- California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced new California Highway Patrol (CHP) crime suppression teams across major cities this week.
- Attorney General Rob Bonta also unveiled a five-year reform pact with the Torrance Police Department following revelations of racism, antisemitism, and homophobia.
- Together, the initiatives highlight a coordinated push for tougher crime enforcement and stronger police accountability statewide.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (TDR) — California officials are deploying new California Highway Patrol crime teams to Los Angeles, San Diego, Sacramento, the Bay Area, the Central Valley, and the Inland Empire, in what Gov. Gavin Newsom described as a critical step to drive crime down. The announcement came alongside Attorney General Rob Bonta’s reveal of a five-year reform plan for the Torrance Police Department, following a scathing probe into racist and antisemitic conduct among its officers.
Expanding CHP’s Crime Teams
“While the Trump administration undermines cities, California is partnering with them — and delivering real results,” Newsom said Thursday. The governor stressed that new CHP deployments will double down on partnerships with local law enforcement and expand progress made since 2024.
According to the Governor’s Office, CHP officers will focus on organized crime, target repeat offenders, seize weapons, and recover stolen property. CHP Commissioner Sean Duryee said, “By combining resources, intelligence and personnel, we can better disrupt criminal activity and strengthen the safety and security of communities across California.”
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The announcement follows similar 2024 deployments in Bakersfield, San Bernardino, and Oakland, where CHP teams made 9,000 arrests, seized 400 firearms, and recovered nearly 5,800 stolen vehicles.
Los Angeles Welcomes Support
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass praised the move, saying CHP’s assistance will help maximize existing LAPD efforts. “The best way to address crime and other top challenges is through partnership,” she noted, calling it a model for public safety collaboration.
Local leaders emphasized that CHP support comes as urban crime suppression remains a priority. Analysts point to violent crime declines in 2025 nationwide, though experts caution that California’s urban hubs still face stubborn rates of organized theft and gang activity.
Torrance Police Under Reform
While Newsom spotlighted crime suppression, Bonta addressed a different crisis: systemic bias in the Torrance Police Department. His office negotiated a five-year reform pact requiring stricter data tracking, Internal Affairs reforms, and new technology to monitor officer conduct.
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The probe began after two Torrance officers were charged with felony vandalism in 2021 for spray-painting a swastika on an impounded vehicle. That discovery exposed dozens of racist, antisemitic, and homophobic messages exchanged among officers, sparking national outrage and local distrust.
Bonta called Thursday’s agreement “an important step toward improving Torrance Police Department’s practices and strengthening trust between officers and the community.” Interim Chief Robert Dunn added the department now enforces zero tolerance for hate.
Statewide Implications
The dual announcements underscore California’s attempt to balance crime enforcement with accountability. Newsom highlighted CHP’s role in tackling organized retail theft, auto theft, and fentanyl trafficking, while Bonta’s reforms aim to rebuild trust between officers and residents.
Observers see this as part of a broader national trend. States across the country, facing pressure from public safety debates, are pairing tougher enforcement with reforms aimed at curbing bias and misconduct. California’s approach offers a test case for whether both strategies can succeed simultaneously.
Some critics argue that Newsom’s framing — contrasting California’s cooperation with President Donald Trump’s policies — is political theater. Yet supporters counter that practical results, such as thousands of arrests and recovered property, demonstrate progress.
Looking Ahead
The CHP teams will roll out in September, coinciding with the DOJ oversight of Torrance police. Analysts note the juxtaposition of crackdowns and reforms could shape California’s national image heading into 2026 midterms.
For Newsom, the initiative provides a platform to showcase crime reduction. For Bonta, it bolsters his reputation as an accountability-focused attorney general. For California residents, the question is whether the combination will deliver safer streets and greater trust.
Can California truly strike the balance between tougher enforcement and police accountability — or will political rivalries define the outcome?
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