Death penalty Ramos is in favor of
capital punishment. In November 2012, Ramos campaigned heavily against
Proposition 34, also known as the SAFE California Act. Proposition 34 sought to replace California's death penalty with a life sentence with no chance of parole as the maximum punishment for murder. The initiative to repeal the death penalty failed by a narrow margin of 52.8% to 47.2%. In 2016, Ramos co-chaired the Death Penalty Reform Initiative Committee for Proposition 66 which sought to keep the death penalty in California. On Nov. 9, 2016, the initiative passed with 51.13% of the vote.
Victims' rights Ramos was appointed by Governor
Arnold Schwarzenegger to serve on the Governor's Victim Compensation and Government Claims Board on January 23, 2004. After being elected to his first term, one of the first actions that Ramos took was placing the supervisor in charge of victim services on his executive staff, elevating the position to the role of a chief, and creating the Bureau of Victim Services Unit. In 2013, during Crime
Victims' Rights Week, Ramos announced that his office had contracted with One Call, an automated phone system, in an effort to reach crime victims and give them information about their rights and possible compensation. Crime victims who provide law enforcement with a land line phone number will get the recorded message that tells them they have rights under the state's 2008 Victims' Bill of Rights Act, passed by voters as Proposition 9. It is most often referred to as Marsy's Law.
Public corruption In a stunning rebuke of Ramos, a high-profile criminal case against four men collapsed in September 2017, with one newspaper later calling the prosecution a “boondoggle.” Ramos and then-Attorney General
Jerry Brown had announced in 2011 a corruption prosecution against Paul Biane, a former 2nd District supervisor; Jim Erwin, former chief of staff for 3rd District Supervisor Neil Derry;
Mark Kirk, former chief of staff for 4th District Supervisor Gary Ovitt; and Jeff Burum, general partner with Colonies Partners LP. A jury acquitted three of the defendants, Jeff Burum, Paul Biane and Mark Kirk, and charges against the fourth defendant, Jim Erwin, were dropped after a separate jury deadlocked. Several jurors said they believed key prosecution witnesses had lied and questioned why the case was ever brought in the first place. By early 2018, all of the defendants had filed separate claims against the county and the state of California, citing
malicious prosecution and seeking in total more than $100 million for damages.
Human trafficking In 2009, Ramos created the county's Coalition Against
Sexual Exploitation (C.A.S.E.). C.A.S.E. brought together a partnership of county departments including the District Attorney's Office, Sheriff's Department, Probation Department, County Superintendent of Schools, Department of Children and Family Services, Public Defender, and Department of Behavioral Health, to raise awareness and to provide enhanced county and community resources to victims. He campaigned heavily in favor of Proposition 35 which voters overwhelmingly passed in 2012 and which created a Human Trafficking Prosecution Unit. In an effort to reduce the demand for victims of human trafficking, Ramos started the Stop the John Project in 2013 and began releasing the names and photographs of those defendants convicted of solicitation in San Bernardino County. In September 2014 Ramos made a blog post mistaking the popular BDSM web page "The Slave Registry" for a human trafficking / prostitution front.
Prevention and intervention Through the Juvenile Justice Crime Prevention Act (JJCPA), the DA office implemented the "Let's End
Truancy" (L.E.T.) Project, which works to improve school attendance for previously truant students, discourage future truancy and helps to make education a priority for at-risk youth. One step that Ramos took to address the problem of truancy was arresting parents for failure to address the issue. Ramos also has various other programs such as Camp Good Grief and the Gang Resistance Intervention Partnership (GRIP). Camp Good Grief is a three-day
grief camp for children and teens whose lives have been shattered due to an act of murder or suicide. The San Bernardino County District Attorney's Office, in partnership with
Loma Linda University Children's Hospital, offer the camp.
Animal cruelty In 2011, in conjunction with
the Humane Society of the United States and
Fontana Animal Services, Ramos released a short film to increase awareness about the dangers of cockfighting. To better focus on
animal abuse, in 2012 Ramos created the San Bernardino County Illegal Animal Fighting and Abuse Task Force, a multi-disciplinary collaboration designed to promote community awareness, education and prosecution of animal fighting and abuse in San Bernardino County. == References ==