Gov. Newsom signs ‘locked door loophole’ bill to combat car break-ins

As part of the Safer California Plan, what is described as “the most significant bipartisan legislation to crack down on property crime in modern California history,” Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the “locked door loophole” bill on Friday.

The bill, authored by Sen. Scott Wiener, no longer requires California car owners to prove their car was locked when it was broken into.

Previously, “The mere fact that a window was broken into is insufficient– prosecutors must prove that the door was locked, which requires that victims must physically come out to court to testify as such,” Wiener said.

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Sen. Wiener described the requirement as “a senseless barrier to holding auto burglars accountable… This requirement can sabotage clear cases of guilt, particularly for situations where someone is visiting San Francisco and is not going to return just to testify that they locked the car door.”

Now, car break-in victims can prove the crime of auto burglary by showing forcible entry, “which may be charged as either a misdemeanor or a felony,” Wiener’s office said.

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