BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    Ó



                                                                  AB 829
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          Date of Hearing:   April 26, 2011
          Counsel:        Milena Nelson


                         ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC SAFETY
                                 Tom Ammiano, Chair

                 AB 829 (Knight) - As Introduced:  February 17, 2011


           SUMMARY  :   Expands the authority of law enforcement agencies to 
          issue identification and concealed weapons permits to honorably 
          retired peace officers, and makes conforming changes.  
          Specifically,  this bill  :  

          1)Expands the list of law enforcement agencies authorized to 
            issue identification in the form of a badge, insignia, emblem, 
            device, label, certificate, card or writing, as well as to 
            revoke that identification in the event of misuse or abuse.  

          2)Expands the definition of "honorably retired" peace officer to 
            be a person who has met his or her department's years of 
            service requirement, and has accepted a separation of service 
            or disability retirement.  

          3)Expands the list of peace officers entitled to an endorsement 
            for a concealed weapons (CCW) permit to Level I and Level II 
            reserve officers, as specified, if he or she carried a firearm 
            during the course and scope of his or her employment and 
            served at least 15 years in aggregate as a California reserve 
            peace officer.  

           EXISTING LAW  :

          1)States that any person other than one who by law is given the 
            authority of a peace officer, who willfully wears, exhibits, 
            or uses the authorized uniform, insignia, emblem, device, 
            label, certificate, card, or writing, of a peace officer, with 
            the intent of fraudulently impersonating a peace officer, or 
            of fraudulently inducing the belief that he or she is a peace 
            officer, is guilty of a misdemeanor.  İPenal Code Section 
            538d(a).]

          2)States that any person, other than the one who by law is given 
            the authority of a peace officer, who willfully wears, 








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            exhibits, or uses the badge of a peace officer with the intent 
            of fraudulently impersonating a peace officer, or of 
            fraudulently inducing the belief that he or she is a peace 
            officer, is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment 
            in a county jail not to exceed one year, by a fine not to 
            exceed $2,000, or by both that imprisonment and fine.  İPenal 
            Code Section 538d(b)(1).]

          3)States that any person who willfully wears or uses any badge 
            that falsely purports to be authorized for the use of one who 
            by law is given the authority of a peace officer, or which so 
            resembles the authorized badge of a peace officer as would 
            deceive any ordinary reasonable person into believing that it 
            is authorized for the use of one who by law is given the 
            authority of a peace officer, for the purpose of fraudulently 
            impersonating a peace officer, or of fraudulently inducing the 
            belief that he or she is a peace officer, is guilty of a 
            misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment in a county jail not to 
            exceed one year, by a fine not to exceed $2,000, or by both 
            that imprisonment and fine.  İPenal Code Section 538d(b)(2).]

          4)States that except as specified, any person who willfully 
            wears, exhibits, or uses, or who willfully makes, sells, 
            loans, gives, or transfers to another, any badge, insignia, 
            emblem, device, or any label, certificate, card, or writing, 
            which falsely purports to be authorized for the use of one who 
            by law is given the authority of a peace officer, or which so 
            resembles the authorized badge, insignia, emblem, device, 
            label, certificate, card, or writing of a peace officer as 
            would deceive an ordinary reasonable person into believing 
            that it is authorized for the use of one who by law is given 
            the authority of a peace officer, is guilty of a misdemeanor, 
            except that any person who makes or sells any badge under the 
            circumstances described in this subdivision is subject to a 
            fine not to exceed $15,000. İPenal Code Section 538d(c).]

          5)States that any person who falsely represents himself or 
            herself to be a deputy or clerk in any state department and 
            who, in that assumed character, does any of the following is 
            guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment in a county 
            jail not exceeding six months, by a fine not exceeding $2,500, 
            or both the fine and imprisonment: 

             a)   Arrests, detains, or threatens to arrest or detain any 
               person; 








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             b)   Otherwise intimidates any person; 

             c)   Searches any person, building, or other property of any 
               person; or,

             d)   Obtains money, property, or other thing of value.  
               İPenal Code Section 146a(a).]

          6)States that any person who falsely represents himself or 
            herself to be a public officer, investigator, or inspector in 
            any state department and who, in that assumed character, does 
            any of the following shall be punished by imprisonment in a 
            county jail not exceeding one year, by a fine not exceeding 
            $2,500, or by both that fine and imprisonment, or by 
            imprisonment in the state prison:

             a)   Arrests, detains, or threatens to arrest or detain any 
               person; 

             b)   Otherwise intimidates any person; 

             c)   Searches any person, building, or other property of any 
               person; or,

             d)   Obtains money, property, or other thing of value.  
               İPenal Code Section 146a(b).]

          7)States that any person who without authority impersonates, or 
            wears the badge of, a member of the California Highway Patrol 
            (CHP) with intention to deceive anyone is guilty of a 
            misdemeanor.  (Vehicle Code Section 27.)

          8)Authorizes the CHP Commissioner to issue to each CHP member a 
            badge of authority with the seal of the State of California in 
            the center thereof, the words "California Highway Patrol" 
            encircling the seal and below the designation of the position 
            held by each member to whom issued.  (Vehicle Code Section 
            2257.)

          9)States that neither the Commissioner nor any other person 
            shall issue a badge to any person who is not a duly appointed 
            CHP member.  (Vehicle Code Section 2258.)

          10)Provides that any peace officer described in this section who 








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            has been honorably retired shall be issued an identification 
            certificate by the law enforcement agency from which the 
            officer has retired.  Defines the term "honorably retired" as 
            all peace officers who have qualified for, and accepted, a 
            service or disability retirement.  States that the term 
            "honorably retired" does not include an officer who has agreed 
            to a service retirement in lieu of termination.  İPenal Code 
            Section 12027(a)(1)(A).]

          11)States that any peace officer employed by an agency listed in 
            Penal Code Section 830.1 or 830.2, or in Penal Code 830.5, who 
            retired after January 1, 1981, shall have an endorsement on 
            the identification certificate stating that the issuing agency 
            approves the officer's carrying of a concealed weapon.  İPenal 
            Code Section 12027.1(a)(1)(B).]

          12)Provides a county sheriff or municipal police chief may issue 
            a license to carry concealed a pistol, revolver, or firearm 
            capable of being concealed upon the person upon proof that:

             a)   The person applying is of good moral character İPenal 
               Code Section 12050(a)(1)(A)];

             b)   Good cause exists for the issuance İPenal Code Section 
               12050(a)(1)(A)];

             c)   The person applying meets the appropriate residency 
               requirements İPenal Code Section 12050(a)(1)(D)]; and,

             d)   The person has completed the appropriate training course 
               İPenal Code Section 12050(E)].

          13)Provides that the license may either:

             a)   Allow the person to carry a concealed firearm on his or 
               her person İPenal Code Section 12050(a)(1)]; or,

             b)   Allow the person to carry a loaded and exposed firearm 
               in a county whose population is less than 200,000 persons 
               according to the most recent federal decennial census.  
               İPenal Code Section 12050(a)(1).]

          14)Provides that a CCW license is valid for up to two years, 
            three years for judicial officers, or four years in the case 
            of a reserve or auxiliary peace officer.  İPenal Code Section 








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            12050(a)(2).]

          15)Provides that a license may include any reasonable 
            restrictions or conditions that the issuing authority deems 
            warranted, which shall be listed on the license.  İPenal Code 
            Section 12050(b) and (c).]

          16)Provides that the fingerprints of each applicant are taken 
            and submitted to the Department of Justice.  Provides criminal 
            penalties for knowingly filing a false application for a 
            concealed weapon license.  İPenal Code Section 12051(b).]

          17)Provides that a person may lawfully possess a loaded firearm 
            in his or her place of business or residence.  İPenal Code 
            Section 12031(h)(l).]

          18)Makes it generally unlawful to carry a concealed handgun or a 
            loaded firearm in public and in vehicles.  (Penal Code 
            Sections 12025 and 12031.)

          19)Defines a "Level I reserve peace officer" as a reserve 
            officer deputized or appointed pursuant to specified sections 
            and assigned to the prevention and detection of crime and the 
            general enforcement of the laws of California, whether or not 
            working alone, and the person has completed the basic training 
            course for deputy sheriffs and police officers prescribed by 
            the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training. İPenal 
            Code Section 832.6(a)(1).]

          20)Defines a "Level II reserve peace officer" as a reserve 
            officer assigned to the prevention and detection of crime and 
            the general enforcement of the laws of California while under 
            the immediate supervision of a peace officer who has completed 
            the basic training course for deputy sheriffs and police 
            officers prescribed by the Commission on Peace Officer 
            Standards and Training, and the Level II reserve officer has 
            completed the course required by Section 832 and any other 
            training prescribed by the commission.  İPenal Code Section 
            832.6(a)(1).]

          21)States that the authority of a reserve peace officer extends 
            only for the duration of the person's specific assignment.  
            İPenal Code Section 830.6(a).]

           FISCAL EFFECT  :   Unknown








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           COMMENTS  :   

          1)Author's Statement  : According to the author, "Reserve officers 
            should receive the same protections upon retirement as those 
            granted to full-time officers. While off-duty or in 
            retirement, peace officers encounter individuals that may 
            cause them harm because of former arrests when on duty. 
            Additionally, reserve officers tend to retire into the 
            community that they policed."

           2)Attorney General Opinion on Issuing of Badges  :  In response to 
            a question regarding whether it is lawful for a sheriff to 
            give honorary badges to private citizens from the Riverside 
            County District Attorney, the Attorney General issued a formal 
            opinion concluding that it is not.  İ90 Cal. Op. Atty. Gen. 57 
            (2007).]  The Attorney General's opinion examines the language 
            of Penal Code Section 538d, which prohibits false 
            impersonation of a peace officer.  That section specifically 
            provides that it is a crime for any person, other than one who 
            by law has the authority of a peace officer, to wear, exhibit, 
            or use the badge of a peace officer with the intent of 
            fraudulently impersonating a peace officer, or of fraudulently 
            inducing the belief that he or she is a peace officer.  The 
            Attorney General, citing its own opinion from 1985, 
            explains,"İt]he purpose of the prohibition is to prevent 
            confusion among members of the general public as to the 
            identity or authority of a person exhibiting a badge."  (Id. 
            at p.4, citing 68 Cal. Op.  Atty. Gen. 11 at 13-14.)  
            Accordingly, "the more an honorary badge resembles an 
            authorized peace officer badge in shape, markings, and other 
            indicia that connote genuineness, the more likely the badge 
            will deceive an ordinary reasonable person, and the more 
            likely that a person furnishing or displaying the badge will 
            be found to have violated Section 538d."  (90 Cal. Op. Atty. 
            Gen. 57 at p.5.)

          The Penal Code specifically delineates the scope of authority 
            for each of an array of persons with some type of law 
            enforcement powers.  Where such persons are granted the 
            authority of a peace officer, Penal Code Section 538d is 
            clear:  they may be issued badges under current law.  The 
            prohibition applies to "İa]ny person, other than one who by 
            law has the authority of a peace officer . . . . "  İPenal 
            Code 538d(b)].  Where such a person does not have the 








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            authority of a peace officer, authorizing that person to 
            exhibit a badge that would lead an ordinary person to believe 
            he or she has such authority would run counter to the very 
            purpose of the prohibition against impersonating a peace 
            officer contained in Penal Code Section 538d, namely, to 
            "prevent confusion among members of the general public as to 
            the identity or authority of a person exhibiting a badge."  
            (90 Cal. Op. Atty. Gen. 57 at p.4, citing 68 Cal. Op. Atty. 
            Gen. 11 at 13-14.)

            SB 169 (Benoit), Chapter 349, Statutes of 2009, addressed this 
            issue by allowing for the issuance of badges and other forms 
            of identification to specified honorably retired peace 
            officers.  The badge or other identification is required to 
            display the clearly visible words "honorably retired" on, 
            above or below the badge.  The issuing agency is also 
            authorized to revoke the badge in the event of misuse or 
            abuse.  This bill expands the list of law enforcement agencies 
            authorized to issue badges to retired officers to include 
            investigators of the Board of Dental Examiners, the California 
            Horse Racing Board, the Division of Labor Standards, the 
            Public Employees' Retirement System, and the Department of 
            Corporations; voluntary fire wardens; inspectors of the food 
            and drug provisions of the Health and Safety Code; the chief 
            and assistant chief security guard at the California Science 
            Museum; Lottery Security Personnel; and security officers for 
            county water districts.  

           3)Following Issuance of the 2007 Attorney General's Opinion, The 
            Attorney General's Office Reportedly Required Its Staff 
            Attorneys to Return the Honorary Police-Type Badges That Had 
            Been Distributed:   According to an article in the Oakland 
            Tribune, "the Attorney General's office is reclaiming honorary 
            police-type badges it distributed to its 1,200 staff 
            attorneys, including those in Oakland and San Francisco, 
            because the agency has declared the practice illegal."  
            İGreissinger, Honorary police badges running afoul of the law, 
            Oakland Tribune (August 31, 2007).]  This article stated, "The 
            agencies that issue the badges - and by extension, taxpayers - 
            could be subject to civil liability for any injury resulting 
            from misuse of the badges, the opinion states.  Around the 
            state, honorary badges have been handed out to an untold 
            number of city council members, county supervisors, animal 
            control officers, prosecutors, public defenders, law 
            enforcement auxiliary groups, ceremonial mounted posses, 








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            courtroom clerks, emergency dispatchers and others."  The 
            article quoted a Deputy Attorney General who stated, "I don't 
            believe that the recall of badges would in any way affect our 
            ability to do our jobs" and added that deputy attorneys have 
            other credentials sufficient to allow them to complete their 
            work.  

           4)Past Problems with Badges:   The Sacramento Bee recently 
            reported an incident involving a 78-year-old retired police 
            chief who was arrested for impersonating an officer after he 
            allegedly brandished a badge and gun at another motorist who 
            he felt had cut him off in traffic.  According to the article, 
            "The Sacramento District Attorney has charged ? İt]he retired 
            Placer County sheriff's deputy with two misdemeanor counts:  
            brandishing a weapon and impersonating a police officer, 
            according to documents filed in Sacramento Superior Court."  
            İRetired Police Chief Arrested for Pulling a Gun in Citrus 
            Heights Road Rage Incident, Sacramento Bee (April 5, 2009).]

           5)CCW Permits and Reserve Officers  :  This bill requires law 
            enforcement agencies to provide a CCW endorsement on the 
            identification of a Level I or II reserve officer stating that 
            the issuing agency approve the officer's carrying of a 
            concealed weapon if that officer carried a firearm during the 
            course and scope of his or her appointment, and he or she has 
            served at least 15 years in aggregate as a California reserve 
            peace officer.  Level I reserve peace officers have similar 
            duties and training as a non-reserve peace officer and are 
            authorized to work without immediate supervision.  In 
            contrast, Level II reserve peace officers do not have the same 
            training requirements as a Level I reserve peace officer, and 
            are required to be under the immediate supervision of a duly 
            trained officer at all times.  Should Level II reserve peace 
            officers, who receive less training than non-reserve officers, 
            have the same right to a CCW endorsement as more highly 
            trained officers?

           6)Previous Legislation  :

             a)   SB 169 (Benoit), Chapter 349, Statutes of 2009, 
               authorized the head of an agency that employs specified 
               peace officers to issue identification in the form of a 
               badge, insignia, emblem, device, label, certificate, card 
               or writing that clearly states that the person has 
               honorably retired following service as a peace officer from 








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               that agency.

             b)   AB 2053 (Miller), of the 2008-09 Legislative Session, 
               would have defined "good cause" for the issuance of a 
               concealed weapons (CCW) license to carry a handgun to 
               include, but not limited to, self-defense, defending the 
               life of another, or preventing crime in which human life is 
               threatened.  AB 2053 failed passage in this Committee.  

             c)   AB 357 (Knight), of the 2008-09 Legislative Session, 
               would have deleted the "good cause" requirement and allowed 
               the issuance of a license to carry a concealed firearm to 
               any person who is of good moral character.  AB 357 failed 
               passage in this Committee.

             d)   AB 462 (Haynes), of the 2003-04 Legislative Session, 
               would have mandated a finding of good cause to issue a CCW 
               permit when the individual applying has been a victim of 
               domestic violence or a hate crime.  AB 462 failed passage 
               in this Committee.

             e)   SB 1283 (Haynes), of the 2001-02 Legislative Session, 
               would have provided that "good cause" is conclusively 
               established for the issuance of a license to carry a 
               concealed firearm if the applicant is a victim of domestic 
               violence or hate crime.  SB 1283 failed passage in the 
               Senate Public Safety Committee.

             f)   AB 1369 (Oller), of the 1997-98 Legislative Session, 
               would have eliminated the discretion of a county sheriff or 
               police chief to deny a permit to carry a concealed firearm 
               to any person who is not otherwise prohibited.  AB 1369 
               failed passage in this Committee.

           REGISTERED SUPPORT / OPPOSITION  :   

           Support 
           
          Association for Los Angeles Deputy Sheriffs 
          California Correctional Supervisors Organization 
          California Narcotic Officers' Association
          California Police Chiefs Association
          California Probation Parole and Correctional Association
          California Reserve Peace Officers Association
          Gun Owners of California 








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          Riverside Sheriffs' Association

           Opposition 
           
          Friends Committee on Legislation of California 
          Violence Prevention Coalition of Greater Los Angeles
          Rainbow Services, Ltd. 
          Legal Community Against Gun Violence 
           

          Analysis Prepared by  :    Milena Nelson / PUB. S. / (916) 
          319-3744