Bill That Would Force Corporations to Disclose Slavery-Era Profits Moves Forward  


Bo Tefu and Antonio Ray Harvey | California Black Media

  On April 14, 2026, Assembly Bill (AB) 2599, known as the Truth in Disclosure Act, authored by Assemblymember Isaac Bryan (D-Ladera Heights), passed out of the Assembly Judiciary Committee on a 9-3 vote.

Supported by the California Legislative Black Caucus (CLBC), the bill would require qualifying corporations—specifically in industries such as banking, insurance, railroads, shipping, textiles, and tobacco—to submit affidavits disclosing whether they were engaged in or profited from chattel slavery. 

“The Truth in Disclosure Act requires any company doing business in California with annual worldwide gross receipts of over $100 million to verify and search their records for any transaction related to wealth gained during chattel slavery,” Bryan said.

A coalition including the Alliance for Reparations, Reconciliation and Truth (ARRT), the Equal Justice Society, and the California Black Power Network participated in the Judiciary Committee hearing to support AB 2599.

While California was admitted as a “free state” in 1850, the state did not have a traditional plantation economy, and there was no single, definitive list of businesses that participated in chattel slavery. 

According to a report by Durham University, California’s Reparations Task Force indicated that, through the 1850s, about 1,500 enslaved African Americans were brought to the state, with many businesses benefiting from this forced labor.

AB 2599’s affidavits, which must disclose whether a company profited from or facilitated slavery-era transactions, are subject to penalties for perjury, according to the bill’s language.

 The bill requires an unspecified department to create a publicly searchable digital platform by Jan. 1, 2028, to display these affidavits.

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