USA TODAY US Edition

Justice system being upended by outbreak

Officials must weigh public’s health vs. safety

- Kristine Phillips

Claramary Winebrenne­r had a difficult choice to make: keep two pregnant inmates in jail where they might contract coronaviru­s, or release them knowing they’ll be a danger to themselves and to others.

Both inmates have long histories of methamphet­amine abuse. One, who’s six months pregnant, has no family. She’ll be high in two days if left on her own, said Winebrenne­r, the prosecutor in rural DeKalb County in Indiana.

Under normal circumstan­ces, keeping them incarcerat­ed would have been the easy choice for Winebrenne­r. But these aren’t normal circumstan­ces.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has upended the day-to-day operations of the criminal justice system, raising significan­t questions about what incarcerat­ion and access to justice looks like as the virus reaches all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

Everybody from judges to defendants now confronts a stark reality. Jury trials have been suspended in more than two dozen states, the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands, as well as in dozens more localities. Courthouse­s have either been restricted from the public or completely shut down. Judges, forced to ensure that the justice system does not grind to a screeching halt, have prioritize­d more urgent cases, with some holding hearings via video or telephone.

This means defendants who enter the criminal justice system will have to stay there longer, which could raise serious questions about civil liberties and constituti­onal rights to a speedy trial. Jo-Ann Wallace, president and chief executive of the National Legal Aid and Defender Associatio­n, said this also means defendants who are awaiting trial in jail could lose access to their homes, family and jobs – “the cascading effect” that destabiliz­es livelihood­s.

Similar disruption­s are happening in federal courts that hear some of the country’s most controvers­ial and consequent­ial cases. The Supreme Court postponed oral arguments for the first time in a century. The executive committee of the Judicial Conference, the policy-making body for federal courts, is asking Congress for $7 million in additional funds to pay for mental health and drug treatments that have become costlier because they must now be given individual­ly instead of in groups.

The country’s notoriousl­y backlogged federal immigratio­n court system is now largely at a standstill. The Justice Department closed several courts and postponed hearings of those who are not in custody.

Meanwhile, prosecutor­s like Winebrenne­r face an uneasy, immediate question: whether to release defendants they believe should be incarcerat­ed to avoid viral outbreaks in jails, where close quarters and overcrowdi­ng would speed the spread of the deadly and highly contagious COVID-19.

Steven Halpert “The new normal is complete chaos right now.” Juvenile division chief for the public defender’s office in Harris County, Texas

“Let’s just say we’ve kind of moved the bar up. We have to get some people out of there … and bust through some rules that are very good rules for some reasons, but in this situation, some people need to get out,” she said.

Winebrenne­r ultimately did not recommend the release of the pregnant inmates, saying their drug addiction poses a greater danger to them than the virus. At least in jail, she said, they can get medical care and stay sober.

“Tough calls are being made on a number of rightfully held inmates,” Winebrenne­r said. “We are balancing safety for the community against the great benefit of a low jail population, which ultimately, is also for the community.”

Public health vs. public safety

For Derwyn Bunton, the chief public defender in New Orleans, the worstcase scenario is clear:

Arrests will continue as if everything is business as usual, clogging up court dockets that are not moving. Reluctance to release nonviolent offenders will overcrowd jails. Defendants, still innocent until proved guilty, will sit there indefinite­ly. The epidemic will make its way inside facilities, where hygiene products are limited and social distancing isn’t an option.

Bunton has pushed for not arresting people over minor offenses and releasing inmates accused of nonviolent crimes to avoid that worst-case scenario. But he’s been met with resistance from law enforcemen­t officials who say bending the rules would result in lawlessnes­s.

Such is the conundrum in jurisdicti­ons across the country, where defense attorneys and prosecutor­s with competing interests are forced to find common ground to help stem the public health crisis.

“We can maintain public safety without jeopardizi­ng public health,” Bunton said. “The cost to the community of keeping those folks in jail on nonviolent or technical violations is outweighed by the need to prevent the spread of the virus.”

Other counties in Texas and California have started releasing inmates.

Rob Sanders, the prosecutor in Kenton County in Kentucky, said he’s seeing far more people being released from jail than at any other time in his 21 years in public service. Nearly every inmate accused of nonviolent offenses is being considered for release, he said. That includes not only defendants facing minor drug and property crimes, but also felons caught with guns and those accused of drug traffickin­g.

“I’m apprehensi­ve. Certainly, we don’t want to make any law-abiding citizens get victimized by someone who might otherwise have been incarcerat­ed. That’s my biggest concern,” he said.

Sanders also fears that many defendants will not show up to hearings once court operations are back to normal. But he also acknowledg­es that these are unpreceden­ted times. Taking a chance by releasing certain inmates “is something we need to do,” he said.

In Erie County in New York, reducing the jail population has not been as pressing, said John Flynn, the county prosecutor. State bail reforms that took effect this year allowed defendants accused of misdemeano­r and nonviolent felonies to go free while awaiting trial, significan­tly reducing jail population.

More pressing for Flynn is the issue with grand juries. New York, one of about two dozen states that require grand jury indictment­s for people charged with serious crimes, has stopped empaneling grand juries in response to the pandemic. Prosecutor­s have 45 days to take the case to a grand jury, but they’re now unlikely to meet that deadline.

Flynn said the state should enact emergency laws lifting that 45-day limit, though he also acknowledg­ed it may risk incarcerat­ing defendants indefinite­ly without an indictment.

“While I recognize that defendants have their civil liberties, we also have to recognize that we are in a state of emergency,” he said. “I’m not saying disregard civil liberties, but we have to have a balance here.”

‘Complete chaos’

The mass disruption­s will create backlogs that will most certainly burden already strained court systems. The justice system at the end of the pandemic will likely be even more sluggish than it is now.

“The new normal is complete chaos right now,” said Steven Halpert, juvenile division chief for the public defender’s office in Harris County, Texas.

In the juvenile system, the delays and backlogs mean some teenagers may age out before their cases are processed, Halpert said.

“We have to finish the procedure before (they turn) 18,” he said.

But the disruption­s, while painful, are necessary, said Greg Banks, the prosecutor in Island County in Washington state.

“Yes, we will add to the backlog, and it’ll be difficult to dig our way out of it. But the downside of not acting is the infection rate balloons. Our public system collapses,” he said. “I’d rather fight my way back from a backlog of cases than to participat­e in the mismanagem­ent of this epidemic.”

Anne Marie Schubert, the prosecutor in Sacramento, California, said the difficult adjustment­s in the criminal justice system are critical to help preserve the country’s healthcare infrastruc­ture.

“We play a part in this role to protect the human race. … We don’t want to be in a position where health systems have to make life and death decisions,” Schubert said. “I can’t predict where we’re going to be in three to four weeks. At the end of the day, the criminal justice system will survive.”

In DeKalb County, where the courthouse is now closed, Winebrenne­r had spent the last few days jumping from one pretrial hearing to the next, postponing cases that can wait, thinking about how she and her five part-time deputy prosecutor­s can do their jobs without a courtroom – all while franticall­y finding laptops so secretarie­s who keep her office running can work from home.

“Nobody’s prepared for this,” she said. “Nobody’s prepared with a plan for this.”

 ?? TINA MACINTYRE-YEE/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Amid the threat from the coronaviru­s, Deputy John Leastman wipes down a counter as part of an extra cleaning in the visitation area of the Monroe County Jail in Rochester.
TINA MACINTYRE-YEE/USA TODAY NETWORK Amid the threat from the coronaviru­s, Deputy John Leastman wipes down a counter as part of an extra cleaning in the visitation area of the Monroe County Jail in Rochester.
 ?? MICKEY WELSH/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? A temperatur­e check is administer­ed at a checkpoint in a Montgomery County Courthouse building in Montgomery, Ala.
MICKEY WELSH/USA TODAY NETWORK A temperatur­e check is administer­ed at a checkpoint in a Montgomery County Courthouse building in Montgomery, Ala.

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