The Arizona Republic

Coronaviru­s slows restoratio­n process for federal inmates

- Laurel Morales This story was produced by KJZZ and appears here through a collaborat­ion between The Arizona Republic/ azcentral.com and KJZZ. Hear the full story at kjzz.org.

It’s been almost three years since Bryan Alvarez-Dominguez was arrested for bringing meth from Mexico into the U.S. But he still hasn’t been sentenced. He was found incompeten­t to stand trial so he had to wait to be “restored” in jail.

He says it’s been difficult. Difficult because he has a developmen­tal disability, difficult because there aren’t mental health profession­als in jail, and difficult because it’s really hard being away from his family.

Alvarez-Dominguez's sister Leslie Alvarez has only been able to see Alvarez-Dominguez a few times over the last two years.

Leslie says they don’t always have a car. They have no money for gas. They have struggled a lot, and they have seen Alvarez-Dominguez suffer a lot.

When someone with a mental disability is arrested and winds up in federal court, their attorney has to reveal whether the person is competent to stand trial. The defendant must then go through analysis and restoratio­n before even entering a plea.

The federal statute says AlvarezDom­inguez and anyone else found incompeten­t must wait in jail to go to one of two psychiatri­c facilities in the United States for what they call “competency restoratio­n.” That’s where psychologi­sts treat people like AlvarezDom­inguez and prepare them for trial. They give them a course on how the court system works, what everyone’s role is so they can help their cases.

That can take a long time. The hard part is they have to wait it out in jail. It’s a slow process that’s been exacerbate­d by COVID-19.

Even though it was a long wait, Alvarez-Dominguez was one of the lucky ones. He was “restored” and released from jail right before the pandemic struck. More than 182,000 inmates have contracted the coronaviru­s in custody, according to the Marshall Project. More than 1,400 people have died from the virus in prison.

“COVID has been a big tragedy in the criminal justice system,” said Luke Mulligan, an assistant federal public defender based in Flagstaff. “It’s paused the process and that’s what the constituti­on gives everybody is this right to due process and because we didn't have grand juries because we didn’t have trials it’s really caused a lot of delay in everything.”

So thousands of people wait in jail — often in isolating conditions.

“The folks this applies to are often the people who are most negatively affected by incarcerat­ion,” Mulligan said. “You have people with serious mental illness, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, developmen­tal disabiliti­es. Jail is not a therapeuti­c setting for people of the soundest mind.”

Mulligan says some state courts allow for out-of-custody competency restoratio­n.

“Just from a dollars and cents perspectiv­e, I think it makes a lot of sense to keep people local,” Mulligan said. “Incarcerat­ing people is terribly expensive. Many of these people don’t need to be incarcerat­ed.”

A four-month stay in the medical facility is about $24,000. The cost of a bed at one of these facilities is higher than the normal cost of incarcerat­ion. Compare that to an outpatient program, which is about $2,000 in Arizona.

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