reason, if given in open court, for the opposition, using standardized terms, including the following:(A) Public safety.(B) Criminal history.(C) Failure of the defendant to consent.(D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior collaborative court program terms.(E) Statutory ineligibility.(F) Discretion.(G) Other.(37) The type of collaborative court according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following:(A) Mental health collaborative court.(B) Veteran collaborative court.(C) Drug or DUI collaborative court.(D) Community or homeless collaborative court.(E) Other collaborative court.(38) The date on which a charge was resolved, whether by dismissal, acquittal, conviction, or other grounds.(39) The disposition of each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation. Specifically, whether the charge or enhancement was resolved by dismissal, acquittal or not true finding, or conviction. If conviction, whether the conviction was by plea or by trial.(40) For any special circumstance alleged in the charging document, whether the defendant was alleged to be the actual killer as defined by paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of Section 189.(41) The date a sentence was imposed by the court.(42) The sentence imposed by the court, including any restitution, fines, and period of incarceration imposed.(43) Whether or not the agency engaged in any postconviction resentencing, defined for purposes of this section as any resentencing where, after judgment and sentencing on a case, the agency revisited the sentence, including, but not limited to, proceedings under Section 1172.1, and the outcome of that resentencing.(44) Whether or not the agency engaged in any parole proceedings, the formal recommendation of the agency during that proceeding, and the outcome of that proceeding.(45) Whether or not the agency engaged in any commutation or pardon proceedings, the official recommendation of the agency for those proceedings, and the outcome of those proceedings.(46) Whether a motion was made by a party under Section 231.7 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the party making the motion, and the result of that motion.(47) Whether a criminal informant was used and whether that informant was used in a custodial or noncustodial setting. This paragraph shall apply only if the existence and nature of the informant was disclosed as part of the public proceedings of the case.(48) Whether competency proceedings were initiated under Section 1368, 1368.1, or 1369 and the result of those proceedings.(49) Whether the last attorney of record at the conclusion of the case was private, publicly retained, or whether the defendant was in propria persona.(50) Whether the defendant pled not guilty by reason of insanity.(51) Whether conservatorship proceedings were instituted.(52) For each defendant charged in a case, all of the following:(A) Their name.(B) The Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned by the department.(C) The date of birth.(D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency. If the agency does not currently use an anonymized identifier created by CMS, the agency shall create and apply an anonymized identifier as directed by the department.(E) The defendants age at the time of the crime.(F) The defendants race as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.(G) The source of the information regarding the defendants race. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants race, including, but not limited to, defendants advocate or record of arrests and prosecution.(H) The defendants ethnicity as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.(I) The source of the information regarding the defendants ethnicity. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants ethnicity.(J) Whether the defendant or their counsel has identified in open court or in a filing with the court that the defendant has a physical disability or a disability as described in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.(K) The type of disability so identified, if any.(L) The defendants gender.(M) Whether the defendant has disclosed to the prosecution that they identify as transgender, nonbinary, or intersex.(N) The defendants county of residence, if reflected in the court record, including, if the defendant is unhoused, an approximation of the county of residence as determined from direction by the department.(O) Whether the defendant was on probation at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(P) Whether the defendant was on parole at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(Q) Whether or not the defendant was required to register as a sex offender under Sections 290 to 290.024, inclusive, at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(53) For each victim, all of the following:(A) Whether there was a victim identified.(B) The race.(C) The ethnicity.(D) The age at the time of the crime.(E) Gender identification.(F) Whether the victim made a request to the court to drop the charges or indicated to the court that they would not be willing to testify or that they would be willing to testify.(54) For each agency or division, if only select divisions perform criminal prosecution within an agency, all of the following data shall be reported by July 1 each year:(A) The number of full-time or full-time equivalent attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.(B) The number of part-time attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.(C) The number of investigators employed by the office as of the reporting date.(D) The number of personnel dedicated to providing victim services employed by the office as of the reporting date.(E) The average annual felony caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.(F) The average annual misdemeanor caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.(G) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of felony cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.(H) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of misdemeanor cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.(I) The number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit contacted, and number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit provided services to during the reporting period. For purposes of this section, services are defined as tangible resources or assistance with recovering tangible resources including, but not limited to, seeking reimbursement from the California Victim Compensation Board, residence relocation, or application for a U visa. Services do not include informing victims of court dates and relaying case information or offers to plea a case.(f) (1) All of the following data shall be collected by the department from the appropriate division within the department with respect to each defendant in the cases identified and reported by a prosecuting agency pursuant to subdivision (e):(A) The number of prior felony convictions and statutory charges comprising prior felony convictions.(B) The number of prior felony arrests.(C) The number of misdemeanor arrests and convictions and statutory charges comprising prior misdemeanor convictions.(D) Whether an appeal was filed following the disposition of the case, the basis for the appeal, whether the appeal was contested by the prosecuting agency, and the resolution of the appeal.(2) The division shall include the Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned to each defendant with the data provided in paragraph (1).(g) (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and (3) and notwithstanding any other law, the department shall publish the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f).(2) The following information shall not be published:(A) The defendants name.(B) The defendants date of birth.(C) The criminal identification and information/state identification number assigned to each defendant.(D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency.(E) The ICN assigned to each case by the agency CMS.(F) The court case number used by the court to identify a case.(G) Any other personally identifying information or information that could reasonably lead to reidentification of an individual charged with a crime or an individual who is the victim of a crime, as defined by the department in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board through regulations. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop protocols and regulations to protect personally identifying information and privacy while maximizing the data available to the public.(3) Dissemination of data under subparagraph (Q) of paragraph (52) of subdivision (e) shall comply with Sections 290.45, 290.46, and 290.021.(h) Notwithstanding paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), subdivision (g) of Section 11105, and subdivision (a) of Section 13305, every bona fide research institution concerned with the quality of the criminal legal system may be provided with the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f), including the information described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), as required for the performance of its duties, including the conduct of research. The material identifying individuals shall only be provided for research and statistical activities and shall not be transferred, revealed, or used for purposes other than research or statistical activities. Reports or publications derived from this information shall not identify specific individuals. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop regulations consistent with this subdivision.
6074
6175 SECTION 1. Article 9 (commencing with Section 13370) is added to Chapter 2 of Title 3 of Part 4 of the Penal Code, to read:
6276
6377 ### SECTION 1.
6478
6579 Article 9. Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act13370. (a) (1) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a workable system of criminal justice data transparency whereby law enforcement prosecution agencies will gather complete, accurate, and timely data in a uniform format, and make that data available to the public in a modern, open, electronic format that is machine-readable and readily accessible through an application program interface. In order that meaningful discussions can occur regarding criminal justice and its most challenging issues, including those regarding criminal caseloads, plea bargaining, race, mass incarceration, equity, and homelessness, the Legislature finds that it is an important state interest to implement a data collection, aggregation, and publishing process for criminal prosecutions to promote criminal justice data transparency. This data would be comprised of publishable statistics and other data from statewide prosecution offices. This section shall be referred to as the Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act, the Act, or JDATA.(2) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a reliable and robust methodology that is consistent county-to-county so that statewide data and trends may be accurately tracked. Further, the legislation shall set low technological and resource barriers so that every affected office may meaningfully participate to the fullest intent of this article.(3) The expediency and accuracy of the data is best served by the Department of Justice as a single data aggregator and repository unit. The participation of the department as the final point of collection, aggregation, and publishing of this data is more efficient, will ensure the uniformity and accuracy of the data, and, by providing the technological resources and aggregation and publication of all data, will allow offices that lack adequate technology or resources to comply with the mandate. As used in this paragraph, technological resources means providing the basic systems and support necessary to receive the case data described in this article in standard formats from prosecution agencies statewide and aggregate that data using appropriate means developed by the department, and then publish the data in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require, for example, on an internet website.(b) (1) The department shall have the following objectives and mandate: (A) Collection of the data described in subdivision (e), hereinafter referred to as data elements, within the timeframes described in this section from all state and local prosecutor offices that prosecute misdemeanors or felonies or both, including county district attorney offices, city attorney offices, and the Attorney General, hereinafter referred to as agencies. Collection of data elements includes providing cooperation and assistance to participating agencies and developing consistent and clear guidelines for how agencies are to define data elements transmitted to the department. The department shall develop consistent definitions and formats for data elements to ensure success of comparing metrics created using said data elements between jurisdictions.(B) Transmission of data elements, defined as the method designated by the department for the participating agency to provide collected data elements to the department.(C) Aggregation of data elements, defined as collecting data elements gathered from multiple agencies in such a way that they can support metrics, defined as the combination of data elements used to track outcomes on any given process or decision point, developed by the department, that may be compared between jurisdictions.(D) Development of metrics, defined as using industry-appropriate methods and technology and cooperation with participating agencies to create accurate, actionable, and digestible metrics using data elements submitted by the agencies. The methods implemented must ensure that the metrics developed can be compared between jurisdictions.(E) Consistent with subdivision (g), publication of metrics, defined as using appropriate technology, methods, and interface design to make metrics available to the public, which may include the use of web publishing, the use of interactive portals or other applications to not only display metrics, but to allow metrics to be compared and filtered so that each metric may be analyzed and dissected by multiple factors, including other metrics and filters including, but not limited to, defendant, victim, and case characteristics. This publication shall be made using a modern, open, and electronic format, such as comma-separated values (CSV) or similar file format, that will allow the user to download the data sets and conduct their own analyses. The public interface for metrics shall also make raw, case-level data available for download so that independent analyses can be conducted using the data. The department shall also ensure that personal identifying information is not published except as allowed by law, and the use of anonymized data may be employed for this purpose.(F) By October 1, 2023, the department shall establish the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board for the purpose of ensuring transparency, accountability, and equitable access to prosecutorial data. The primary responsibilities of the board shall be providing guidance to the department on any and all draft rules, regulations, policies, plans, reports, or other decisions made by the department in regard to this Act. The board shall include the following members: (i) The Attorney General, or their designee.(ii) The president of the California Public Defenders Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California Public Defenders Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(iii) The president of the California District Attorneys Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California District Attorneys Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(iv) An advisory committee member of the Prosecutors Alliance of California, or their designee, who shall consult with other advisory committee members and members of the Prosecutors Alliance of California to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(v) The chairperson of the Committee on Revision of the Penal Code, or their designee.(vi) A university professor who specializes in criminal justice data.(vii) A data scientist who specializes in criminal justice data.(viii) Two representatives of human or civil rights tax-exempt organizations who specialize in civil or human rights.(ix) Two representatives of community organizations who specialize in civil or human rights and criminal justice.(x) Two representatives of tax-exempt organizations who specialize in criminal justice data.(xi) Two individuals who have direct experience being prosecuted in the states criminal legal system.(xii) Two individuals who have direct experience being a victim of a crime or the spouse, parents, children, siblings, or guardian of a crime victim, if the victim is deceased, a minor, or physically or psychologically incapacitated.(xiii) Two representatives of organizations that provide services to crime victims.(G) (i) By July 1, 2024, the department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop a data dictionary that includes standardized definitions for each data element in subdivision (e) so that data elements transmitted to the department are uniform across all jurisdictions, taking into account any technical and practical limitations on the collection of that data element. (ii) Upon completion of the data dictionary, the department shall share the data dictionary with all agencies statewide.(2) The department shall assess and develop its capabilities in carrying out its functions using the following guidelines. The department shall do all of the following in carrying out its objectives and mandate:(A) Use standardized practices in developing web pages, using what is commonly referred to as open web standards or standard best practices such as those recommendations published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) or those published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).(B) Employ appropriate security measures and best practices for data elements transmitted and stored to account for personal identifying information and other sensitive information as governed by state and federal law. These processes shall include the remote backing-up of all data, including data elements and metrics, as well as the logging and detection of data-related events.(C) Use technology that is scalable so as to accommodate large increases in volume of data.(D) Staff personnel familiar with web user-interface coding and web service coding.(E) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data available, including raw data elements and metrics, in a machine readable format with open format, nonproprietary file formats that will allow for download of complete data sets.(F) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data, including data elements and metrics, available in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require using modern web Application Programming Interfaces that allow access to data directly through programs in addition to internet website publishing.(G) Assess and create processes to collect, aggregate, and validate data elements transmitted by an agency, to include methods to identify duplicate, overlapping, or missing data and processes for the rejection and retransmission of invalid data.(H) Test data quality to facilitate the dissemination of accurate, valid, reliable, and complete criminal justice data.(I) Develop methods for archiving data, retrieving archived data, and data editing.(c) (1) The operation of this article is contingent upon an adequate appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute for purposes of this article.(2) Any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall be used only for the purpose of administering this article.(3) The recipient of any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall provide a full public accounting of all of those funds.(d) (1) Beginning March 1, 2027, every agency statewide shall collect every data element in subdivision (e) for cases in which a decision to reject charges or to initiate criminal proceedings by way of complaint or indictment has been made by that agency from that date forward. Each data element shall be collected according to the definitions provided in this section with any ambiguities to be resolved by the department in the data dictionary described in clause (i) of subparagraph (I) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) for uniform application statewide. Each data element shall be submitted in a format designated by the department to be the most appropriate and cost effective to carry out the objectives of this article. Any ambiguities regarding the substance or timing of the collection described in this paragraph shall be resolved by the department by letter guidelines issued to all prosecution agencies upon consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board.(2) Beginning June 1, 2027, every agency statewide, at the direction of the department, shall begin transmitting its required data elements to the department. The transmission shall occur on a quarterly basis until June 1, 2028, after which data elements shall be transmitted on a monthly basis. The department may require any agency to transmit data to the department before the deadlines stated in this paragraph for quality control purposes, including to ensure data consistency, compliance with standardized formats as determined by the department, and to ensure the agencies are ready to fully comply with this section as required for their deadlines.(3) Beginning June 1, 2027, the department shall begin collecting data elements from all agencies statewide according to the timetable in paragraph (2). The department shall aggregate data elements for all agencies in order to publish this data from those agencies by June 1, 2028. This publication shall continue on a quarterly basis for one year, and then the publication shall occur on a monthly basis thereafter.(4) It shall be an express exception to any sealing of a case or expungement of a case, whether by court order or by operation of law, or any rule of confidentiality or rule otherwise prohibiting disclosure provided by law that all data, pursuant to this section, shall be provided by the agencies to the department.(e) Agencies shall collect and transmit to the department the following data elements in accordance with this section and under direction from the department. The department shall have discretion to resolve ambiguities in this subdivision consistent with the purposes of this section, including the development of uniform definitions for the required data elements. The department shall also have discretion to determine the form and format in which data elements shall be captured and transmitted.Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), for each case, the following data elements shall be gathered and published as described in this section. For purposes of this article, a case is defined as a collection of charges filed by an agency on a particular date to initiate a criminal prosecution for a felony or a misdemeanor. A case dismissed and later refiled shall only be counted as one case. The collection of charges filed by an agency against multiple defendants in a single charging document shall each be an individual case for each such defendant.(1) The court case number used by the court to identify a case. The court case number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency.(2) The Internal Case Number (ICN) assigned to each case by the Case Management System (CMS). This number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency. If the agency does not currently use an ICN, the agency shall create and apply an ICN as directed by the department.(3) Whether the case is pending, has concluded, is on appeal, or is inactive, such as when a defendant is in warrant status.(4) The ZIP Code where most of the acts comprising the crimes charged occurred.(5) The date of the crime. If multiple crime dates are alleged, the date of the crime shall be the earliest date alleged in the charging document. (6) The name and Originating Agency Identifier (ORI), as designated by the National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System, of the law enforcement agency that investigated the case for submission to the prosecutor.(7) The ZIP Code of the arrest.(8) The date of the arrest.(9) Each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation, referred by law enforcement, including a uniform description, statute number, and level, either felony or misdemeanor.(10) The date on which charges were filed, the case was discharged, or the case was returned for further investigation.(11) Each charge, enhancement, and special circumstance or special allegation filed by the agency in the initial charging document.(12) For each case declined to prosecute, each charge that the agency declined to prosecute.(13) The county in which the case was filed.(14) The date on which the defendant initially entered a plea to the charges.(15) The date on which the defendant first appeared in a case, whether or not an arraignment took place.(16) The date on which bail or bond was set by the court in open court and the amount of bail set.(17) The agency pretrial release recommendation for each case, as stated in open court, as described in standardized terms developed by the department.(18) The prosecution bail recommendation for each case stated in open court according to standardized terms developed by the department.(19) The court pretrial detention determination at arraignment as described in standardized terms developed by the department.(20) Whether the defendant posted bail.(21) The date of any release from custody, the reason for release, and the terms of that release. The department shall develop standardized terms for this data element.(22) The start and end date for every period of pretrial detention for a defendant in a case and the reason for that detention as described in standardized terms provided by the department.(23) The date of any amendments adding charges or enhancements to a charging document, including a complaint, indictment, or information.(24) The charges, enhancements, special circumstances, or special allegations added to a charging document by amendment.(25) The date on which the first plea bargain offer was made by the agency to each defendant. For purposes of this section, plea bargain offer is defined as the terms of resolution of a case made by the agency that are ultimately transmitted to the defendant by their counsel for consideration, which is commonly called a bona fide offer or, if the defendant is in propria persona, the first offer to resolve a case transmitted to the defendant on any given date.(26) The terms of the initial plea bargain offer communicated to the defendant or the defendants counsel. The department shall develop a standardized method to capture the terms of the initial plea bargain offer according to uniform definitions.(27) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for diversion. For purposes of this section, diversion is defined as a program, either as created and defined by state law or an agency, by which charges are reduced or dismissed as part of participation in alternatives to prosecution such as counseling, therapy, restorative justice principles, or periods of noncriminality.(28) Whether the defendant was offered a diversion program by the agency.(29) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for diversion as allowed by law, if such a motion was made.(30) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a diversion program.(31) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for diversion, if that request was made in open court, and the reason for the opposition, if given in open court, using standardized terms, including the following:(A) Public safety.(B) Criminal history.(C) Failure of the defendant to consent.(D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior diversion program terms.(E) Statutory ineligibility.(F) Discretion.(G) Other.(32) The type of diversion according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following: (A) Mental health diversion pursuant to Section 1001.36.(B) Veteran diversion pursuant to Section 1001.80.(C) Misdemeanor diversion pursuant to Section 1001.95.(D) Drug diversion pursuant to Section 1000.(E) Other diversion.(33) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for collaborative court. For purposes of this section, collaborative court is a program wherein the prosecution of the case is stayed in order to engage in any collaborative process, such as by the agency, the public defender, and the court, to address underlying issues such as chemical dependency or mental health issues.(34) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for collaborative court, if such a motion was made.(35) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a collaborative court program.(36) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for collaborative court, if that request was made in open court, and the reason, if given in open court, for the opposition, using standardized terms, including the following:(A) Public safety.(B) Criminal history.(C) Failure of the defendant to consent.(D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior collaborative court program terms.(E) Statutory ineligibility.(F) Discretion.(G) Other.(37) The type of collaborative court according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following:(A) Mental health collaborative court.(B) Veteran collaborative court.(C) Drug or DUI collaborative court.(D) Community or homeless collaborative court.(E) Other collaborative court.(38) The date on which a charge was resolved, whether by dismissal, acquittal, conviction, or other grounds.(39) The disposition of each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation. Specifically, whether the charge or enhancement was resolved by dismissal, acquittal or not true finding, or conviction. If conviction, whether the conviction was by plea or by trial.(40) For any special circumstance alleged in the charging document, whether the defendant was alleged to be the actual killer as defined by paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of Section 189.(41) The date a sentence was imposed by the court.(42) The sentence imposed by the court, including any restitution, fines, and period of incarceration imposed.(43) Whether or not the agency engaged in any postconviction resentencing, defined for purposes of this section as any resentencing where, after judgment and sentencing on a case, the agency revisited the sentence, including, but not limited to, proceedings under Section 1172.1, and the outcome of that resentencing.(44) Whether or not the agency engaged in any parole proceedings, the formal recommendation of the agency during that proceeding, and the outcome of that proceeding.(45) Whether or not the agency engaged in any commutation or pardon proceedings, the official recommendation of the agency for those proceedings, and the outcome of those proceedings.(46) Whether a motion was made by a party under Section 231.7 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the party making the motion, and the result of that motion.(47) Whether a criminal informant was used and whether that informant was used in a custodial or noncustodial setting. This paragraph shall apply only if the existence and nature of the informant was disclosed as part of the public proceedings of the case.(48) Whether competency proceedings were initiated under Section 1368, 1368.1, or 1369 and the result of those proceedings.(49) Whether the last attorney of record at the conclusion of the case was private, publicly retained, or whether the defendant was in propria persona.(50) Whether the defendant pled not guilty by reason of insanity.(51) Whether conservatorship proceedings were instituted.(52) For each defendant charged in a case, all of the following:(A) Their name.(B) The Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned by the department.(C) The date of birth.(D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency. If the agency does not currently use an anonymized identifier created by CMS, the agency shall create and apply an anonymized identifier as directed by the department.(E) The defendants age at the time of the crime.(F) The defendants race as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.(G) The source of the information regarding the defendants race. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants race, including, but not limited to, defendants advocate or record of arrests and prosecution.(H) The defendants ethnicity as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.(I) The source of the information regarding the defendants ethnicity. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants ethnicity.(J) Whether the defendant or their counsel has identified in open court or in a filing with the court that the defendant has a physical disability or a disability as described in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.(K) The type of disability so identified, if any.(L) The defendants gender.(M) Whether the defendant has disclosed to the prosecution that they identify as transgender, nonbinary, or intersex.(N) The defendants county of residence, if reflected in the court record, including, if the defendant is unhoused, an approximation of the county of residence as determined from direction by the department.(O) Whether the defendant was on probation at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(P) Whether the defendant was on parole at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(Q) Whether or not the defendant was required to register as a sex offender under Sections 290 to 290.024, inclusive, at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(53) For each victim, all of the following:(A) Whether there was a victim identified.(B) The race.(C) The ethnicity.(D) The age at the time of the crime.(E) Gender identification.(F) Whether the victim made a request to the court to drop the charges or indicated to the court that they would not be willing to testify or that they would be willing to testify.(54) For each agency or division, if only select divisions perform criminal prosecution within an agency, all of the following data shall be reported by July 1 each year:(A) The number of full-time or full-time equivalent attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.(B) The number of part-time attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.(C) The number of investigators employed by the office as of the reporting date.(D) The number of personnel dedicated to providing victim services employed by the office as of the reporting date.(E) The average annual felony caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.(F) The average annual misdemeanor caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.(G) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of felony cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.(H) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of misdemeanor cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.(I) The number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit contacted, and number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit provided services to during the reporting period. For purposes of this section, services are defined as tangible resources or assistance with recovering tangible resources including, but not limited to, seeking reimbursement from the California Victim Compensation Board, residence relocation, or application for a U visa. Services do not include informing victims of court dates and relaying case information or offers to plea a case.(f) (1) All of the following data shall be collected by the department from the appropriate division within the department with respect to each defendant in the cases identified and reported by a prosecuting agency pursuant to subdivision (e):(A) The number of prior felony convictions and statutory charges comprising prior felony convictions.(B) The number of prior felony arrests.(C) The number of misdemeanor arrests and convictions and statutory charges comprising prior misdemeanor convictions.(D) Whether an appeal was filed following the disposition of the case, the basis for the appeal, whether the appeal was contested by the prosecuting agency, and the resolution of the appeal.(2) The division shall include the Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned to each defendant with the data provided in paragraph (1).(g) (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and (3) and notwithstanding any other law, the department shall publish the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f).(2) The following information shall not be published:(A) The defendants name.(B) The defendants date of birth.(C) The criminal identification and information/state identification number assigned to each defendant.(D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency.(E) The ICN assigned to each case by the agency CMS.(F) The court case number used by the court to identify a case.(G) Any other personally identifying information or information that could reasonably lead to reidentification of an individual charged with a crime or an individual who is the victim of a crime, as defined by the department in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board through regulations. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop protocols and regulations to protect personally identifying information and privacy while maximizing the data available to the public.(3) Dissemination of data under subparagraph (Q) of paragraph (52) of subdivision (e) shall comply with Sections 290.45, 290.46, and 290.021.(h) Notwithstanding paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), subdivision (g) of Section 11105, and subdivision (a) of Section 13305, every bona fide research institution concerned with the quality of the criminal legal system may be provided with the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f), including the information described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), as required for the performance of its duties, including the conduct of research. The material identifying individuals shall only be provided for research and statistical activities and shall not be transferred, revealed, or used for purposes other than research or statistical activities. Reports or publications derived from this information shall not identify specific individuals. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop regulations consistent with this subdivision.
6680
6781 Article 9. Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act13370. (a) (1) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a workable system of criminal justice data transparency whereby law enforcement prosecution agencies will gather complete, accurate, and timely data in a uniform format, and make that data available to the public in a modern, open, electronic format that is machine-readable and readily accessible through an application program interface. In order that meaningful discussions can occur regarding criminal justice and its most challenging issues, including those regarding criminal caseloads, plea bargaining, race, mass incarceration, equity, and homelessness, the Legislature finds that it is an important state interest to implement a data collection, aggregation, and publishing process for criminal prosecutions to promote criminal justice data transparency. This data would be comprised of publishable statistics and other data from statewide prosecution offices. This section shall be referred to as the Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act, the Act, or JDATA.(2) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a reliable and robust methodology that is consistent county-to-county so that statewide data and trends may be accurately tracked. Further, the legislation shall set low technological and resource barriers so that every affected office may meaningfully participate to the fullest intent of this article.(3) The expediency and accuracy of the data is best served by the Department of Justice as a single data aggregator and repository unit. The participation of the department as the final point of collection, aggregation, and publishing of this data is more efficient, will ensure the uniformity and accuracy of the data, and, by providing the technological resources and aggregation and publication of all data, will allow offices that lack adequate technology or resources to comply with the mandate. As used in this paragraph, technological resources means providing the basic systems and support necessary to receive the case data described in this article in standard formats from prosecution agencies statewide and aggregate that data using appropriate means developed by the department, and then publish the data in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require, for example, on an internet website.(b) (1) The department shall have the following objectives and mandate: (A) Collection of the data described in subdivision (e), hereinafter referred to as data elements, within the timeframes described in this section from all state and local prosecutor offices that prosecute misdemeanors or felonies or both, including county district attorney offices, city attorney offices, and the Attorney General, hereinafter referred to as agencies. Collection of data elements includes providing cooperation and assistance to participating agencies and developing consistent and clear guidelines for how agencies are to define data elements transmitted to the department. The department shall develop consistent definitions and formats for data elements to ensure success of comparing metrics created using said data elements between jurisdictions.(B) Transmission of data elements, defined as the method designated by the department for the participating agency to provide collected data elements to the department.(C) Aggregation of data elements, defined as collecting data elements gathered from multiple agencies in such a way that they can support metrics, defined as the combination of data elements used to track outcomes on any given process or decision point, developed by the department, that may be compared between jurisdictions.(D) Development of metrics, defined as using industry-appropriate methods and technology and cooperation with participating agencies to create accurate, actionable, and digestible metrics using data elements submitted by the agencies. The methods implemented must ensure that the metrics developed can be compared between jurisdictions.(E) Consistent with subdivision (g), publication of metrics, defined as using appropriate technology, methods, and interface design to make metrics available to the public, which may include the use of web publishing, the use of interactive portals or other applications to not only display metrics, but to allow metrics to be compared and filtered so that each metric may be analyzed and dissected by multiple factors, including other metrics and filters including, but not limited to, defendant, victim, and case characteristics. This publication shall be made using a modern, open, and electronic format, such as comma-separated values (CSV) or similar file format, that will allow the user to download the data sets and conduct their own analyses. The public interface for metrics shall also make raw, case-level data available for download so that independent analyses can be conducted using the data. The department shall also ensure that personal identifying information is not published except as allowed by law, and the use of anonymized data may be employed for this purpose.(F) By October 1, 2023, the department shall establish the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board for the purpose of ensuring transparency, accountability, and equitable access to prosecutorial data. The primary responsibilities of the board shall be providing guidance to the department on any and all draft rules, regulations, policies, plans, reports, or other decisions made by the department in regard to this Act. The board shall include the following members: (i) The Attorney General, or their designee.(ii) The president of the California Public Defenders Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California Public Defenders Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(iii) The president of the California District Attorneys Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California District Attorneys Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(iv) An advisory committee member of the Prosecutors Alliance of California, or their designee, who shall consult with other advisory committee members and members of the Prosecutors Alliance of California to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(v) The chairperson of the Committee on Revision of the Penal Code, or their designee.(vi) A university professor who specializes in criminal justice data.(vii) A data scientist who specializes in criminal justice data.(viii) Two representatives of human or civil rights tax-exempt organizations who specialize in civil or human rights.(ix) Two representatives of community organizations who specialize in civil or human rights and criminal justice.(x) Two representatives of tax-exempt organizations who specialize in criminal justice data.(xi) Two individuals who have direct experience being prosecuted in the states criminal legal system.(xii) Two individuals who have direct experience being a victim of a crime or the spouse, parents, children, siblings, or guardian of a crime victim, if the victim is deceased, a minor, or physically or psychologically incapacitated.(xiii) Two representatives of organizations that provide services to crime victims.(G) (i) By July 1, 2024, the department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop a data dictionary that includes standardized definitions for each data element in subdivision (e) so that data elements transmitted to the department are uniform across all jurisdictions, taking into account any technical and practical limitations on the collection of that data element. (ii) Upon completion of the data dictionary, the department shall share the data dictionary with all agencies statewide.(2) The department shall assess and develop its capabilities in carrying out its functions using the following guidelines. The department shall do all of the following in carrying out its objectives and mandate:(A) Use standardized practices in developing web pages, using what is commonly referred to as open web standards or standard best practices such as those recommendations published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) or those published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).(B) Employ appropriate security measures and best practices for data elements transmitted and stored to account for personal identifying information and other sensitive information as governed by state and federal law. These processes shall include the remote backing-up of all data, including data elements and metrics, as well as the logging and detection of data-related events.(C) Use technology that is scalable so as to accommodate large increases in volume of data.(D) Staff personnel familiar with web user-interface coding and web service coding.(E) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data available, including raw data elements and metrics, in a machine readable format with open format, nonproprietary file formats that will allow for download of complete data sets.(F) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data, including data elements and metrics, available in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require using modern web Application Programming Interfaces that allow access to data directly through programs in addition to internet website publishing.(G) Assess and create processes to collect, aggregate, and validate data elements transmitted by an agency, to include methods to identify duplicate, overlapping, or missing data and processes for the rejection and retransmission of invalid data.(H) Test data quality to facilitate the dissemination of accurate, valid, reliable, and complete criminal justice data.(I) Develop methods for archiving data, retrieving archived data, and data editing.(c) (1) The operation of this article is contingent upon an adequate appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute for purposes of this article.(2) Any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall be used only for the purpose of administering this article.(3) The recipient of any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall provide a full public accounting of all of those funds.(d) (1) Beginning March 1, 2027, every agency statewide shall collect every data element in subdivision (e) for cases in which a decision to reject charges or to initiate criminal proceedings by way of complaint or indictment has been made by that agency from that date forward. Each data element shall be collected according to the definitions provided in this section with any ambiguities to be resolved by the department in the data dictionary described in clause (i) of subparagraph (I) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) for uniform application statewide. Each data element shall be submitted in a format designated by the department to be the most appropriate and cost effective to carry out the objectives of this article. Any ambiguities regarding the substance or timing of the collection described in this paragraph shall be resolved by the department by letter guidelines issued to all prosecution agencies upon consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board.(2) Beginning June 1, 2027, every agency statewide, at the direction of the department, shall begin transmitting its required data elements to the department. The transmission shall occur on a quarterly basis until June 1, 2028, after which data elements shall be transmitted on a monthly basis. The department may require any agency to transmit data to the department before the deadlines stated in this paragraph for quality control purposes, including to ensure data consistency, compliance with standardized formats as determined by the department, and to ensure the agencies are ready to fully comply with this section as required for their deadlines.(3) Beginning June 1, 2027, the department shall begin collecting data elements from all agencies statewide according to the timetable in paragraph (2). The department shall aggregate data elements for all agencies in order to publish this data from those agencies by June 1, 2028. This publication shall continue on a quarterly basis for one year, and then the publication shall occur on a monthly basis thereafter.(4) It shall be an express exception to any sealing of a case or expungement of a case, whether by court order or by operation of law, or any rule of confidentiality or rule otherwise prohibiting disclosure provided by law that all data, pursuant to this section, shall be provided by the agencies to the department.(e) Agencies shall collect and transmit to the department the following data elements in accordance with this section and under direction from the department. The department shall have discretion to resolve ambiguities in this subdivision consistent with the purposes of this section, including the development of uniform definitions for the required data elements. The department shall also have discretion to determine the form and format in which data elements shall be captured and transmitted.Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), for each case, the following data elements shall be gathered and published as described in this section. For purposes of this article, a case is defined as a collection of charges filed by an agency on a particular date to initiate a criminal prosecution for a felony or a misdemeanor. A case dismissed and later refiled shall only be counted as one case. The collection of charges filed by an agency against multiple defendants in a single charging document shall each be an individual case for each such defendant.(1) The court case number used by the court to identify a case. The court case number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency.(2) The Internal Case Number (ICN) assigned to each case by the Case Management System (CMS). This number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency. If the agency does not currently use an ICN, the agency shall create and apply an ICN as directed by the department.(3) Whether the case is pending, has concluded, is on appeal, or is inactive, such as when a defendant is in warrant status.(4) The ZIP Code where most of the acts comprising the crimes charged occurred.(5) The date of the crime. If multiple crime dates are alleged, the date of the crime shall be the earliest date alleged in the charging document. (6) The name and Originating Agency Identifier (ORI), as designated by the National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System, of the law enforcement agency that investigated the case for submission to the prosecutor.(7) The ZIP Code of the arrest.(8) The date of the arrest.(9) Each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation, referred by law enforcement, including a uniform description, statute number, and level, either felony or misdemeanor.(10) The date on which charges were filed, the case was discharged, or the case was returned for further investigation.(11) Each charge, enhancement, and special circumstance or special allegation filed by the agency in the initial charging document.(12) For each case declined to prosecute, each charge that the agency declined to prosecute.(13) The county in which the case was filed.(14) The date on which the defendant initially entered a plea to the charges.(15) The date on which the defendant first appeared in a case, whether or not an arraignment took place.(16) The date on which bail or bond was set by the court in open court and the amount of bail set.(17) The agency pretrial release recommendation for each case, as stated in open court, as described in standardized terms developed by the department.(18) The prosecution bail recommendation for each case stated in open court according to standardized terms developed by the department.(19) The court pretrial detention determination at arraignment as described in standardized terms developed by the department.(20) Whether the defendant posted bail.(21) The date of any release from custody, the reason for release, and the terms of that release. The department shall develop standardized terms for this data element.(22) The start and end date for every period of pretrial detention for a defendant in a case and the reason for that detention as described in standardized terms provided by the department.(23) The date of any amendments adding charges or enhancements to a charging document, including a complaint, indictment, or information.(24) The charges, enhancements, special circumstances, or special allegations added to a charging document by amendment.(25) The date on which the first plea bargain offer was made by the agency to each defendant. For purposes of this section, plea bargain offer is defined as the terms of resolution of a case made by the agency that are ultimately transmitted to the defendant by their counsel for consideration, which is commonly called a bona fide offer or, if the defendant is in propria persona, the first offer to resolve a case transmitted to the defendant on any given date.(26) The terms of the initial plea bargain offer communicated to the defendant or the defendants counsel. The department shall develop a standardized method to capture the terms of the initial plea bargain offer according to uniform definitions.(27) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for diversion. For purposes of this section, diversion is defined as a program, either as created and defined by state law or an agency, by which charges are reduced or dismissed as part of participation in alternatives to prosecution such as counseling, therapy, restorative justice principles, or periods of noncriminality.(28) Whether the defendant was offered a diversion program by the agency.(29) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for diversion as allowed by law, if such a motion was made.(30) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a diversion program.(31) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for diversion, if that request was made in open court, and the reason for the opposition, if given in open court, using standardized terms, including the following:(A) Public safety.(B) Criminal history.(C) Failure of the defendant to consent.(D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior diversion program terms.(E) Statutory ineligibility.(F) Discretion.(G) Other.(32) The type of diversion according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following: (A) Mental health diversion pursuant to Section 1001.36.(B) Veteran diversion pursuant to Section 1001.80.(C) Misdemeanor diversion pursuant to Section 1001.95.(D) Drug diversion pursuant to Section 1000.(E) Other diversion.(33) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for collaborative court. For purposes of this section, collaborative court is a program wherein the prosecution of the case is stayed in order to engage in any collaborative process, such as by the agency, the public defender, and the court, to address underlying issues such as chemical dependency or mental health issues.(34) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for collaborative court, if such a motion was made.(35) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a collaborative court program.(36) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for collaborative court, if that request was made in open court, and the reason, if given in open court, for the opposition, using standardized terms, including the following:(A) Public safety.(B) Criminal history.(C) Failure of the defendant to consent.(D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior collaborative court program terms.(E) Statutory ineligibility.(F) Discretion.(G) Other.(37) The type of collaborative court according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following:(A) Mental health collaborative court.(B) Veteran collaborative court.(C) Drug or DUI collaborative court.(D) Community or homeless collaborative court.(E) Other collaborative court.(38) The date on which a charge was resolved, whether by dismissal, acquittal, conviction, or other grounds.(39) The disposition of each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation. Specifically, whether the charge or enhancement was resolved by dismissal, acquittal or not true finding, or conviction. If conviction, whether the conviction was by plea or by trial.(40) For any special circumstance alleged in the charging document, whether the defendant was alleged to be the actual killer as defined by paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of Section 189.(41) The date a sentence was imposed by the court.(42) The sentence imposed by the court, including any restitution, fines, and period of incarceration imposed.(43) Whether or not the agency engaged in any postconviction resentencing, defined for purposes of this section as any resentencing where, after judgment and sentencing on a case, the agency revisited the sentence, including, but not limited to, proceedings under Section 1172.1, and the outcome of that resentencing.(44) Whether or not the agency engaged in any parole proceedings, the formal recommendation of the agency during that proceeding, and the outcome of that proceeding.(45) Whether or not the agency engaged in any commutation or pardon proceedings, the official recommendation of the agency for those proceedings, and the outcome of those proceedings.(46) Whether a motion was made by a party under Section 231.7 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the party making the motion, and the result of that motion.(47) Whether a criminal informant was used and whether that informant was used in a custodial or noncustodial setting. This paragraph shall apply only if the existence and nature of the informant was disclosed as part of the public proceedings of the case.(48) Whether competency proceedings were initiated under Section 1368, 1368.1, or 1369 and the result of those proceedings.(49) Whether the last attorney of record at the conclusion of the case was private, publicly retained, or whether the defendant was in propria persona.(50) Whether the defendant pled not guilty by reason of insanity.(51) Whether conservatorship proceedings were instituted.(52) For each defendant charged in a case, all of the following:(A) Their name.(B) The Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned by the department.(C) The date of birth.(D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency. If the agency does not currently use an anonymized identifier created by CMS, the agency shall create and apply an anonymized identifier as directed by the department.(E) The defendants age at the time of the crime.(F) The defendants race as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.(G) The source of the information regarding the defendants race. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants race, including, but not limited to, defendants advocate or record of arrests and prosecution.(H) The defendants ethnicity as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.(I) The source of the information regarding the defendants ethnicity. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants ethnicity.(J) Whether the defendant or their counsel has identified in open court or in a filing with the court that the defendant has a physical disability or a disability as described in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.(K) The type of disability so identified, if any.(L) The defendants gender.(M) Whether the defendant has disclosed to the prosecution that they identify as transgender, nonbinary, or intersex.(N) The defendants county of residence, if reflected in the court record, including, if the defendant is unhoused, an approximation of the county of residence as determined from direction by the department.(O) Whether the defendant was on probation at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(P) Whether the defendant was on parole at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(Q) Whether or not the defendant was required to register as a sex offender under Sections 290 to 290.024, inclusive, at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(53) For each victim, all of the following:(A) Whether there was a victim identified.(B) The race.(C) The ethnicity.(D) The age at the time of the crime.(E) Gender identification.(F) Whether the victim made a request to the court to drop the charges or indicated to the court that they would not be willing to testify or that they would be willing to testify.(54) For each agency or division, if only select divisions perform criminal prosecution within an agency, all of the following data shall be reported by July 1 each year:(A) The number of full-time or full-time equivalent attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.(B) The number of part-time attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.(C) The number of investigators employed by the office as of the reporting date.(D) The number of personnel dedicated to providing victim services employed by the office as of the reporting date.(E) The average annual felony caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.(F) The average annual misdemeanor caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.(G) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of felony cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.(H) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of misdemeanor cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.(I) The number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit contacted, and number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit provided services to during the reporting period. For purposes of this section, services are defined as tangible resources or assistance with recovering tangible resources including, but not limited to, seeking reimbursement from the California Victim Compensation Board, residence relocation, or application for a U visa. Services do not include informing victims of court dates and relaying case information or offers to plea a case.(f) (1) All of the following data shall be collected by the department from the appropriate division within the department with respect to each defendant in the cases identified and reported by a prosecuting agency pursuant to subdivision (e):(A) The number of prior felony convictions and statutory charges comprising prior felony convictions.(B) The number of prior felony arrests.(C) The number of misdemeanor arrests and convictions and statutory charges comprising prior misdemeanor convictions.(D) Whether an appeal was filed following the disposition of the case, the basis for the appeal, whether the appeal was contested by the prosecuting agency, and the resolution of the appeal.(2) The division shall include the Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned to each defendant with the data provided in paragraph (1).(g) (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and (3) and notwithstanding any other law, the department shall publish the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f).(2) The following information shall not be published:(A) The defendants name.(B) The defendants date of birth.(C) The criminal identification and information/state identification number assigned to each defendant.(D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency.(E) The ICN assigned to each case by the agency CMS.(F) The court case number used by the court to identify a case.(G) Any other personally identifying information or information that could reasonably lead to reidentification of an individual charged with a crime or an individual who is the victim of a crime, as defined by the department in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board through regulations. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop protocols and regulations to protect personally identifying information and privacy while maximizing the data available to the public.(3) Dissemination of data under subparagraph (Q) of paragraph (52) of subdivision (e) shall comply with Sections 290.45, 290.46, and 290.021.(h) Notwithstanding paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), subdivision (g) of Section 11105, and subdivision (a) of Section 13305, every bona fide research institution concerned with the quality of the criminal legal system may be provided with the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f), including the information described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), as required for the performance of its duties, including the conduct of research. The material identifying individuals shall only be provided for research and statistical activities and shall not be transferred, revealed, or used for purposes other than research or statistical activities. Reports or publications derived from this information shall not identify specific individuals. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop regulations consistent with this subdivision.
6882
6983 Article 9. Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act
7084
7185 Article 9. Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act
7286
7387 13370. (a) (1) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a workable system of criminal justice data transparency whereby law enforcement prosecution agencies will gather complete, accurate, and timely data in a uniform format, and make that data available to the public in a modern, open, electronic format that is machine-readable and readily accessible through an application program interface. In order that meaningful discussions can occur regarding criminal justice and its most challenging issues, including those regarding criminal caseloads, plea bargaining, race, mass incarceration, equity, and homelessness, the Legislature finds that it is an important state interest to implement a data collection, aggregation, and publishing process for criminal prosecutions to promote criminal justice data transparency. This data would be comprised of publishable statistics and other data from statewide prosecution offices. This section shall be referred to as the Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act, the Act, or JDATA.(2) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a reliable and robust methodology that is consistent county-to-county so that statewide data and trends may be accurately tracked. Further, the legislation shall set low technological and resource barriers so that every affected office may meaningfully participate to the fullest intent of this article.(3) The expediency and accuracy of the data is best served by the Department of Justice as a single data aggregator and repository unit. The participation of the department as the final point of collection, aggregation, and publishing of this data is more efficient, will ensure the uniformity and accuracy of the data, and, by providing the technological resources and aggregation and publication of all data, will allow offices that lack adequate technology or resources to comply with the mandate. As used in this paragraph, technological resources means providing the basic systems and support necessary to receive the case data described in this article in standard formats from prosecution agencies statewide and aggregate that data using appropriate means developed by the department, and then publish the data in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require, for example, on an internet website.(b) (1) The department shall have the following objectives and mandate: (A) Collection of the data described in subdivision (e), hereinafter referred to as data elements, within the timeframes described in this section from all state and local prosecutor offices that prosecute misdemeanors or felonies or both, including county district attorney offices, city attorney offices, and the Attorney General, hereinafter referred to as agencies. Collection of data elements includes providing cooperation and assistance to participating agencies and developing consistent and clear guidelines for how agencies are to define data elements transmitted to the department. The department shall develop consistent definitions and formats for data elements to ensure success of comparing metrics created using said data elements between jurisdictions.(B) Transmission of data elements, defined as the method designated by the department for the participating agency to provide collected data elements to the department.(C) Aggregation of data elements, defined as collecting data elements gathered from multiple agencies in such a way that they can support metrics, defined as the combination of data elements used to track outcomes on any given process or decision point, developed by the department, that may be compared between jurisdictions.(D) Development of metrics, defined as using industry-appropriate methods and technology and cooperation with participating agencies to create accurate, actionable, and digestible metrics using data elements submitted by the agencies. The methods implemented must ensure that the metrics developed can be compared between jurisdictions.(E) Consistent with subdivision (g), publication of metrics, defined as using appropriate technology, methods, and interface design to make metrics available to the public, which may include the use of web publishing, the use of interactive portals or other applications to not only display metrics, but to allow metrics to be compared and filtered so that each metric may be analyzed and dissected by multiple factors, including other metrics and filters including, but not limited to, defendant, victim, and case characteristics. This publication shall be made using a modern, open, and electronic format, such as comma-separated values (CSV) or similar file format, that will allow the user to download the data sets and conduct their own analyses. The public interface for metrics shall also make raw, case-level data available for download so that independent analyses can be conducted using the data. The department shall also ensure that personal identifying information is not published except as allowed by law, and the use of anonymized data may be employed for this purpose.(F) By October 1, 2023, the department shall establish the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board for the purpose of ensuring transparency, accountability, and equitable access to prosecutorial data. The primary responsibilities of the board shall be providing guidance to the department on any and all draft rules, regulations, policies, plans, reports, or other decisions made by the department in regard to this Act. The board shall include the following members: (i) The Attorney General, or their designee.(ii) The president of the California Public Defenders Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California Public Defenders Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(iii) The president of the California District Attorneys Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California District Attorneys Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(iv) An advisory committee member of the Prosecutors Alliance of California, or their designee, who shall consult with other advisory committee members and members of the Prosecutors Alliance of California to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.(v) The chairperson of the Committee on Revision of the Penal Code, or their designee.(vi) A university professor who specializes in criminal justice data.(vii) A data scientist who specializes in criminal justice data.(viii) Two representatives of human or civil rights tax-exempt organizations who specialize in civil or human rights.(ix) Two representatives of community organizations who specialize in civil or human rights and criminal justice.(x) Two representatives of tax-exempt organizations who specialize in criminal justice data.(xi) Two individuals who have direct experience being prosecuted in the states criminal legal system.(xii) Two individuals who have direct experience being a victim of a crime or the spouse, parents, children, siblings, or guardian of a crime victim, if the victim is deceased, a minor, or physically or psychologically incapacitated.(xiii) Two representatives of organizations that provide services to crime victims.(G) (i) By July 1, 2024, the department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop a data dictionary that includes standardized definitions for each data element in subdivision (e) so that data elements transmitted to the department are uniform across all jurisdictions, taking into account any technical and practical limitations on the collection of that data element. (ii) Upon completion of the data dictionary, the department shall share the data dictionary with all agencies statewide.(2) The department shall assess and develop its capabilities in carrying out its functions using the following guidelines. The department shall do all of the following in carrying out its objectives and mandate:(A) Use standardized practices in developing web pages, using what is commonly referred to as open web standards or standard best practices such as those recommendations published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) or those published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).(B) Employ appropriate security measures and best practices for data elements transmitted and stored to account for personal identifying information and other sensitive information as governed by state and federal law. These processes shall include the remote backing-up of all data, including data elements and metrics, as well as the logging and detection of data-related events.(C) Use technology that is scalable so as to accommodate large increases in volume of data.(D) Staff personnel familiar with web user-interface coding and web service coding.(E) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data available, including raw data elements and metrics, in a machine readable format with open format, nonproprietary file formats that will allow for download of complete data sets.(F) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data, including data elements and metrics, available in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require using modern web Application Programming Interfaces that allow access to data directly through programs in addition to internet website publishing.(G) Assess and create processes to collect, aggregate, and validate data elements transmitted by an agency, to include methods to identify duplicate, overlapping, or missing data and processes for the rejection and retransmission of invalid data.(H) Test data quality to facilitate the dissemination of accurate, valid, reliable, and complete criminal justice data.(I) Develop methods for archiving data, retrieving archived data, and data editing.(c) (1) The operation of this article is contingent upon an adequate appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute for purposes of this article.(2) Any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall be used only for the purpose of administering this article.(3) The recipient of any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall provide a full public accounting of all of those funds.(d) (1) Beginning March 1, 2027, every agency statewide shall collect every data element in subdivision (e) for cases in which a decision to reject charges or to initiate criminal proceedings by way of complaint or indictment has been made by that agency from that date forward. Each data element shall be collected according to the definitions provided in this section with any ambiguities to be resolved by the department in the data dictionary described in clause (i) of subparagraph (I) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) for uniform application statewide. Each data element shall be submitted in a format designated by the department to be the most appropriate and cost effective to carry out the objectives of this article. Any ambiguities regarding the substance or timing of the collection described in this paragraph shall be resolved by the department by letter guidelines issued to all prosecution agencies upon consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board.(2) Beginning June 1, 2027, every agency statewide, at the direction of the department, shall begin transmitting its required data elements to the department. The transmission shall occur on a quarterly basis until June 1, 2028, after which data elements shall be transmitted on a monthly basis. The department may require any agency to transmit data to the department before the deadlines stated in this paragraph for quality control purposes, including to ensure data consistency, compliance with standardized formats as determined by the department, and to ensure the agencies are ready to fully comply with this section as required for their deadlines.(3) Beginning June 1, 2027, the department shall begin collecting data elements from all agencies statewide according to the timetable in paragraph (2). The department shall aggregate data elements for all agencies in order to publish this data from those agencies by June 1, 2028. This publication shall continue on a quarterly basis for one year, and then the publication shall occur on a monthly basis thereafter.(4) It shall be an express exception to any sealing of a case or expungement of a case, whether by court order or by operation of law, or any rule of confidentiality or rule otherwise prohibiting disclosure provided by law that all data, pursuant to this section, shall be provided by the agencies to the department.(e) Agencies shall collect and transmit to the department the following data elements in accordance with this section and under direction from the department. The department shall have discretion to resolve ambiguities in this subdivision consistent with the purposes of this section, including the development of uniform definitions for the required data elements. The department shall also have discretion to determine the form and format in which data elements shall be captured and transmitted.Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), for each case, the following data elements shall be gathered and published as described in this section. For purposes of this article, a case is defined as a collection of charges filed by an agency on a particular date to initiate a criminal prosecution for a felony or a misdemeanor. A case dismissed and later refiled shall only be counted as one case. The collection of charges filed by an agency against multiple defendants in a single charging document shall each be an individual case for each such defendant.(1) The court case number used by the court to identify a case. The court case number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency.(2) The Internal Case Number (ICN) assigned to each case by the Case Management System (CMS). This number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency. If the agency does not currently use an ICN, the agency shall create and apply an ICN as directed by the department.(3) Whether the case is pending, has concluded, is on appeal, or is inactive, such as when a defendant is in warrant status.(4) The ZIP Code where most of the acts comprising the crimes charged occurred.(5) The date of the crime. If multiple crime dates are alleged, the date of the crime shall be the earliest date alleged in the charging document. (6) The name and Originating Agency Identifier (ORI), as designated by the National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System, of the law enforcement agency that investigated the case for submission to the prosecutor.(7) The ZIP Code of the arrest.(8) The date of the arrest.(9) Each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation, referred by law enforcement, including a uniform description, statute number, and level, either felony or misdemeanor.(10) The date on which charges were filed, the case was discharged, or the case was returned for further investigation.(11) Each charge, enhancement, and special circumstance or special allegation filed by the agency in the initial charging document.(12) For each case declined to prosecute, each charge that the agency declined to prosecute.(13) The county in which the case was filed.(14) The date on which the defendant initially entered a plea to the charges.(15) The date on which the defendant first appeared in a case, whether or not an arraignment took place.(16) The date on which bail or bond was set by the court in open court and the amount of bail set.(17) The agency pretrial release recommendation for each case, as stated in open court, as described in standardized terms developed by the department.(18) The prosecution bail recommendation for each case stated in open court according to standardized terms developed by the department.(19) The court pretrial detention determination at arraignment as described in standardized terms developed by the department.(20) Whether the defendant posted bail.(21) The date of any release from custody, the reason for release, and the terms of that release. The department shall develop standardized terms for this data element.(22) The start and end date for every period of pretrial detention for a defendant in a case and the reason for that detention as described in standardized terms provided by the department.(23) The date of any amendments adding charges or enhancements to a charging document, including a complaint, indictment, or information.(24) The charges, enhancements, special circumstances, or special allegations added to a charging document by amendment.(25) The date on which the first plea bargain offer was made by the agency to each defendant. For purposes of this section, plea bargain offer is defined as the terms of resolution of a case made by the agency that are ultimately transmitted to the defendant by their counsel for consideration, which is commonly called a bona fide offer or, if the defendant is in propria persona, the first offer to resolve a case transmitted to the defendant on any given date.(26) The terms of the initial plea bargain offer communicated to the defendant or the defendants counsel. The department shall develop a standardized method to capture the terms of the initial plea bargain offer according to uniform definitions.(27) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for diversion. For purposes of this section, diversion is defined as a program, either as created and defined by state law or an agency, by which charges are reduced or dismissed as part of participation in alternatives to prosecution such as counseling, therapy, restorative justice principles, or periods of noncriminality.(28) Whether the defendant was offered a diversion program by the agency.(29) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for diversion as allowed by law, if such a motion was made.(30) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a diversion program.(31) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for diversion, if that request was made in open court, and the reason for the opposition, if given in open court, using standardized terms, including the following:(A) Public safety.(B) Criminal history.(C) Failure of the defendant to consent.(D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior diversion program terms.(E) Statutory ineligibility.(F) Discretion.(G) Other.(32) The type of diversion according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following: (A) Mental health diversion pursuant to Section 1001.36.(B) Veteran diversion pursuant to Section 1001.80.(C) Misdemeanor diversion pursuant to Section 1001.95.(D) Drug diversion pursuant to Section 1000.(E) Other diversion.(33) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for collaborative court. For purposes of this section, collaborative court is a program wherein the prosecution of the case is stayed in order to engage in any collaborative process, such as by the agency, the public defender, and the court, to address underlying issues such as chemical dependency or mental health issues.(34) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for collaborative court, if such a motion was made.(35) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a collaborative court program.(36) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for collaborative court, if that request was made in open court, and the reason, if given in open court, for the opposition, using standardized terms, including the following:(A) Public safety.(B) Criminal history.(C) Failure of the defendant to consent.(D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior collaborative court program terms.(E) Statutory ineligibility.(F) Discretion.(G) Other.(37) The type of collaborative court according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following:(A) Mental health collaborative court.(B) Veteran collaborative court.(C) Drug or DUI collaborative court.(D) Community or homeless collaborative court.(E) Other collaborative court.(38) The date on which a charge was resolved, whether by dismissal, acquittal, conviction, or other grounds.(39) The disposition of each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation. Specifically, whether the charge or enhancement was resolved by dismissal, acquittal or not true finding, or conviction. If conviction, whether the conviction was by plea or by trial.(40) For any special circumstance alleged in the charging document, whether the defendant was alleged to be the actual killer as defined by paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of Section 189.(41) The date a sentence was imposed by the court.(42) The sentence imposed by the court, including any restitution, fines, and period of incarceration imposed.(43) Whether or not the agency engaged in any postconviction resentencing, defined for purposes of this section as any resentencing where, after judgment and sentencing on a case, the agency revisited the sentence, including, but not limited to, proceedings under Section 1172.1, and the outcome of that resentencing.(44) Whether or not the agency engaged in any parole proceedings, the formal recommendation of the agency during that proceeding, and the outcome of that proceeding.(45) Whether or not the agency engaged in any commutation or pardon proceedings, the official recommendation of the agency for those proceedings, and the outcome of those proceedings.(46) Whether a motion was made by a party under Section 231.7 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the party making the motion, and the result of that motion.(47) Whether a criminal informant was used and whether that informant was used in a custodial or noncustodial setting. This paragraph shall apply only if the existence and nature of the informant was disclosed as part of the public proceedings of the case.(48) Whether competency proceedings were initiated under Section 1368, 1368.1, or 1369 and the result of those proceedings.(49) Whether the last attorney of record at the conclusion of the case was private, publicly retained, or whether the defendant was in propria persona.(50) Whether the defendant pled not guilty by reason of insanity.(51) Whether conservatorship proceedings were instituted.(52) For each defendant charged in a case, all of the following:(A) Their name.(B) The Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned by the department.(C) The date of birth.(D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency. If the agency does not currently use an anonymized identifier created by CMS, the agency shall create and apply an anonymized identifier as directed by the department.(E) The defendants age at the time of the crime.(F) The defendants race as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.(G) The source of the information regarding the defendants race. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants race, including, but not limited to, defendants advocate or record of arrests and prosecution.(H) The defendants ethnicity as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.(I) The source of the information regarding the defendants ethnicity. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants ethnicity.(J) Whether the defendant or their counsel has identified in open court or in a filing with the court that the defendant has a physical disability or a disability as described in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.(K) The type of disability so identified, if any.(L) The defendants gender.(M) Whether the defendant has disclosed to the prosecution that they identify as transgender, nonbinary, or intersex.(N) The defendants county of residence, if reflected in the court record, including, if the defendant is unhoused, an approximation of the county of residence as determined from direction by the department.(O) Whether the defendant was on probation at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(P) Whether the defendant was on parole at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(Q) Whether or not the defendant was required to register as a sex offender under Sections 290 to 290.024, inclusive, at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.(53) For each victim, all of the following:(A) Whether there was a victim identified.(B) The race.(C) The ethnicity.(D) The age at the time of the crime.(E) Gender identification.(F) Whether the victim made a request to the court to drop the charges or indicated to the court that they would not be willing to testify or that they would be willing to testify.(54) For each agency or division, if only select divisions perform criminal prosecution within an agency, all of the following data shall be reported by July 1 each year:(A) The number of full-time or full-time equivalent attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.(B) The number of part-time attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.(C) The number of investigators employed by the office as of the reporting date.(D) The number of personnel dedicated to providing victim services employed by the office as of the reporting date.(E) The average annual felony caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.(F) The average annual misdemeanor caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.(G) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of felony cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.(H) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of misdemeanor cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.(I) The number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit contacted, and number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit provided services to during the reporting period. For purposes of this section, services are defined as tangible resources or assistance with recovering tangible resources including, but not limited to, seeking reimbursement from the California Victim Compensation Board, residence relocation, or application for a U visa. Services do not include informing victims of court dates and relaying case information or offers to plea a case.(f) (1) All of the following data shall be collected by the department from the appropriate division within the department with respect to each defendant in the cases identified and reported by a prosecuting agency pursuant to subdivision (e):(A) The number of prior felony convictions and statutory charges comprising prior felony convictions.(B) The number of prior felony arrests.(C) The number of misdemeanor arrests and convictions and statutory charges comprising prior misdemeanor convictions.(D) Whether an appeal was filed following the disposition of the case, the basis for the appeal, whether the appeal was contested by the prosecuting agency, and the resolution of the appeal.(2) The division shall include the Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned to each defendant with the data provided in paragraph (1).(g) (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and (3) and notwithstanding any other law, the department shall publish the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f).(2) The following information shall not be published:(A) The defendants name.(B) The defendants date of birth.(C) The criminal identification and information/state identification number assigned to each defendant.(D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency.(E) The ICN assigned to each case by the agency CMS.(F) The court case number used by the court to identify a case.(G) Any other personally identifying information or information that could reasonably lead to reidentification of an individual charged with a crime or an individual who is the victim of a crime, as defined by the department in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board through regulations. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop protocols and regulations to protect personally identifying information and privacy while maximizing the data available to the public.(3) Dissemination of data under subparagraph (Q) of paragraph (52) of subdivision (e) shall comply with Sections 290.45, 290.46, and 290.021.(h) Notwithstanding paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), subdivision (g) of Section 11105, and subdivision (a) of Section 13305, every bona fide research institution concerned with the quality of the criminal legal system may be provided with the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f), including the information described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), as required for the performance of its duties, including the conduct of research. The material identifying individuals shall only be provided for research and statistical activities and shall not be transferred, revealed, or used for purposes other than research or statistical activities. Reports or publications derived from this information shall not identify specific individuals. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop regulations consistent with this subdivision.
7488
7589
7690
7791 13370. (a) (1) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a workable system of criminal justice data transparency whereby law enforcement prosecution agencies will gather complete, accurate, and timely data in a uniform format, and make that data available to the public in a modern, open, electronic format that is machine-readable and readily accessible through an application program interface. In order that meaningful discussions can occur regarding criminal justice and its most challenging issues, including those regarding criminal caseloads, plea bargaining, race, mass incarceration, equity, and homelessness, the Legislature finds that it is an important state interest to implement a data collection, aggregation, and publishing process for criminal prosecutions to promote criminal justice data transparency. This data would be comprised of publishable statistics and other data from statewide prosecution offices. This section shall be referred to as the Justice Data Accountability and Transparency Act, the Act, or JDATA.
7892
7993 (2) It is the intent of the Legislature to create a reliable and robust methodology that is consistent county-to-county so that statewide data and trends may be accurately tracked. Further, the legislation shall set low technological and resource barriers so that every affected office may meaningfully participate to the fullest intent of this article.
8094
8195 (3) The expediency and accuracy of the data is best served by the Department of Justice as a single data aggregator and repository unit. The participation of the department as the final point of collection, aggregation, and publishing of this data is more efficient, will ensure the uniformity and accuracy of the data, and, by providing the technological resources and aggregation and publication of all data, will allow offices that lack adequate technology or resources to comply with the mandate. As used in this paragraph, technological resources means providing the basic systems and support necessary to receive the case data described in this article in standard formats from prosecution agencies statewide and aggregate that data using appropriate means developed by the department, and then publish the data in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require, for example, on an internet website.
8296
8397 (b) (1) The department shall have the following objectives and mandate:
8498
8599 (A) Collection of the data described in subdivision (e), hereinafter referred to as data elements, within the timeframes described in this section from all state and local prosecutor offices that prosecute misdemeanors or felonies or both, including county district attorney offices, city attorney offices, and the Attorney General, hereinafter referred to as agencies. Collection of data elements includes providing cooperation and assistance to participating agencies and developing consistent and clear guidelines for how agencies are to define data elements transmitted to the department. The department shall develop consistent definitions and formats for data elements to ensure success of comparing metrics created using said data elements between jurisdictions.
86100
87101 (B) Transmission of data elements, defined as the method designated by the department for the participating agency to provide collected data elements to the department.
88102
89103 (C) Aggregation of data elements, defined as collecting data elements gathered from multiple agencies in such a way that they can support metrics, defined as the combination of data elements used to track outcomes on any given process or decision point, developed by the department, that may be compared between jurisdictions.
90104
91105 (D) Development of metrics, defined as using industry-appropriate methods and technology and cooperation with participating agencies to create accurate, actionable, and digestible metrics using data elements submitted by the agencies. The methods implemented must ensure that the metrics developed can be compared between jurisdictions.
92106
93107 (E) Consistent with subdivision (g), publication of metrics, defined as using appropriate technology, methods, and interface design to make metrics available to the public, which may include the use of web publishing, the use of interactive portals or other applications to not only display metrics, but to allow metrics to be compared and filtered so that each metric may be analyzed and dissected by multiple factors, including other metrics and filters including, but not limited to, defendant, victim, and case characteristics. This publication shall be made using a modern, open, and electronic format, such as comma-separated values (CSV) or similar file format, that will allow the user to download the data sets and conduct their own analyses. The public interface for metrics shall also make raw, case-level data available for download so that independent analyses can be conducted using the data. The department shall also ensure that personal identifying information is not published except as allowed by law, and the use of anonymized data may be employed for this purpose.
94108
95109 (F) By October 1, 2023, the department shall establish the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board for the purpose of ensuring transparency, accountability, and equitable access to prosecutorial data. The primary responsibilities of the board shall be providing guidance to the department on any and all draft rules, regulations, policies, plans, reports, or other decisions made by the department in regard to this Act. The board shall include the following members:
96110
97111 (i) The Attorney General, or their designee.
98112
99113 (ii) The president of the California Public Defenders Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California Public Defenders Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.
100114
101115 (iii) The president of the California District Attorneys Association, or their designee, who shall consult with other members of the California District Attorneys Association to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.
102116
103117 (iv) An advisory committee member of the Prosecutors Alliance of California, or their designee, who shall consult with other advisory committee members and members of the Prosecutors Alliance of California to represent the geographic, population, and county size diversity of the state.
104118
105119 (v) The chairperson of the Committee on Revision of the Penal Code, or their designee.
106120
107121 (vi) A university professor who specializes in criminal justice data.
108122
109123 (vii) A data scientist who specializes in criminal justice data.
110124
111125 (viii) Two representatives of human or civil rights tax-exempt organizations who specialize in civil or human rights.
112126
113127 (ix) Two representatives of community organizations who specialize in civil or human rights and criminal justice.
114128
115129 (x) Two representatives of tax-exempt organizations who specialize in criminal justice data.
116130
117131 (xi) Two individuals who have direct experience being prosecuted in the states criminal legal system.
118132
119133 (xii) Two individuals who have direct experience being a victim of a crime or the spouse, parents, children, siblings, or guardian of a crime victim, if the victim is deceased, a minor, or physically or psychologically incapacitated.
120134
121135 (xiii) Two representatives of organizations that provide services to crime victims.
122136
123137 (G) (i) By July 1, 2024, the department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop a data dictionary that includes standardized definitions for each data element in subdivision (e) so that data elements transmitted to the department are uniform across all jurisdictions, taking into account any technical and practical limitations on the collection of that data element.
124138
125139 (ii) Upon completion of the data dictionary, the department shall share the data dictionary with all agencies statewide.
126140
127141 (2) The department shall assess and develop its capabilities in carrying out its functions using the following guidelines. The department shall do all of the following in carrying out its objectives and mandate:
128142
129143 (A) Use standardized practices in developing web pages, using what is commonly referred to as open web standards or standard best practices such as those recommendations published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) or those published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).
130144
131145 (B) Employ appropriate security measures and best practices for data elements transmitted and stored to account for personal identifying information and other sensitive information as governed by state and federal law. These processes shall include the remote backing-up of all data, including data elements and metrics, as well as the logging and detection of data-related events.
132146
133147 (C) Use technology that is scalable so as to accommodate large increases in volume of data.
134148
135149 (D) Staff personnel familiar with web user-interface coding and web service coding.
136150
137151 (E) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data available, including raw data elements and metrics, in a machine readable format with open format, nonproprietary file formats that will allow for download of complete data sets.
138152
139153 (F) Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), make all data, including data elements and metrics, available in a format that will allow users to easily navigate and access the data they require using modern web Application Programming Interfaces that allow access to data directly through programs in addition to internet website publishing.
140154
141155 (G) Assess and create processes to collect, aggregate, and validate data elements transmitted by an agency, to include methods to identify duplicate, overlapping, or missing data and processes for the rejection and retransmission of invalid data.
142156
143157 (H) Test data quality to facilitate the dissemination of accurate, valid, reliable, and complete criminal justice data.
144158
145159 (I) Develop methods for archiving data, retrieving archived data, and data editing.
146160
147161 (c) (1) The operation of this article is contingent upon an adequate appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act or another statute for purposes of this article.
148162
149163 (2) Any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall be used only for the purpose of administering this article.
150164
151165 (3) The recipient of any funds disbursed to effectuate this article shall provide a full public accounting of all of those funds.
152166
153167 (d) (1) Beginning March 1, 2027, every agency statewide shall collect every data element in subdivision (e) for cases in which a decision to reject charges or to initiate criminal proceedings by way of complaint or indictment has been made by that agency from that date forward. Each data element shall be collected according to the definitions provided in this section with any ambiguities to be resolved by the department in the data dictionary described in clause (i) of subparagraph (I) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) for uniform application statewide. Each data element shall be submitted in a format designated by the department to be the most appropriate and cost effective to carry out the objectives of this article. Any ambiguities regarding the substance or timing of the collection described in this paragraph shall be resolved by the department by letter guidelines issued to all prosecution agencies upon consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board.
154168
155169 (2) Beginning June 1, 2027, every agency statewide, at the direction of the department, shall begin transmitting its required data elements to the department. The transmission shall occur on a quarterly basis until June 1, 2028, after which data elements shall be transmitted on a monthly basis. The department may require any agency to transmit data to the department before the deadlines stated in this paragraph for quality control purposes, including to ensure data consistency, compliance with standardized formats as determined by the department, and to ensure the agencies are ready to fully comply with this section as required for their deadlines.
156170
157171 (3) Beginning June 1, 2027, the department shall begin collecting data elements from all agencies statewide according to the timetable in paragraph (2). The department shall aggregate data elements for all agencies in order to publish this data from those agencies by June 1, 2028. This publication shall continue on a quarterly basis for one year, and then the publication shall occur on a monthly basis thereafter.
158172
159173 (4) It shall be an express exception to any sealing of a case or expungement of a case, whether by court order or by operation of law, or any rule of confidentiality or rule otherwise prohibiting disclosure provided by law that all data, pursuant to this section, shall be provided by the agencies to the department.
160174
161175 (e) Agencies shall collect and transmit to the department the following data elements in accordance with this section and under direction from the department. The department shall have discretion to resolve ambiguities in this subdivision consistent with the purposes of this section, including the development of uniform definitions for the required data elements. The department shall also have discretion to determine the form and format in which data elements shall be captured and transmitted.
162176
163177 Except as provided in subdivisions (g) and (h), for each case, the following data elements shall be gathered and published as described in this section. For purposes of this article, a case is defined as a collection of charges filed by an agency on a particular date to initiate a criminal prosecution for a felony or a misdemeanor. A case dismissed and later refiled shall only be counted as one case. The collection of charges filed by an agency against multiple defendants in a single charging document shall each be an individual case for each such defendant.
164178
165179 (1) The court case number used by the court to identify a case. The court case number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency.
166180
167181 (2) The Internal Case Number (ICN) assigned to each case by the Case Management System (CMS). This number shall be assigned to each case and charge within a case prosecuted by the agency. If the agency does not currently use an ICN, the agency shall create and apply an ICN as directed by the department.
168182
169183 (3) Whether the case is pending, has concluded, is on appeal, or is inactive, such as when a defendant is in warrant status.
170184
171185 (4) The ZIP Code where most of the acts comprising the crimes charged occurred.
172186
173187 (5) The date of the crime. If multiple crime dates are alleged, the date of the crime shall be the earliest date alleged in the charging document.
174188
175189 (6) The name and Originating Agency Identifier (ORI), as designated by the National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System, of the law enforcement agency that investigated the case for submission to the prosecutor.
176190
177191 (7) The ZIP Code of the arrest.
178192
179193 (8) The date of the arrest.
180194
181195 (9) Each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation, referred by law enforcement, including a uniform description, statute number, and level, either felony or misdemeanor.
182196
183197 (10) The date on which charges were filed, the case was discharged, or the case was returned for further investigation.
184198
185199 (11) Each charge, enhancement, and special circumstance or special allegation filed by the agency in the initial charging document.
186200
187201 (12) For each case declined to prosecute, each charge that the agency declined to prosecute.
188202
189203 (13) The county in which the case was filed.
190204
191205 (14) The date on which the defendant initially entered a plea to the charges.
192206
193207 (15) The date on which the defendant first appeared in a case, whether or not an arraignment took place.
194208
195209 (16) The date on which bail or bond was set by the court in open court and the amount of bail set.
196210
197211 (17) The agency pretrial release recommendation for each case, as stated in open court, as described in standardized terms developed by the department.
198212
199213 (18) The prosecution bail recommendation for each case stated in open court according to standardized terms developed by the department.
200214
201215 (19) The court pretrial detention determination at arraignment as described in standardized terms developed by the department.
202216
203217 (20) Whether the defendant posted bail.
204218
205219 (21) The date of any release from custody, the reason for release, and the terms of that release. The department shall develop standardized terms for this data element.
206220
207221 (22) The start and end date for every period of pretrial detention for a defendant in a case and the reason for that detention as described in standardized terms provided by the department.
208222
209223 (23) The date of any amendments adding charges or enhancements to a charging document, including a complaint, indictment, or information.
210224
211225 (24) The charges, enhancements, special circumstances, or special allegations added to a charging document by amendment.
212226
213227 (25) The date on which the first plea bargain offer was made by the agency to each defendant. For purposes of this section, plea bargain offer is defined as the terms of resolution of a case made by the agency that are ultimately transmitted to the defendant by their counsel for consideration, which is commonly called a bona fide offer or, if the defendant is in propria persona, the first offer to resolve a case transmitted to the defendant on any given date.
214228
215229 (26) The terms of the initial plea bargain offer communicated to the defendant or the defendants counsel. The department shall develop a standardized method to capture the terms of the initial plea bargain offer according to uniform definitions.
216230
217231 (27) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for diversion. For purposes of this section, diversion is defined as a program, either as created and defined by state law or an agency, by which charges are reduced or dismissed as part of participation in alternatives to prosecution such as counseling, therapy, restorative justice principles, or periods of noncriminality.
218232
219233 (28) Whether the defendant was offered a diversion program by the agency.
220234
221235 (29) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for diversion as allowed by law, if such a motion was made.
222236
223237 (30) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a diversion program.
224238
225239 (31) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for diversion, if that request was made in open court, and the reason for the opposition, if given in open court, using standardized terms, including the following:
226240
227241 (A) Public safety.
228242
229243 (B) Criminal history.
230244
231245 (C) Failure of the defendant to consent.
232246
233247 (D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior diversion program terms.
234248
235249 (E) Statutory ineligibility.
236250
237251 (F) Discretion.
238252
239253 (G) Other.
240254
241255 (32) The type of diversion according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following:
242256
243257 (A) Mental health diversion pursuant to Section 1001.36.
244258
245259 (B) Veteran diversion pursuant to Section 1001.80.
246260
247261 (C) Misdemeanor diversion pursuant to Section 1001.95.
248262
249263 (D) Drug diversion pursuant to Section 1000.
250264
251265 (E) Other diversion.
252266
253267 (33) Whether the prosecutor determined that the defendant was eligible for collaborative court. For purposes of this section, collaborative court is a program wherein the prosecution of the case is stayed in order to engage in any collaborative process, such as by the agency, the public defender, and the court, to address underlying issues such as chemical dependency or mental health issues.
254268
255269 (34) Whether the court granted or denied a motion for collaborative court, if such a motion was made.
256270
257271 (35) Whether the defendant agreed to participate in a collaborative court program.
258272
259273 (36) Whether the agency opposed the defendants request for collaborative court, if that request was made in open court, and the reason, if given in open court, for the opposition, using standardized terms, including the following:
260274
261275 (A) Public safety.
262276
263277 (B) Criminal history.
264278
265279 (C) Failure of the defendant to consent.
266280
267281 (D) Failure of the defendant to comply with current or prior collaborative court program terms.
268282
269283 (E) Statutory ineligibility.
270284
271285 (F) Discretion.
272286
273287 (G) Other.
274288
275289 (37) The type of collaborative court according to standardized terms to be developed by the department, including terms to describe each of the following:
276290
277291 (A) Mental health collaborative court.
278292
279293 (B) Veteran collaborative court.
280294
281295 (C) Drug or DUI collaborative court.
282296
283297 (D) Community or homeless collaborative court.
284298
285299 (E) Other collaborative court.
286300
287301 (38) The date on which a charge was resolved, whether by dismissal, acquittal, conviction, or other grounds.
288302
289303 (39) The disposition of each charge and enhancement, including any special circumstance or special allegation. Specifically, whether the charge or enhancement was resolved by dismissal, acquittal or not true finding, or conviction. If conviction, whether the conviction was by plea or by trial.
290304
291305 (40) For any special circumstance alleged in the charging document, whether the defendant was alleged to be the actual killer as defined by paragraph (1) of subdivision (e) of Section 189.
292306
293307 (41) The date a sentence was imposed by the court.
294308
295309 (42) The sentence imposed by the court, including any restitution, fines, and period of incarceration imposed.
296310
297311 (43) Whether or not the agency engaged in any postconviction resentencing, defined for purposes of this section as any resentencing where, after judgment and sentencing on a case, the agency revisited the sentence, including, but not limited to, proceedings under Section 1172.1, and the outcome of that resentencing.
298312
299313 (44) Whether or not the agency engaged in any parole proceedings, the formal recommendation of the agency during that proceeding, and the outcome of that proceeding.
300314
301315 (45) Whether or not the agency engaged in any commutation or pardon proceedings, the official recommendation of the agency for those proceedings, and the outcome of those proceedings.
302316
303317 (46) Whether a motion was made by a party under Section 231.7 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the party making the motion, and the result of that motion.
304318
305319 (47) Whether a criminal informant was used and whether that informant was used in a custodial or noncustodial setting. This paragraph shall apply only if the existence and nature of the informant was disclosed as part of the public proceedings of the case.
306320
307321 (48) Whether competency proceedings were initiated under Section 1368, 1368.1, or 1369 and the result of those proceedings.
308322
309323 (49) Whether the last attorney of record at the conclusion of the case was private, publicly retained, or whether the defendant was in propria persona.
310324
311325 (50) Whether the defendant pled not guilty by reason of insanity.
312326
313327 (51) Whether conservatorship proceedings were instituted.
314328
315329 (52) For each defendant charged in a case, all of the following:
316330
317331 (A) Their name.
318332
319333 (B) The Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned by the department.
320334
321335 (C) The date of birth.
322336
323337 (D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency. If the agency does not currently use an anonymized identifier created by CMS, the agency shall create and apply an anonymized identifier as directed by the department.
324338
325339 (E) The defendants age at the time of the crime.
326340
327341 (F) The defendants race as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.
328342
329343 (G) The source of the information regarding the defendants race. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants race, including, but not limited to, defendants advocate or record of arrests and prosecution.
330344
331345 (H) The defendants ethnicity as determined according to standardized definitions developed by the department.
332346
333347 (I) The source of the information regarding the defendants ethnicity. The department shall develop a standardized list of sources of information regarding a defendants ethnicity.
334348
335349 (J) Whether the defendant or their counsel has identified in open court or in a filing with the court that the defendant has a physical disability or a disability as described in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.
336350
337351 (K) The type of disability so identified, if any.
338352
339353 (L) The defendants gender.
340354
341355 (M) Whether the defendant has disclosed to the prosecution that they identify as transgender, nonbinary, or intersex.
342356
343357 (N) The defendants county of residence, if reflected in the court record, including, if the defendant is unhoused, an approximation of the county of residence as determined from direction by the department.
344358
345359 (O) Whether the defendant was on probation at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.
346360
347361 (P) Whether the defendant was on parole at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.
348362
349363 (Q) Whether or not the defendant was required to register as a sex offender under Sections 290 to 290.024, inclusive, at the time the acts comprising the crime charged occurred.
350364
351365 (53) For each victim, all of the following:
352366
353367 (A) Whether there was a victim identified.
354368
355369 (B) The race.
356370
357371 (C) The ethnicity.
358372
359373 (D) The age at the time of the crime.
360374
361375 (E) Gender identification.
362376
363377 (F) Whether the victim made a request to the court to drop the charges or indicated to the court that they would not be willing to testify or that they would be willing to testify.
364378
365379 (54) For each agency or division, if only select divisions perform criminal prosecution within an agency, all of the following data shall be reported by July 1 each year:
366380
367381 (A) The number of full-time or full-time equivalent attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.
368382
369383 (B) The number of part-time attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads as of the reporting date.
370384
371385 (C) The number of investigators employed by the office as of the reporting date.
372386
373387 (D) The number of personnel dedicated to providing victim services employed by the office as of the reporting date.
374388
375389 (E) The average annual felony caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.
376390
377391 (F) The average annual misdemeanor caseload for attorneys who carry nonappellate adult criminal caseloads for the preceding calendar year.
378392
379393 (G) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of felony cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.
380394
381395 (H) The office limits, if any, regarding the number of misdemeanor cases a single attorney can carry over a one-year period.
382396
383397 (I) The number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit contacted, and number of victims the prosecutors victims services unit provided services to during the reporting period. For purposes of this section, services are defined as tangible resources or assistance with recovering tangible resources including, but not limited to, seeking reimbursement from the California Victim Compensation Board, residence relocation, or application for a U visa. Services do not include informing victims of court dates and relaying case information or offers to plea a case.
384398
385399 (f) (1) All of the following data shall be collected by the department from the appropriate division within the department with respect to each defendant in the cases identified and reported by a prosecuting agency pursuant to subdivision (e):
386400
387401 (A) The number of prior felony convictions and statutory charges comprising prior felony convictions.
388402
389403 (B) The number of prior felony arrests.
390404
391405 (C) The number of misdemeanor arrests and convictions and statutory charges comprising prior misdemeanor convictions.
392406
393407 (D) Whether an appeal was filed following the disposition of the case, the basis for the appeal, whether the appeal was contested by the prosecuting agency, and the resolution of the appeal.
394408
395409 (2) The division shall include the Criminal Identification and Information/State Identification number assigned to each defendant with the data provided in paragraph (1).
396410
397411 (g) (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and (3) and notwithstanding any other law, the department shall publish the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f).
398412
399413 (2) The following information shall not be published:
400414
401415 (A) The defendants name.
402416
403417 (B) The defendants date of birth.
404418
405419 (C) The criminal identification and information/state identification number assigned to each defendant.
406420
407421 (D) The defendants anonymized identifier created by CMS within the agency.
408422
409423 (E) The ICN assigned to each case by the agency CMS.
410424
411425 (F) The court case number used by the court to identify a case.
412426
413427 (G) Any other personally identifying information or information that could reasonably lead to reidentification of an individual charged with a crime or an individual who is the victim of a crime, as defined by the department in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board through regulations. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop protocols and regulations to protect personally identifying information and privacy while maximizing the data available to the public.
414428
415429 (3) Dissemination of data under subparagraph (Q) of paragraph (52) of subdivision (e) shall comply with Sections 290.45, 290.46, and 290.021.
416430
417431 (h) Notwithstanding paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), subdivision (g) of Section 11105, and subdivision (a) of Section 13305, every bona fide research institution concerned with the quality of the criminal legal system may be provided with the information contained in the data elements described in subdivisions (e) and (f), including the information described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (g), as required for the performance of its duties, including the conduct of research. The material identifying individuals shall only be provided for research and statistical activities and shall not be transferred, revealed, or used for purposes other than research or statistical activities. Reports or publications derived from this information shall not identify specific individuals. The department, in consultation with the Prosecutorial Transparency Advisory Board, shall develop regulations consistent with this subdivision.
418432
419433 SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 of this act, which adds Section 13370 to the Penal Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:The provisions set forth in Section 1 further the need to protect the privacy of individuals arrested for and prosecuted for crimes while balancing the publics right to access.
420434
421435 SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 of this act, which adds Section 13370 to the Penal Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:The provisions set forth in Section 1 further the need to protect the privacy of individuals arrested for and prosecuted for crimes while balancing the publics right to access.
422436
423437 SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares that Section 1 of this act, which adds Section 13370 to the Penal Code, imposes a limitation on the publics right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:
424438
425439 ### SEC. 2.
426440
427441 The provisions set forth in Section 1 further the need to protect the privacy of individuals arrested for and prosecuted for crimes while balancing the publics right to access.
428442
429443 SEC. 3. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
430444
431445 SEC. 3. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
432446
433447 SEC. 3. If the Commission on State Mandates determines that this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
434448
435449 ### SEC. 3.