What will be the outcome of the first high-profile case under Proposition 36 in San Francisco by the end of 2025?
Conviction • 25%
Acquittal • 25%
Plea deal • 25%
Case dropped • 25%
San Francisco court case records and news reports
California's Proposition 36, Approved by 69% Majority, Toughens Penalties for Repeat Theft and Drug Crimes in San Francisco
Dec 20, 2024, 02:59 PM
Proposition 36, which increases penalties for certain theft and drug crimes, went into effect in California on December 18, 2024. The measure, approved by a 69% majority of voters in November, aims to address retail theft and drug addiction by turning some misdemeanors into felonies, particularly for repeat offenders. It also allows for longer sentences of up to three years for group crimes and drug sales based on quantity. The law has led to immediate action, with arrests for shoplifting and drug-related offenses being reported across the state. In San Francisco, the first charges under Prop 36 were filed against Martinez Guillory for drug possession and sales with a 9mm Glock firearm, marking the use of new legal tools to combat drug dealing in the city's Tenderloin neighborhood, where he was found with heroin and cocaine.
View original story
50 to 100 • 25%
101 to 200 • 25%
More than 200 • 25%
Less than 50 • 25%
Conviction with standard penalties • 25%
Acquittal • 25%
Case dismissed • 25%
Conviction with enhanced penalties • 25%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
Other • 25%
Organized retail crime • 25%
Retail theft • 25%
Drug-related crimes • 25%
Decrease in crime rate • 25%
Mixed results • 25%
Increase in crime rate • 25%
No significant change • 25%
Convicted on all charges • 25%
Convicted on some charges • 25%
Acquitted on all charges • 25%
Mistrial declared • 25%
Convicted on some charges • 25%
Mistrial declared • 25%
Mistrial or hung jury • 25%
Acquitted on all charges • 25%
Convicted on all charges • 25%
Not guilty • 25%
Guilty of assault • 25%
Guilty of attempted murder • 25%
Case dismissed • 25%
Broader scope • 25%
Increased penalties • 25%
No amendments • 25%
Reduced penalties • 25%
Acquitted on all charges • 25%
Mistrial or case unresolved • 25%
Convicted on all charges • 25%
Convicted on some charges • 25%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
No change in support • 25%
Insufficient data • 25%
Increase in support • 25%
Decrease in support • 25%