Chicago Sun-Times

Jail emerges from 43 years of federal oversight

- BY FRANK MAIN Staff Reporter Email: fmain@suntimes.com Twitter: @FrankMainN­ews

Four decades ago, overcrowdi­ng and poor staffing in the Cook County Jail led to federal court oversight of the sprawling complex on the Southwest Side.

But last week, U. S. District Judge Virginia Kendall lifted that oversight, saying the Cook County sheriff’s office has made all of the improvemen­ts that were set out in an agreement with the U. S. Justice Department in 2010.

Cara Smith, chief of policy for Sheriff Tom Dart, said Cook County is the largest jail in the United States to get out from under a federal consent decree. The jail systems in New York City and Los Angeles remain under such federal oversight, she said.

The pact with the Justice Department grewout of a 2008 report that gave the jail failing marks for the safety of inmates, medical care, sanitary conditions, fire safety and guards’ use of excessive force.

In a statement Monday, Dart touted a list of improvemen­ts, including:

† Installing 2,400 cameras around the jail complex so sheriff’s supervisor­s can review incidents involving inmates and guards.

† Expanding medical and mental- health treatment facilities.

† Increasing the size of the correction­al staff and boosting training time.

At a recent court hearing, Kendall said the sheriff’s staff took the right approach to the consent decree. “They didn’t look at it as an accusation against them, but, rather, looked at it as a challenge to fix and to work towards improvemen­t for the protection of the pretrial detainees, and that attitude is just so refreshing and remarkable,” she said.

The jail first came under federal oversight in 1974, when it was bursting at the seams with more than 11,000 inmates. Now, about 7,600 inmates are housed on the jail campus near 26th and California.

In 2007, the Justice Department launched its investigat­ion into allegation­s of abuse and unconstitu­tional confinemen­t. The sheriff’s office entered into the agreement with the federal government in 2010.

As improvemen­ts were being made, some critics still said a “culture of brutality” continued at the jail.

In 2013, Northweste­rn University’s MacArthur Justice Center sued the county, calling for additional measures to deal with jailhouse violence. But Kendall, in a 2015 ruling denying a request for a preliminar­y injunction, wrote “the defendants have worked diligently, and with marked success in many areas, in combatting the danger that exists at the jail.”

Last year, MacArthur agreed to dismiss the lawsuit and pay the county $ 45,500 in court- related costs, records show.

Dart said it was clear that reforms were needed before he took office in 2007.

“Prior to the DOJ report, I began a systematic overhaul of the jail,” he said in his statement. “Today we have systems and structures that are looked at as a beacon for correction­al facilities around the country.”

 ??  ?? Sheriff Tom Dart
Sheriff Tom Dart

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