Decision ’94 / SPECIAL GUIDE TO CALIFORNIA’S ELECTIONS : Statewide Races : ATTORNEY GENERAL

Latimes

Decision ’94 / SPECIAL GUIDE TO CALIFORNIA’S ELECTIONS : Statewide Races : ATTORNEY GENERAL"


Play all audios:

Loading...

Often referred to as the state’s top cop, the attorney general oversees a cadre of attorneys who handle appeals of criminal cases as well as enforcement of the state’s environmental,


consumer protection and civil rights laws. The office also collects criminal statistics and important policing data such as fingerprints and rap sheets. It handles forensic work and


narcotics investigations.


* Education: Bachelor’s degree, University of Notre Dame; law degree, Georgetown University


* Career highlights: Elected to Congress in 1978 and served five terms. Nominated as state treasurer, but rejected by Democrat-dominated Legislature in 1988. Won narrow victory over Democrat


Arlo Smith in 1990 attorney general race.


* Background: An unabashed conservative, Lungren is widely regarded as the Republican Party’s most likely nominee for governor in 1998. He has spent large amounts of time in Washington as a


student, staffer on the Republican National Committee and congressman, prompting some observers to speculate that Lungren is infected with “Potomac fever” and will instead run for the U.S.


Senate. Lungren grew up in Long Beach, the son of a doctor who served as Richard Nixon’s physician in the 1950s. During his decade in Congress, Lungren was regarded as bright and


ideologically passionate, but with a pragmatic core. He helped win passage of a watershed crime package as well as the 1986 immigration act.


* Education: Bachelor’s degree, UCLA; law degree, UC Hastings School of Law


* Career highlights: Former military prosecutor and assistant U.S. attorney. Elected to Assembly in 1990, becoming the only Orange County Democrat holding state or federal office. Reelected


in 1992 with 60% of vote.


* Background: Should he win, Umberg would become the first challenger in modern times to defeat a sitting attorney general. Although only a two-term assemblyman, he gained enough support


from Democratic powerbrokers to scare San Francisco Dist. Atty. Arlo Smith, who lost narrowly to Lungren in 1990, out of the June primary. After law school, he became a military prosecutor,


then served as an assistant U.S. attorney in Orange County, prosecuting cases involving drugs, white-collar crime and a headline-grabbing cross-burning incident. He vaulted to Sacramento


after defeating an incumbent Republican in a nasty 1990 election confrontation. But in the Capitol he earned a reputation as an earnest, hard-working moderate. As a member of the Assembly


Public Safety Committee, the Democrat-dominated graveyard for GOP crime bills, he consistently cast votes for law-and-order issues.


* RICHARD N. BURNS, Libertarian, 64, Woodland Hills trial attorney


* ROBERT J. EVANS, Peace & Freedom, 49, Berkeley criminal defense lawyer


Lungren takes credit as the first politician to help Mike Reynolds, the Fresno photographer who launched the “three strikes” movement in California. The attorney general supported the bill


signed into law this year and the initiative on the November ballot. Umberg, who voted for the law when it first appeared in 1993, contends that Lungren did not surface on the issue until it


became a hot topic this year. Although he supports the initiative, Umberg worries about the potential for prison overcrowding. His own version of the “three strikes” bill focused only on


the most violent criminals.


A battle of statistics among the candidates. Umberg argues that the number of crimes in California has risen 2.1% since Lungren took office, with violent incidents swelling 7.8%. He


questions whether voters feel “as safe today as they did four years ago.” Lungren notes that crime dropped during the first six months of 1994 and the per-capita rate has fallen during his


tenure. He expresses hope that it is the start of a downward trend prompted by tougher new laws, but says much more must be done.


Neither supports a ban on all guns, but both get failing grades from the gun lobby. Lungren has irked gun owners by siding with Democrats on the state’s assault weapons ban. He notes that


his office enforced the state’s 15-day waiting period for gun purchases, turning down 6,500 buyers in 1993. But he opposes proposals to ban cheap “Saturday night specials,” saying it would


strip the poor of the right to own a gun for protection. Umberg supports the waiting period, the assault weapons ban and wants to see more copycat weapons banned. He carried legislation


designed to improve gun safety, particularly for households with children.


Umberg, chairman of the Assembly Toxics Committee, charges that Lungren has slashed the Justice Department’s environmental division and compromised on settlement of environmental cases. He


says a $40-million settlement negotiated by Lungren for a toxic spill in Dunsmuir in rural Northern California was not enough. Lungren counters that he has done a fair job of weighing


environmental and business interests. He contends that the Dunsmuir settlement was fair and helped speed restoration work. Lungren prodded the wine industry to remove lead from the foil that


caps bottles, but rejected a $3-million settlement suggested by his staff and accepted $900,000 from the vintners instead.


Lungren has made regulation of the state’s gambling industry a top priority. He pushed unsuccessfully this year to establish an independent commission to license and regulate the industry.


But he also took nearly $20,000 in campaign contributions from Nevada casinos and a Southern California card club. Umberg supports efforts to regulate the gambling industry, but suggests


that there are higher priorities such as juvenile crime. He has collected more than $40,000 from Native American tribes that own casinos.


Umberg contends that the incumbent skewed priorities by cutting the consumer protection and environmental enforcement divisions of the Department of Justice. He notes that the sex offender


registration effort is flagging and that fingerprint collection lags 80 days. He says Lungren failed to properly fund a statewide computerized database that would have helped in the Polly


Klaas murder-kidnap case. Lungren takes credit for slicing into management fat. He blames many of the problems on cuts by the Legislature. He contends that a computer database that might


have helped in the Klaas case was in the midst of getting funded when the crime occurred.


Lungren has used his post to rail against the “culture of violence” in video games, rap music lyrics and professional football. Umberg contends that the pulpit should be used to highlight


juvenile crime, in particular the link between illiteracy and criminals.


Trending News

Mariah Carey accidentally flashes NIPPLES as she suffers wardrobe fail in sheer mini dress

We use your sign-up to provide content in ways you've consented to and to improve our understanding of you. This may inc...

Six nations tournament 2025: where to watch france vs. Scotland, the last match of the tournament?

It's a final match that will be decisive, a match that could lead the XV de France to victory: don't miss the ...

Dominic cummings petition: petition to sack cummings reaches 977,000

Dominic Cummings is at the centre of a national row regarding an alleged breach of coronavirus lockdown rules in March. ...

Patrons at crowded restaurant chant 'get out' at covid health inspectors

This weekend, guests at the packed Vancouver restaurant Corduroy greeted health inspectors by chanting, "Get out!&q...

Bbc audience member warns sturgeon snp voters not behind indyref2

A BBC audience member discussed the recent Scottish election and revealed he voted for both Labour and the SNP due to th...

Latests News

Decision ’94 / SPECIAL GUIDE TO CALIFORNIA’S ELECTIONS : Statewide Races : ATTORNEY GENERAL

Often referred to as the state’s top cop, the attorney general oversees a cadre of attorneys who handle appeals of crimi...

Response to an FOI asking about personal vehicle use and hire vehicle use - GOV.UK

FOI release Response to an FOI asking about personal vehicle use and hire vehicle use The response to an FOI asking abou...

Efforts on to cancel illegal land patta on Assam Rifles land: Mizoram minister Lalruatkima

Mizoram government is making efforts to cancel all land pattas illegally allotted to individuals to own a plot of land i...

Kathy Griffin Shares Powerful Thread About Trump Mask Controversy 1 Year Later

Kathy Griffin Shares Powerful Thread About Trump Mask Controversy 1 Year Later "I was punching up...he decided to punch ...

Prince Harry ordered to stay away from UK by Express readers despite King’s cancer | Royal | News | Express.co.uk

Prince Harry ordered to stay away from UK by Express readers despite King’s cancerResults of an Express.co.uk poll revea...

Top