Sacramento County District Attorney: Prosecution and Criminal Justice

The Sacramento County District Attorney's Office holds primary responsibility for prosecuting criminal offenses within the county's jurisdiction, representing the People of the State of California in felony, misdemeanor, and juvenile delinquency cases. This page covers the office's legal authority, how charging and prosecution decisions are made, the categories of cases it most frequently handles, and the boundaries that separate its role from those of city attorneys, the public defender, and federal prosecutors. Understanding these distinctions matters for anyone seeking to navigate the local criminal justice system in Sacramento County.

Definition and scope

The Sacramento County District Attorney is a constitutionally established office under Article V, Section 1 of the California Constitution, which designates district attorneys as the chief law enforcement officers of their counties for the purposes of criminal prosecution. The officeholder is elected by Sacramento County voters to a four-year term and exercises independent prosecutorial discretion — meaning neither the County Board of Supervisors nor any other county body can direct individual charging decisions.

The office prosecutes violations of California state law committed within Sacramento County's geographic boundaries. This includes felonies, misdemeanors, and infractions filed in the Sacramento County Courts, as well as juvenile delinquency petitions heard in Juvenile Court. The District Attorney also handles appeals and post-conviction matters arising from those prosecutions.

The office operates alongside, but distinct from, the Sacramento County Sheriff, which conducts investigations and makes arrests, and the Sacramento County Public Defender, which represents defendants who cannot afford private counsel. The adversarial structure of the California criminal courts places these three entities in defined, non-overlapping roles.

How it works

A criminal case in Sacramento County typically moves through the following sequence:

  1. Law enforcement investigation — A city police department (such as the Sacramento Police Department) or the Sheriff's Office investigates an alleged offense and prepares a crime report.
  2. Case submission — Investigators submit the report and evidence package to the District Attorney's Office for review.
  3. Filing decision — A deputy district attorney reviews the evidence and applies the California standard of "reasonable likelihood of conviction at trial" before deciding whether to file charges, decline prosecution, or request additional investigation.
  4. Arraignment — If charges are filed, the defendant appears in court to enter a plea. Bail or release conditions are argued at this stage.
  5. Pretrial proceedings — Both sides conduct discovery, file motions, and may negotiate a plea agreement. Felony cases require a preliminary hearing or grand jury indictment before proceeding to trial.
  6. Trial or disposition — Cases resolve by guilty plea, dismissal, or jury/bench trial. The District Attorney's Office bears the burden of proof — beyond a reasonable doubt — on every element of the charged offense (California Penal Code §1096).
  7. Sentencing — After conviction, prosecutors present sentencing arguments and victim impact evidence to the court.
  8. Post-conviction — The office may oppose or support post-conviction petitions, including resentencing motions brought under statutes such as California Penal Code §1172.6 (formerly SB 1437), which altered felony murder liability rules.

The office employs specialized units for categories including homicide, sexual assault, domestic violence, elder abuse, gang crimes, environmental crimes, and consumer protection fraud, reflecting the volume and complexity of Sacramento County's caseload.

Common scenarios

The District Attorney's Office encounters a defined set of recurring case categories that account for the bulk of its docket:

Decision boundaries

Prosecutorial authority has defined limits that distinguish the Sacramento County District Attorney from adjacent offices and agencies.

District Attorney vs. City Attorney: Sacramento City Attorney handles civil code enforcement, municipal ordinance violations, and civil litigation on behalf of the City of Sacramento. The District Attorney prosecutes criminal violations of state law. Where conduct triggers both a municipal ordinance and a state penal statute — for example, a business operating illegally — the two offices may act in parallel but under separate legal authority.

District Attorney vs. Federal Prosecutors: The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of California prosecutes federal crimes occurring in Sacramento, including bank robbery, federal drug trafficking, immigration offenses, and public corruption involving federal programs. Jurisdiction overlaps exist — certain drug trafficking and firearms offenses can be charged in either state or federal court — and the two offices coordinate case-by-case on which venue is more appropriate.

Scope limitations: The District Attorney's authority does not extend to crimes committed entirely outside Sacramento County, civil disputes between private parties, regulatory enforcement actions (which belong to state agencies), or the conduct of other government officials absent a criminal referral. Cases arising in incorporated cities such as Elk Grove, Folsom, or Rancho Cordova fall within Sacramento County and are therefore within the District Attorney's scope; crimes committed in Placer County or El Dorado County are handled by those counties' separate district attorney offices.

The office also does not represent individual crime victims in civil proceedings. Victims seeking civil remedies — such as restraining orders or civil damages — must pursue those through separate legal channels. The Sacramento Metro Authority index provides orientation to the broader network of county and regional agencies that serve Sacramento residents across overlapping public functions.

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