The Denver Post

Lawyers requesting release of mentally ill from jails

- By Allison Sherry

Public defenders across the state have filed 64 requests to judges in recent weeks to get mentally ill people immediatel­y moved out of jails.

The people in jail have been charged with crimes but have been deemed incompeten­t and are awaiting competency restoratio­n provided by state officials.

They technicall­y have 28 days to get people this treatment, but wait times are extending far beyond that — one man has been sitting in the Fremont County Jail for 270 days, his lawyer said.

Public defenders allege that the people’s constituti­onal rights are being violated by sitting in jail, pretrial, before being convicted of anything.

“Many of them are there for very, very low-level offenses, and they’re holding in jail for way longer than a person who did not suffer from mental illness would be in custody,” said Maureen Cain, policy liaison for the public defender’s office. “They are being incarcerat­ed for their mental illness, not really because of the crime they committed.”

Judges are responding in mixed ways. Some are ordering people immediatel­y out of jail and requiring the state to find room for them elsewhere. Others are holding the state in contempt of court. A few are siding with state officials and allowing them to take the time to find a place for someone. And some are asking state officials for more informatio­n about the delays and problems.

“I think judges are both worried about the individual defendant and are also worried about the efficient administra­tion of their court docket,” said Lucienne Ohanian, a public defender orchestrat­ing the statewide effort. “These orders are one way judges can ensure people are getting their treatment and getting their cases resolved efficientl­y.”

The court filings come at a time when the state is amid a crisis in how to handle the spiking number of people awaiting competency restoratio­n.

The Colorado Department of Human Services is in charge of these people once they’re deemed incompeten­t to stand trial. But officials there have said they don’t have enough bed space or capacity to get people moved out of jail within 28 days.

The department did not respond to a request for comment for this story.

Disability Law Colorado is also suing Department of Human Services on behalf of mentally ill people for jail wait times.

The state is currently out of compliance of a previous settlement agreement which set the 28 day-limit to restore people to competency after being found incompeten­t.

A trial for the federal lawsuit has been set for March, likely when new leadership will be installed under Gov.-elect Jared Polis.

Federal Judge Nina Wang was exasperate­d with state officials at a recent court hearing.

“We are in a situation where the department is in breech, and I need to know what efforts are being made to bring it back into compliance,” Wang said. “These individual­s are not being served, and frankly the state is not being served.”

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