Police in California launched a video of a trio of alleged shoplifters who had been shocked to seek out out that the penalty for his or her crime had lately modified.
In the viral surveillance video shared by the Seal Beach Police Department on Sunday, three ladies will be seen strolling into an Ulta Beauty retailer, shopping the cabinets, then casually exiting the enterprise with what police stated was practically $650 worth of stolen merchandise.
“… a pleasant reminder that Proposition 36, which will increase punishments for some retail theft and drug possession offenses, went into impact Wednesday morning in California,” the Seal Beach Police Department wrote within the caption of the video on their Instagram account.
The video reveals the ladies coming into a Kohls retailer and allegedly stealing extra merchandise, totaling practically $1,000 in stolen items.
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Bodycam video then reveals cops chasing after the ladies and in the end arresting them.
“It’s a felony?” one of many ladies asks the opposite at the back of the patrol automotive.
“B—h new legal guidelines,” the girl responds. “Stealing is a felony and this Orange County b—h. They don’t play.”
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The ladies had been later recognized by police as Destiny Bender, 24, and Deanna Hines, 24, each from Long Beach, and Michelle Pitts, 26, of Signal Hill.
All three people had been booked into the Orange County Jail on costs of Grand Theft, Conspiracy to Commit a Crime and Resisting Arrest.
Police shared a pleasant reminder together with the video.
“It undoes a few of the adjustments voters made with a 2014 poll measure that turned sure nonviolent felonies into misdemeanors, successfully shortening jail sentences and resulting in a spike in retail theft and crime,” police stated. “Here in Seal Beach we by no means believed within the cite and launch program, however this new proposition solely strengthens our dedication to combatting Organized Retail Theft. Remember people, don’t steal in Seal.”
Proposition 36, the Homelessness, Drug Addiction and Theft Reduction Act, sought to undo parts of Proposition 47 by growing penalties for some crimes. It was overwhelmingly handed in California, reversing some billionaire George Soros-backed soft-on-crime insurance policies.
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When Proposition 47 handed in 2014, it downgraded most thefts from felonies to misdemeanors if the quantity stolen was beneath $950, “until the defendant had prior convictions of homicide, rape, sure intercourse offenses, or sure gun crimes.”
Progressive Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón, backed by Soros, helped writer Proposition 47, and misplaced his seat to challenger Nathan Hochman in November.
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California Gov. Gavin Newsom remained adamantly against the trouble to undo parts of Proposition 47, saying it “takes us again to the Nineteen Eighties, mass incarceration.”
Fox News Digital’s Jamie Joseph contributed to this report.
Stepheny Price is author for Fox News Digital and Fox Business. Story ideas and concepts will be despatched to stepheny.value@fox.com