The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Judge rescinds order in Fulton jail phone dispute Fulton Superior Court judge expects sheriff, DA to settle their feud.

- By Rhonda Cook rcook@ajc.com

A Fulton County judge has rescinded her order for the sheriff to restore prosecutor­s’ unfettered access to the in mate phone system at the jail.

But she made it clear she expects Sheriff Ted Jackson and District Attorney Paul Howard to settle their feud over it.

Fulton Superior Court Chief Judge Gail Tusan wrote in her latest order, “The court (and no doubt the general public) expects that the sheriff and the district attorney will work together as law enforcemen­t profession­als to expedite a return to more comprehens­ive and more direct access, consistent with the Sheriff ’s Office’s reasonable desire to ensure that such outside access is properly regulated.”

It’s the sheriff ’s prerogativ­e to decide who can and cannot listen in on calls placed from the cellblocks, she said. She wrote that Jackson had assured her he would give the District Attorney’s Office “more direct and more complete access ... as soon as the sheriff has developed a more rigorous and formal access protocol.”

The dispute between two of the county’s top law enforcemen­t officers seemed to have become a tit-for-tat in mid-August when Fulton County prosecutor­s learned that they no longer could monitor inmate calls whenever they wanted because their PIN numbers had been disabled. Howard said then that lawyers on his staff needed immediate access to the system to ensure defendants weren’t threatenin­g witnesses or plotting escapes or other crimes.

It was through the use of the jail’s Securus Technology system that prosecutor­s listened in on Claud “Tex” McIver, who is charged with murdering his wife. Based on those calls, they alleged that McIver tried to influence witnesses and tried to get a friend who is a judge to push the judge in his case to grant him a bond.

Animosity between Howard and Jackson were in plain view during a June 30 court hearing over where McIver was being held. Jail officials had transferre­d the 74-yearold McIver from the medical unit at the main jail to a much smaller lockup in north Fulton County where he was able to bypass the telephone monitoring system.

In an explosive court hearing, prosecutor­s accused the sheriff of giving McIver preferenti­al treatment.

Howard said Jackson then terminated his office’s access to the phone system because of harsh words that were exchanged in court.

Both men have now hired attorneys.

Joyce Lewis, who represents the sheriff, said Thursday that he “was exercising a reasonable access.” While the Sheriff’s Office develops policies and procedures, Lewis said, prosecutor­s can get a subpoena for copies of recordings and that informatio­n will be provided “fairly quickly.”

Lewis said it was not known how long it would take to develop new policies.

Attorney Ken Hodges, who is representi­ng Howard, said while Fulton prosecutor­s have been assured they will eventually regain access to the system, they expect it to fall short of what they had before. “That access may not ever return to the access that we had,” Hodges said.

Howard has said the loss of access to the system created “some critical public safety issues.” So the district attorney in late September asked Tusan to order Jackson to reinstate his access, which she did without first hearing from the sheriff.

Jackson argued that Tusan had no authority in the matter of protecting Fulton County Courthouse visitors and employees. He returned some access to Howard’s office but “in a manner that is less direct and less comprehens­ive than previously allowed,” Tusan wrote in an Oct, 25 order.

Jackson’s office said he cut off the access when officials realized the District Attorney’s Office had more PINs than people working at the office.

“That made him very concerned that there wasn’t appropriat­e oversight of the way folks in the DA’s office office were accessing informatio­n,” Lewis said. “What the sheriff wanted to do was make sure the sheriff ’s office knew who was requesting the informatio­n.”

Howard’s office said many of those PINs were no longer active at the time. Now none are active. Howard has said surveillan­ce via Securus has allowed authoritie­s to stop escapes, prevent killings ordered by defendants or ward off witness intimidati­on.

The system, used in jails and prisons throughout Georgia, also has a feature that thwarts inmates who make calls using someone else’s identifica­tion and another that alerts authoritie­s if a call from the jail is being made to a specific geographic area.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States