成人X站

JASON RANTZ

Rantz: New WA Supreme Court rule endangers our lives in the name of equity

May 1, 2022, 6:33 PM | Updated: May 2, 2022, 3:44 pm

(Getty Images)...

(Getty Images)

(Getty Images)

The Washington State Supreme Court is set to make a sweeping change to how it handles juvenile criminal records. Their move endangers the lives of every Washingtonian, gives a pass to dangerous juvenile criminals, and it stifles a free press, all in the name of equity.

On Tuesday, May 3, or discussion, the Supreme Court will stop using the full names of juvenile criminals and suspects, instead relying on initials and date of birth. The implications of this change are sweeping.

This means, in part, that juvenile records will not be properly filed with law enforcement, summons will not be delivered to juveniles, the state will be out of compliance with the National Instant Criminal Background Check System, and future juveniles with the same birthdate and initials will have to prove they’re not the criminal juvenile. As worrisome, the media will not be able to cover important public safety stories or hold judges accountable for their mishandling of cases.

This rule change is part of the Court’s commitment to a contrived equity movement that treats criminals better than their victims. And all of Washington loses if this radical change goes into effect.

Rantz: Public defender charged for obstructing Seattle police at bar, smelled of alcohol

Rule change intentionally kept quiet?

Activists with the Office of Public Defense and the Minority & Justice Commission complain that juvenile criminals, who are “disproportionately” black, are unfairly impacted for life when they enter the criminal justice system. Their goal is to protect juvenile criminals from repercussions purely because of the criminal’s skin color.

Instead of even offering meaningful debate, the Supreme Court only opened the proposed rule change up for public comment. Virtually no one in the public, or the media, knew about this or participated.

Nevertheless, Chief Justice Steven Gonz谩lez was joined by justices Charles Johnson, Debra Stephens, Susan Owens, Sheryl Gordon McCloud, Mary Yu, G. Helen Whitener, and Barbara Madsen adopted the rule on March 31.

Why was there no public debate? The Supreme Court likely didn’t want to deal with any public pushback.聽But those working in the criminal justice system are sounding alarms about the implications.

This move is equitably dangerous

A coalition of ten statewide agencies, associations, and industry groups sent letters to the Supreme Court imploring them to pause implementation of this new rule. The groups include Superior Court Judges鈥 Association, WA Assn of Prosecuting Attorneys, Washington State Patrol, and WA State Association of Broadcasters.

Among their many concerns:

RCW 10.97.045 requires every court or criminal justice agency to furnish disposition data to the Washington State Patrol (WSP) and the law enforcement agency initiating the criminal history record for that charge. Courts are required to retain any record upon which disposition data is based. GR 31 amendments create confusion as to whether courts will have a record of any juvenile offender鈥檚 full name to report to law enforcement or maintain for its disposition data.

RCW 13.40.100 outlines a process to serve a summons on a juvenile. A summons without a name, as well as a pick-up order without a name, is useless.

Sex offender registration, revocation and restoration of firearm rights, driver鈥檚 license revocation, warrants, restitution orders, and orders of protection all are implicated by a proscription on the use of an individual鈥檚 full name in the case record.

Without names of alleged offenders identified in the charging documents, the records become a generic, unidentifiable pile of cases not associated with any person. This may work to the juvenile鈥檚 detriment if, for example, fictitious Derek Thompson (DT), DOB 3/1/2006, is adjudicated for armed robbery. In 2023, fictitious David Tanner (DT), DOB 3/1/2006, is rejected by the military due to his conviction for armed robbery. David Tanner is without recourse to prove he is not that 鈥淒T鈥.

This rule change also makes it nearly impossible for media outlets to effectively cover juvenile crime.

This rule stifles a free press

For the press to operate freely, it must be able to decide what crimes are worthy of public attention. And if the system — or a judge — fails to keep the public safe or treat a suspect fairly, the public has the right to know.

But the media would not be able to do its job under this rule change.

How are we supposed to track the progress of juveniles accused of serious crimes once they’re out of jail? If they re-offend, how are we to investigate if all we have are initials and birthdates? We’d be forced to rely on leaks of their identities. We might even have to guess.

If we can’t identify a criminal, then we’ll also have a harder time identifying judges who go easy on them, especially if they re-offend.

When a dangerous juvenile gets a light sentence, or is pushed into restorative justice programs that don’t work, the public won’t know because the media won’t cover it. This poses a significant public safety risk.

This isn’t about equity, it’s about reimaging the courts

Progressive partisans pretend they’re trying to create equitable systems. But they’re merely dismantling the ones we have and rebuilding them through their ideological lens. The Supreme Court is attempting to do that with this new rule change. It’s transparently obvious.

On Tuesday, the Supreme Court is supposed to discuss the letters registering complaints over the rule change. But the rule goes into effect聽产别蹿辞谤别听the meeting.聽If the change goes into effect as intended, the consequences cannot be understated. Prosecutors say they will be effectively forced into not moving on new juvenile cases and pleadings.

This is a public safety emergency. And the Supreme Court must reverse course before it’s too late.

Listen to the Jason Rantz Show weekday afternoons from 3鈥6 pm on KTTH 770 AM (HD Radio 97.3 FM HD-Channel 3). Subscribe to the聽podcast here. Follow聽聽 on听听听听, and聽. Check back frequently for more news and analysis.

Jason Rantz on AM 770 KTTH
  • listen to jason rantzTune in to AM 770 KTTH weekdays at 3-7pm to The Jason Rantz Show.

Jason Rantz Show

Jason Rantz

...

MyNorthwest Video

Video: CNN exposes Pramila Jayapal鈥檚 hypocrisy on Epstein investigation

Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Seattle) was put on the spot by CNN鈥檚 Pamela Brown, who called out the congresswoman鈥檚 sudden interest in Jeffrey Epstein鈥檚 DOJ files. While Jayapal is now demanding transparency, CNN highlighted her silence during past administrations. Listen to The Jason Rantz Show weekdays from 3 p.m. – 7 p.m. on AM 770 KTTH […]

1 day ago

State Sen. John Braun (R-Centralia) is criticizing Democrats for blaming problems they caused on th...

Jackson Meyer

Sen. Braun calls out Washington Democrats blaming their own failures on ‘Big Beautiful Bill’

State Sen. John Braun (R-Centralia) is criticizing Washington Democrats for blaming the problems they caused on the "One Big Beautiful Bill."

1 day ago

Border Patrol immigration...

Jason Sutich

‘We’re not going away’: Border Patrol union chief vows return to enforcement under Trump

Paul Perez, National Border Patrol Council president discusses the union's commitment to secure U.S. borders and support frontline agents in challenging times.

2 days ago

jayapal (3)...

Jason Rantz

Rantz: CNN confronts Rep. Pramila Jayapal for sudden interest in Jeffrey Epstein

CNN's Pamela Brown confronts Rep. Pramila Jayapal over her sudden focus on Jeffrey Epstein.

2 days ago

pierce county sheriff swank...

Jason Rantz Show

‘It was handled improperly’: Sheriff Swank says he wasn’t driving when he was issued DUI 18 years ago

Pierce County Sheriff responds to his DUI arrest after it resurfaced following an alleged DUI crash involving a major in the sheriff's office.

3 days ago

...

MyNorthwest Video

Video: Teens assault delivery guy steps from SPD West Precinct

A disturbing incident unfolded just steps from the Seattle Police Department鈥檚 West Precinct, where a 14-year-old boy (with a criminal record) and a 15-year-old girl 鈥渂rutally assaulted鈥 a Domino鈥檚 delivery driver over an alleged confrontation. Listen to The Jason Rantz Show weekdays from 3 p.m. – 7 p.m. on AM 770 KTTH or on-demand wherever […]

3 days ago

Rantz: New WA Supreme Court rule endangers our lives in the name of equity