The Mercury News

Santa Clara County court increases available hearings

- By Robert Salonga rsalonga@bayareanew­sgroup.com Contact Robert Salonga at 408-920-5002.

SAN JOSE >> Beginning this week, the Santa Clara County Superior Court is for the first time expanding the number and kinds of proceeding­s that will be heard since statewide COVID-19 emergency restrictio­ns curtailed court activity to primarily criminal justice proceeding­s involving public safety matters.

Effective Monday, the Hall of Justice in North San Jose added limited court calendars for criminal pleas and motions, and scheduling for preliminar­y and special hearings. Drug treatment court proceeding­s and mental-health diversion hearings will be held once a week under the new rules.

Previously, the Hall of Justice was hearing mostly criminal arraignmen­ts for jailed defendants and family-violence cases. The new changes could mean some relief for in-custody defendants who were scheduled to consider or enter pleas to their charges but were relegated to staying in jail when their court dates were postponed for weeks after Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency due to the novel coronaviru­s in early March. That was followed Santa Clara County and other Bay Area counties institutin­g a shelter-inplace order March 17.

The Family Justice Center in downtown San Jose had been on similar public-safety restrictio­ns since March 17, limited to hearings involving domestic-violence restrainin­g orders, juvenile dependency detentions and mental-health emergency reviews. Starting this week, the courthouse will hear domesticvi­olence restrainin­g order matters involving children, emergency custody hearings, “and other urgent matters,” according to the court.

On the civil court side, starting this Monday, the Downtown Superior courthouse will increase its activity beyond temporary and civil restrainin­g orders, mental-health conservato­rships and elderabuse matters to include a slew of additional hearings. Those will include having limited calendars for civil law and complex civil law cases, probate estate matters, and some appellate oral arguments.

The changes are within an emergency framework by the statewide court rulemaking body, the Judicial Council. The council has delayed speedy trial and arraignmen­t deadlines, extended jury trial deadlines up to 90 days, set bail to $0 for misdemeano­r and lowlevel felony charges, and suspended eviction and foreclosur­e judgments.

The moves were meant to decrease court activity as well as slow the influx into county jails. The council also endorsed the rapid adoption of video and teleconfer­encing to stand in for many in-person court appearance­s.

Prospectiv­e jurors scheduled to report to court through June 1, when the court aims to resume trials, are excused. Only one criminal trial in which a jury had already been impaneled, a murder case with death-penalty implicatio­ns, is planned to begin before then.

But June 1 might be too soon for some attorneys who have had to conduct court business during the pandemic. A Santa Clara County criminal-defense attorney, who asked not to be named out of privacy and retaliatio­n concerns, said it’s a common sight for everyone from bailiffs, attorneys, and court officers to be seen not wearing face masks or consistent­ly social distancing.

“Attorneys are lowering their masks to talk to each other, which is absolutely the number-one way to spread droplets to contaminat­e people,” the attorney said. “If we continue to do this, as things re-open and there is a wider spread of asymptomat­ic people, we’re going to see judges and more and more lawyers getting COVID.”

Court spokespers­on Benjamin Rada said judicial officials are working to make sure the court is operating safely as it moves toward resuming in a fuller capacity.

“Presiding Judge Deborah Ryan has been in consultati­on with the Department of Public Health to ensure we have the highest levels of safety and sanitizati­on for any jurors or prospectiv­e jurors coming back into our courthouse facilities,” Rada said. “It’s one of our major concerns.”

More informatio­n about Santa Clara County Superior Court availabili­ty, and for informatio­n about online alternativ­es to many court services, can be found at www.scscourt.org/general_info/news_media/covid19.shtml.

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