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Maggy Krell

American politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Maggy Krell
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Maggy Krell is an American lawyer, prosecutor, and politician currently serving in the California State Assembly. She is a Democrat representing the 6th district, encompassing the majority of the city of Sacramento and surrounding unincorporated communities. Before successfully running for the Assembly, Krell served as a Deputy Attorney General and Special Assistant United States Attorney prosecuting high profile cases throughout California.[1] She also served as Chief Legal Counsel for Planned Parenthood California where she led the organization’s national litigation efforts.[2]

Quick facts Member of the California State Assembly from the 6th district, Preceded by ...
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Krell received her Juris Doctor from the University of California, Davis School of Law in 2003, and started her career as a deputy district attorney for San Joaquin County, in Stockton, California. She subsequently moved to the California Department of Justice where she prosecuted a wide variety of cases, including cold case murders, white collar crime, and multi-jurisdictional cases. She was promoted to Supervising Deputy Attorney General, and led California’s Special Prosecution Unit.[3]

In that role, Krell distinguished herself as both a prosecutor of human traffickers and an advocate for survivors. She led the successful prosecution of executives of Backpage.com, at the time the largest online sex trafficking platform in the world,[4] which resulted in the site being shut down in 2018.[5] Krell described her work against the site in her 2022 book Taking Down Backpage: Fighting the World’s Largest Sex Trafficker: A Prosecutor’s Story.[6] The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children honored Krell with a career achievement award for her work on the Backpage case.[7] As an advocate for survivors, Krell helped secure the early release of a sex-trafficking survivor who had been imprisoned as a teenager for crimes stemming from her victimization.[8] Krell has been outspoken about the need for better treatment of victims by the criminal justice system.[9]

In 2018, Krell joined Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California as their Chief Legal Counsel, seeking to help combat efforts by the Trump Administration to cut funding and curtail access to low-cost reproductive healthcare. In that role, she filed an amicus brief defending a California law that sought to reduce targeted dissemination of misinformation about reproductive healthcare from a suit that was being heard by the Supreme Court.[2] She also defended access to federal family planning funds by seeking an injunction under the federal government’s Title X Rule.[10]

After the Trump Administration began a policy of separating families arrested for crossing the U.S.-Mexico border, Krell served as a volunteer lawyer, helping to reunite separated parents and children, and worked to challenge the federal government’s policy through legal action.[11]

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Political career

Krell won election to the California State Assembly in 2024 on a platform promising to prioritize public safety, protect access to reproductive healthcare, address high prices and homelessness, and improve programs benefiting vulnerable youth.[12][13] She had previously run for Sacramento County District Attorney in 2014 and lost to Anne Marie Schubert.[14] In 2024, Krell won her primary by a more than 10-point margin in a large field that included six other Democrats.[15] She focused her general election campaign on a ballot measure in Nevada to enshrine access to abortion as a right in the state constitution, bussing dozens of volunteers from Sacramento to Reno to campaign.[16] [17] Krell secured 66% of the vote[18] and Nevada’s constitutional initiative also passed.[19] Upon taking office, Krell introduced legislation to protect Californians' access to medication abortion.[20]

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Electoral history

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References

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