The Columbus Dispatch

Cleveland judge: Jail too dangerous to send offenders

- By Karen Zraick

CLEVELAND — A judge in Cleveland is refusing to send people accused of low-level crimes into the county jail system, citing safety concerns after six inmate deaths in four months.

The judge, Michael Nelson of Cleveland Municipal Court, said this week that he would release people charged with such crimes until their next court appearance, rather than holding them on bail, which many defendants cannot afford.

Defendants who are released must still agree to any conditions imposed, which could include electronic monitoring or regular check-ins.

“Six deaths means the jail is unsafe,” Nelson said. “You shouldn’t die before we see you in court.”

Five of the six inmates were being held at the Cuyahoga County Jail in Cleveland, and one was at the Euclid City Jail, which also is run by the county, according to the county medical examiner.

The cause of death has yet to be determined in two of the cases, the most recent of which occurred Tuesday. That prisoner, Allan Martin Gomez Roman, 44, died four days after he was arrested on a warrant stemming from a cocaine possession charge, Cleveland. com reported. Two of the other men who died were found hanging in their cells, and two had drugs in their systems at the time of their deaths, the authoritie­s said.

Cuyahoga County Sheriff Clifford Pinkney said he will ask the county to pay for an independen­t expert to assess the jail system. He also said the jails are dealing with an influx of people struggling with addiction and psychologi­cal problems.

A report released last year by the Pretrial Justice Institute found that the Cuyahoga County Jail, with 2,100 beds, had been operating at more than 100 percent capacity, on average, in four of the previous five years.

The report, which was requested by local court officials and the American Civil Liberties Union, included a survey of all inmates released on a single day. It found that 73 percent of them were black. In the latest census, 53 percent of Cleveland’s residents were black.

Judge Nelson, a former president of the Cleveland NAACP, said the jails remain overcrowde­d and that staffing levels aren’t sufficient to monitor all inmates. He was loath to place people in those facilities because they could not afford bail, he said.

Cash bail, which requires defendants to put up money or other assets to win their freedom, has been widely criticized in recent years. Some states and municipali­ties have taken steps to reduce its use, and California recently abolished cash bail.

Critics of the cash bail system argue that defendants should be evaluated based on the risk they present to public safety, not on their financial situation.

Low-income defendants often turn to bail bond agents, who function as the payday lenders of the criminal justice world. Commercial bail is a $2 billion industry, and agents charge steep fees and can even arrest their clients.

Nelson said the most recent death underscore­d the need to change bail practices and reduce overcrowdi­ng and strain on the jail system.

“If the balance of the county had implemente­d bail bond reform, there’s a good chance that young man would not be in jail, period,” he said.

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