11 - 2 vote to make it illegal to conduct investigative journalism in California!
California Assembly Bill 2624 (AB 2624)
authored by Assembly member Mia Bonta (D
This is the wife of rob bonta, the guy leading anti gun legislation in California. He is the california DA.
This is rob bonta, born in Quezon City in the Philippines.
Another reason foreign born should NOT HOLD OFFICE of any kind!
And now onto the 11 who voted in favor of this bill.. No official roll call with individual names for the 11 "aye" votes has been published in public sources or the legislative record yet (committee votes in California are sometimes not detailed publicly until later, if at all). However, based on the party-line nature of the vote and the current membership of the Assembly Judiciary Committee (2025-2026 session), the "aye" votes almost certainly came from the Democratic members present and voting. this is a huge problem. Secretive voting and no accountability. This reeks to high heaven of individuals desperately scrambling to cover up fraud.
Ash Kalra (Chair) (D) Born1972 (age 54 years), Toronto, Canada (Foreign born) Rebecca Bauer-Kahan (D) Isaac Bryan (D) Dallas, TX (Carpetbagger) Damon Connolly (D) John Harabedian (D) Blanca Pacheco (D) Diane Papan (D) Catherine Stefani (D) Rick Chavez Zbur (D) Born1957 (age 69 years), New Mexico (Carpetbagger) Only nine known to have voted Aye. Only two dissenting
Alexandra Macedo (R) Carl DeMaio (R)
And there you have it. Two unknowns voted aye whos identities remain a secret.
They stated the following three reasons for the bill....
Key provisions and controversy
The bill aims to protect staff and providers at certain organizations (often described as immigrant services providers) from doxxing, harassment, or threats by restricting the sharing of their personal information or images online in ways that could incite harm.
Opponents claim the language is broad enough to allow targeted organizations to demand removal of public videos/footage (even if recorded in public spaces), impose civil penalties (starting at around $4,000, with potential triple damages), injunctions banning further exposure (up to 4 years), and criminal misdemeanor charges with fines up to $10,000 and/or up to one year in jail. Higher penalties could apply if harm results.
It recently advanced out of the Assembly Judiciary Committee (reportedly on an 11-2 vote), but it has not yet become law.
And there you have it. All democrats voting to shield fraud investigation by it's own people, violating your first amendment right. #California Fraud #protecting fraud in California #California Corruption Disclaimer: All this information is available publicly.

















