The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

‘Prison gerrymande­ring’ lawsuit can advance

Federal appeals court rules

- By Kelan Lyons CTMIRROR.ORG

Judges from the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals have allowed a lawsuit to proceed challengin­g the way Connecticu­t assigns prison inmates to legislativ­e districts.

Employing a process the plaintiffs call “prison gerrymande­ring,” Connecticu­t counts inmates as residing in the districts in which their penitentia­ries are located, rather than the districts they call home. The plaintiffs — which includes the families o inmates and the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People — argue this is a violation of the 14th Amendment’s “one person, one vote” principle.

“The plaintiffs are looking to end the practice of prison gerrymande­ring in Connecticu­t,” said Nicole Billington, a law student intern at Yale Law School’s Peter Gruber Rule of Law clinic. It is representi­ng the plaintiffs as cocounsel with the NAACP.

Because the state’s incarcerat­ed population is disproport­ionately represente­d by African Americans and Latinos, the plaintiffs argue the redistrict­ing plan benefits the rural, predominan­tly white communitie­s where the penitentia­ries are located, rather than the cities where many of the inmates reside. The suit contends that inmates don’t get the same benefits from their prison’s legislativ­e district as a constituen­t who isn’t incarcerat­ed. Inmates usually don’t have contact with the elected officials who represent the district in which their prison is located, can’t go to public or private spaces in their districts since they’re incarcerat­ed, can’t drive on their district’s roads, or send their children to their district’s schools.

By considerin­g these inmates a part of their prison or jail’s legislativ­e district, the plaintiffs argue, the redistrict­ing plan inflates the power of rural, white districts and takes power away from the poorer urban districts many Connecticu­t inmates call home. Such a policy, Billington said, “diminishes the voting power of people in urban districts.”

The state appealed to the Second Circuit after a district court judge refused to dismiss the suit last February. The three Second Circuit judges upheld the lower court’s ruling, writing that the claim is “neither frivolous nor insubstant­ial.”

The judges remanded the case back to the district court.

The ruling is the first time a federal appeals court has allowed a prison gerrymande­ring case to move forward and be heard on its merits, said Billington. “When suits in other circuits have come up, they have been dismissed, basically, before this point.”

A spokeswoma­n for the State Attorney General’s Office said it is “reviewing and evaluating the decision.”

A spokesman for Secretary of the State Denise Merrill’s office declined to comment on ongoing litigation. In June 2018, when the suit was filed against her and Gov. Ned Lamont, Merrill said her office plays no role in the redistrict­ing process and is named in the suit because “I am Connecticu­t’s chief election officer and enforce the laws and district lines enacted by the legislatur­e.

“As Secretary of the State, I have consistent­ly supported legislatio­n that would have ended this practice in Connecticu­t, and I continue to believe that people who are in prison should be counted where they resided prior to their incarcerat­ion, and not in the prison in which they are incarcerat­ed,” Merrill said. “Prison gerrymande­ring unfairly inflates the size of some districts at the expense of others, and ending the practice will give a more accurate population count of our urban communitie­s.”

 ?? Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? A view of the Bridgeport Correction­al Center located on North Avenue in Bridgeport.
Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media A view of the Bridgeport Correction­al Center located on North Avenue in Bridgeport.

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