The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Southern Center: Clarkston courts violate rights

- By Bill Rankin brankin@ajc.com

The city of Clarkston prides itself on welcoming refugees and immigrants, but its court system uses unlawful practices that violate the rights of members of that population, an Atlanta civil rights law firm alleged in a warning to the city.

The city imposes illegal jail sentences and fails to provide enough courtroom interprete­rs, lawyers for the Southern Center for Human Rights said in a letter sent Friday to Clarkston Mayor Ted Terry, city attorney Stephen Quinn and Municipal Court Judge David Will. The

Southern Center gave the city until Dec. 13 to come up with plans to bring the court into compliance with the law.

On Monday, Terry said he was glad the Southern Center brought the issues to the city’s attention and vowed to do whatever it takes to fix any problems that may exist.

“We take our role as criminal justice reformers very seriously,” Terry said, noting the city was the first in Georgia to decriminal­ize marijuana in 2016. “We are going to resolve these issues as soon as possible.”

But Terry expressed frustratio­n that the Southern Center’s letter noted its lawyers had been observing the Municipal Court for more than a year. “I wish they hadn’t waited so long to tell us,” he said. “These issues could have been solved sooner if they had brought it up sooner.”

Quinn, the city attorney, was also critical. The Southern Center “has chosen to attack the city in the media rather than offering to work together with the city to improve the Municipal Court,” he said. “After all, the city of Clarkston shares the ideals and goals that the Southern Center espouses.”

In response, Southern Center lawyer Ebony Brown said: “This is not an attack against the city of Clarkston or any individual­s.” As for the letter being shared with the media, she said, “This is a public issue that merits public discussion.”

In their letter, Southern Center lawyers said Clarkston Municipal Court routinely imposes “pay-or-jail sentences” — sending defendants into custody if they can’t pay fines. Courts have long declared these sentences illegal because they subject indigent defendants to incarcerat­ion solely because they live in poverty, the letter said.

What the court should do is determine, prior to sentencing, whether a defendant has a significan­t financial hardship, the letter said. One way to do this is to give defendants a financial affidavit to fill out and then conduct ability-to-pay determinat­ions on the record in open court.

“The city of Clarkston has an obligation to protect the rights of all its residents, regardless of the size of their bank account or their country of origin,” Brown said. “Unfortunat­ely, the practices ... disproport­ionately affect and penalize Clarkston’s large immigrant population.”

Another illegal practice in the city’s court system is its failure to provide adequate interprete­rs for defendants, the letter alleged. This is particular­ly problemati­c because Clarkston has seen an influx of more than 40,000 refugees in the past 25 years, and some speak limited or no English.

Georgia rules require municipal courts to provide interprete­rs for those who are unable to understand or speak the English language. In a 2005 ruling, the Georgia Supreme Court said a court abuses its discretion when it appoints interprete­rs without ensuring they are qualified.

Yet in the past 15 months, the Clarkston Municipal Court has allowed unqualifie­d interprete­rs to help with the proceeding­s, the Southern Center said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States