On January 24, 2017, upon appointment by California governor
Jerry Brown, Becerra took office and become the first Latino to serve as California's attorney general. Becerra was elected to a full four-year term in
2018, defeating Republican Steven Bailey with 61% of the vote. He delivered the Democratic Spanish-language response to President Trump's 2019
State of the Union address. During his term as attorney general, Becerra filed 122 lawsuits against the first Trump administration.
California Department of Justice reforms Bureau of Environmental Justice In 2018, Becerra created an
environmental justice bureau at the California Department of Justice. It opposed the effort to expand
San Bernardino International Airport due to concerns regarding
air pollution, intervened to halt a proposed waterfront cement plant in Vallejo, citing significant concerns over increased air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, and supported the City of Arvin's oil and gas ordinance, endorsing a 300-foot buffer for homes, schools, and hospitals.
Protection of endangered species in Sacramento and San Joaquin River On May 11, 2020, Becerra secured a preliminary injunction in this lawsuit against the Trump Administration for unlawfully expanding water export operations in the Central Valley.
Criminal law enforcement On June 4, 2019, Becerra announced the arrest of Naasón Joaquín García, the leader of La Luz Del Mundo and other co-defendants. Charges included human trafficking, production of child pornography, and forcible rape of a minor. On June 8, 2022, Naasón Joaquín García was sentenced to more than 16 years in a California prison. On January 17, 2020, Becerra and Riverside Police chief Larry Gonzalez announced the successful execution of "Operation Blocc Buster". The operation led to the arrest of 15 individuals associated with the Casa Blanca Gangster Crips street gang in Riverside and the seizure of 14 firearms, methamphetamine, and cocaine. In August 2018, an operation targeted the MS-13 gang in the Central Valley and beyond. The following year, multiple operations were directed against Norteño street gangs in Kings, Tulare, and Stanislaus Counties, as well as in Stockton. In December 2019, the Country Boy Crips in south Bakersfield were the focus of a significant operation.
Statewide organized crime ring charged with sex trafficking in California In 2019, Becerra filed charges against Jing Chiang Huang, Shu Mei Lin, Shao Lee, Peihsin Lee, Pengcheng Cai, and Dafeng Wen for their alleged involvement in a statewide organized crime ring engaged in sex trafficking, tax fraud, and money laundering. Five suspects were sentenced in March 2022.
Additional criminal law enforcement Becerra brought fourteen felony charges against
Center for Medical Progress activists for recording fourteen videos (see
Planned Parenthood 2015 undercover videos controversy), and one felony charge for conspiring to invade privacy, on March 28, 2017. The charges were dismissed by a California Superior Court judge in June for not stating the names of those recorded and the specific dates of the recordings; the charges were refiled with the names and dates in July 2017. In 2019, Becerra threatened "legal action" against reporters who had received records of California law enforcement officers who had been convicted of crimes during the past decade. In December 2020, Becerra was faulted by state district attorneys for not taking leadership to help stop unemployment fraud during the COVID-19 pandemic, in what was described as the "biggest taxpayer fraud in California history". In January 2021, investigators said the total fraud was over $11 billion, with $19 billion in claims still under investigation. Most of this money will likely never be recovered, prosecutors said.
Lawsuits against Trump administration Defense of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) In November 2019, Becerra led a coalition of 21 attorneys general to defend
DACA against the Trump Administration's attempt to terminate it. The Court found that the administration's actions to end DACA were unlawful.
Defense of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) Becerra led the multi-state lawsuit to preserve the ACA's protections for people with pre-existing conditions and Medicaid expansion. The Supreme Court upheld the law.
Additional federal litigation In February 2019, Becerra, Governor Gavin Newsom, and 15 other states filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration over the president's
declaration of a national emergency to fund a wall at the southern U.S. border. The Trump administration opened 1 million acres in California to
fracking and drilling in December 2019. Under this policy, the
Bureau of Land Management proposed new lease sales for oil and gas extraction along "California's
Central Valley and
Central Coast, touching eight counties and including 400,000 acres of public land". California officials and agencies, including Becerra, filed a lawsuit against the Bureau of Land Management in January 2020. ==Secretary of Health and Human Services (2021–2025)==