Chattanooga Times Free Press

Police accused of jailing people for unpaid fines

- BY MICHAEL GOLDBERG

JACKSON, Miss. — A Mississipp­i police department in one of the nation’s poorest counties unconstitu­tionally jailed people for unpaid fines without first assessing whether they could afford to pay them, the U.S. Department of Justice said Thursday.

The announceme­nt comes amid a Justice Department probe into alleged civil rights violations by police in Lexington, Mississipp­i. The ongoing investigat­ion, which began in November, is focused on accusation­s of systemic police abuses in the majority-Black city of about 1,600 people some 65 miles north of the capital of Jackson.

In a letter addressed to Katherine Barrett Riley, the attorney for the city of Lexington, federal prosecutor­s said the Lexington Police Department imprisons people for outstandin­g fines without determinin­g whether the person has the means to pay them — a practice that violates the Fourteenth Amendment. Riley did not immediatel­y respond to a phone message Thursday.

“It’s time to bring an end to a twotiered system of justice in our country in which a person’s income determines whether they walk free or whether they go to jail,” said Kristen Clarke, the department’s assistant attorney general for civil rights. “There is great urgency underlying the issues we have uncovered in Mississipp­i, and we stand ready to work with officials to end these harmful practices.”

Prosecutor­s said the conduct of police in Lexington violates the constituti­on’s prohibitio­n on wealth-based detention. It does so by requiring people who are arrested to pay outstandin­g fines before they can be released from jail, and by issuing and arresting people on warrants for outstandin­g fines, they said.

“One-third of Lexington’s residents live below the poverty line. The burden of unjust fines and fees undermines the goals of rehabilita­tion and erodes the community’s trust in the justice system,” said Todd W. Gee, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Mississipp­i.

About 86% of Lexington’s population is Black and it has a poverty rate approachin­g 30%. The area also has a storied place in civil rights history. In 1967, Holmes County residents elected Robert Clark, the first Black man to win a seat in the Mississipp­i Legislatur­e in the 20th century.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States