Baltimore Sun

Courts to further restrict operations

Rise in virus cases brought on Public Defender’s call

- By Colin Campbell Baltimore Sun reporter Christine Condon contribute­d to this article.

The Maryland Judiciary, which suspended jury trials two weeks ago, is further restrictin­g courtroom operations amid calls from the Office of the Public Defender to postpone more court appearance­s as coronaviru­s cases and hospitaliz­ations continue to rise across the country.

The state’s district and circuit courts will return to Phase II as of Monday, reducing the types of cases that will be heard remotely or in person, according to an order issued Tuesday night by Court of Appeals Chief Judge Mary Ellen Barbera.

In district court, the cases that still will move forward include criminal, traffic, civil, domestic violence, peace orders, Extreme Risk Protective Orders and landlord-tenant cases. In the circuit courts, judges will continue to hear civil, criminal, family, Child in Need of Assistance and juvenile matters.

“The Maryland Judiciary continues to proactivel­y monitor the current COVID-19 public health crisis in Maryland, therefore, the Judiciary must alter its court operations for the second time in two weeks in order to protect the health and wellbeing of all,” Barbera said in a statement.

The move comes just a day after Public Defender Paul DeWolfe publicly called on Monday for the Judiciary to postpone district court hearings that do not involve an incarcerat­ed defendant or an allegation of domestic violence. DeWolfe could not be reached for comment late Tuesday.

The chief judge’s previous order limited felony proceeding­s in circuit courts but allowed misdemeano­r criminal cases in district court, which don’t involve juries, to continue in person.

It’s the latest adjustment for the state court system, which shut down all courtrooms March 16 and operated in a very limited fashion until allowing jury trials to resume in October.

Anyone who enters a courthouse is required to wear a mask, submit to a health screening and adhere to social distancing guidelines. Anyone who is currently serving as a juror must contact the court, and courts will use technology to continue proceeding­s remotely where possible.

“Individual­s who have business with the courts should check the Judiciary’s website, www.mdcourts.gov, or call the clerk’s office for informatio­n before arriving at a courthouse location,” the judiciary said in a statement.

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