Miami Herald (Sunday)

Tourists unlikely to be jailed, but not so for the homeless

- BY KYRA GURNEY kgurney@miamiheral­d.com

Amid a growing national movement away from jailing people for lowlevel crimes — which critics say can trap defendants in a cycle of poverty and incarcerat­ion — Miami Beach has taken the opposite approach.

Last January, after learning that the Miami-Dade state attorney’s office was routinely dropping charges for “quality of life” offenses such as drinking in public and entering a park after hours, Miami Beach hired its own prosecutor to target people who violate city laws. The program, which is the only one of its kind in Miami-Dade County, was part of a broader effort to address nuisance crimes.

But despite residents’ complaints about rampant public drunkennes­s during spring break and other times that draw a lot of tourists, a review of the cases prosecuted by the new program shows that few tourists have been arrested and prosecuted for drinking in public or for other nuisance crimes.

Instead, public records show, the majority of the cases have involved homeless people. An analysis of 212 cases prosecuted between mid-January and mid- August 2018 revealed that at least two-thirds involved a homeless defendant. In another 15 percent of the cases, the defendant’s circumstan­ces were unclear, although details on many of the arrest reports suggested that he or she was homeless. In contrast, just 12 arrests involved defendants who may have been tourists, based on the address listed on the arrest report. In another 13 cases, the arrest report did not include an address.

Most of the prosecutio­ns were for drinking in public, although roughly a dozen were for urinating in public and a few were for camping in a prohibited area or entering a park or the beach after hours.

While the number of arrests

Last year, Miami Beach created a municipal prosecutor program to target “quality of life” offenses like drinking in public. The majority of the cases prosecuted involved homeless people, records show.

for violating Miami Beach ordinances decreased last year, the number of conviction­s rose dramatical­ly. More than 40 percent of the cases resulted in jail time. Many also resulted in “stay away orders” — court orders that bar a defendant from returning to the area where he or she was arrested for a certain period of time.

The number of homeless people prosecuted raises red flags for activists and lawyers who work with this population.

“I thought my tax dollars were going to target actual crime,” said Valerie Navarrete, a local activist who reviewed the Miami Herald’s findings. “If you’re talking about 60 to 80 percent being homeless, that’s targeting.”

Carey Haughwout, president of the Florida Public Defenders Associatio­n, echoed these concerns.

“There is a growing consensus that these types of prosecutio­ns that really are prosecutio­ns based on poverty are not appropriat­e,” she said. “We’re just housing them in the jail instead of housing them somewhere else.”

Miami Beach officials said that neither the police department nor the city prosecutor are targeting homeless people or avoiding charging tourists. The city prosecutor is responsibl­e for prosecutin­g all cases involving only criminal municipal ordinance violations, according to the city attorney’s office. If a city law is broken and there is an accompanyi­ng state charge, the case is prosecuted by the state attorney’s office.

“An important component in maintainin­g a high quality of life throughout the City involves the enforcemen­t of the laws under which all citizens and guests must live and abide,” the city said in a statement. “And while no such leniency is shown for felony or most misdemeano­r offenses, the officers of the Miami Beach Police Department typically provide a warning to those individual­s who violate the City’s municipal criminal ordinances prior to effectuati­ng an arrest.”

Mayor Dan Gelber said that the people prosecuted were “mostly repeat and habitual offenders,” which was the idea behind the program when it was created. City officials did not say at the outset that most of the people prosecuted would be homeless, howev- er, although Police Chief Daniel Oates said police wouldn’t prioritize tourists who were unaware of the city’s laws.

“The people that are arrested are self-selected as people who generally refuse to comply with lawful direction from police,” Gelber said. “They may include part of the homeless population, but that’s not why they’re being arrested at all. When a police officer asks somebody to not drink in public and they refuse, it’s very likely they’re going to get arrested. I think tourists tend to comply. That’s the difference.”

Some of the arrest reports reviewed by the Herald indicated that the defendant had been previously warned or arrested for the same offense — sometimes that same week or even that same day. There were also cases in which defendants were walking in traffic or yelling at pedestrian­s when they were arrested for drinking.

But in other cases, according to the informatio­n on the arrest reports, homeless people were arrested for simply drinking a beer on the beach or for trying to find a place to sleep. Of the 156 people prosecuted between January and August, 78 percent were arrested only once over that sevenmonth period.

Nearly 88 percent of the cases were for drinking in public, which is punishable by up to 30 days in jail and carries a fine of up to $250 for a first violation.

Beach Police recently started a program to help homeless people with an alcohol or drug problem get treatment. In collaborat­ion with the South Florida Behavioral Health Network, police so far have gotten court orders to send 11 homeless people to 90day treatment facilities.

But at least 95 homeless people were booked for “nuisance crimes” in those seven months, which advocates say isn’t an effective or humane way to address homelessne­ss.

“Arresting a person experienci­ng homelessne­ss may temporaril­y remove that person from the streets of Miami Beach,” Jeffrey Hearne, director of litigation at Legal Services of Greater Miami, said in an email. “But, in the long run, the arrest ultimately makes it more difficult for the person to access housing, jobs, and public benefits — things they need to get back on their feet.”

Advocates say that prosecutin­g homeless people typically ends up being more expensive than pro- viding housing and other services.

It costs Miami-Dade taxpayers roughly $230 per inmate per day to put someone in county jail, according to a spokesman for Miami-Dade County Correction­s. That’s in addition to court costs and, in Miami Beach, funding the municipal prosecutor program, which costs the city $129,000 a year.

STAY AWAY

On a recent Thursday afternoon, Michael, a homeless man who asked to be identified only by his first name, was resting in Lummus Park. Michael said he’d seen “a big change” in the punishment for lowlevel offenses since the municipal prosecutor program started.

“They’re giving out ‘stay away orders’ for a year for taking a sip of beer,” he said.

But Michael, who said he was arrested last year for drinking in public, said he doesn’t see police going after tourists for doing the same thing.

“They tell them to pour it out sometimes.”

Concerns about Miami Beach’s treatment of homeless people aren’t confined to the new municipal prosecutor program. Homeless people on the island say they are frequently arrested for trespassin­g and other misdemeano­rs prosecuted by the state attorney’s office, which can result in hundreds of dollars in fines and court fees. The arrests and fines can also limit their access to some services. Until recently, for example, homeless people in Miami Beach weren’t eligible for bus vouchers through the city’s relocation program if they had unpaid court fees.

But for city officials and the members of a local crime prevention group, the municipal prosecutor program has been a success. The prosecutor achieved an 81 percent conviction rate last year, the city said in a statement, compared to a success rate of less than six percent when the state attorney’s office was responsibl­e for prosecutin­g the same crimes. The number of arrests in which a defendant was charged with violating at least one municipal ordinance also fell from 739 in 2017 to

460 last year, a drop the city attributed to the success of the new program.

John Deutzman, a Beach activist who moderates the crime prevention group’s Facebook page, said that as a result of the program and other efforts, “people who are habitual offenders or chronic offenders are now seeing more time in jail, the proper people who need rehab are being filtered to rehab and we’ve got a better handle on things these days.”

Deutzman, who advocated for the creation of the program, said that it has created a “deterrent to lawlessnes­s” in Miami Beach. “Essentiall­y a lot of the drinking in public stuff leads to everything from aggressive harassment of residents and tourists to other things and most of these guys escalate to other things,” he said.

Deutzman and city officials also point to “stay away orders” as a measure of the program’s success.

“We may have someone who gets a conviction with no jail time penalty, but the ‘stay away order’ is so effective that these folks stay away or they’re rearrested if they come back, and many of them have left the Beach,” Oates told commission­ers at a recent meeting.

Nearly a quarter of the cases prosecuted between January and August 2018 resulted in a stay away order, according to informatio­n the city provided in response to a public records request. It’s unclear how long the orders last and how broad a geographic area they cover because Miami Beach did not respond to questions about their scope.

But activists and lawyers who work with the homeless question the use of “stay away orders.”

“The ‘stay away’ orders only move these folks to a different area while the underlying problems of homelessne­ss, mental illness and poverty are not addressed,” Haughwout said in an email.

Miami Beach saw a 28 percent increase in the number of homeless people without shelter between August 2017 and August 2018, according to the Miami-Dade County Homeless Trust.

In an email, chairman Ron Book said that while the Homeless Trust recognizes that nuisance crimes can have a negative impact on residents’ quality of life, “communitie­s cannot arrest their way out of homelessne­ss.”

There are no homeless shelters in Miami Beach, but the city has roughly 100 beds set aside for its homeless population in shelters in Miami-Dade County and provides transporta­tion. Roughly 1,400 people in Miami Beach identified themselves as homeless during the last fiscal year, according to city figures, and the city offered services, such as shelter placement and help finding a job, to 1,200 people.

THE ‘ROOT CAUSE’

Across the country, a push for criminal justice reform has seen prosecutor­s elected in both majority Democrat and majority Republican states on platforms based in part on less incarcerat­ion.

One alternativ­e approach, known as homeless court, has taken root in dozens of places across the country. Last week, Fort Lauderdale launched Florida’s first homeless community court, which is designed to help homeless people cited for minor crimes like trespassin­g and public drinking get mental health services and other aid. In lieu of going to jail, defendants are asked to do community service.

Miami-Dade has a similar program for people with mental health issues — known as the Criminal Mental Health Project — which diverts people with mental disorders out of the criminal justice system and sends them to treatment.

Miriam Krinsky, the executive director of national advocacy group Fair and Just Prosecutio­n, said that the most effective solutions are ones that provide public health and housing services.

“If the effort is really to solve these problems rather than simply prosecute people for manifestin­g deeper concerns, then the criminal justice system isn’t the player that should be responding here,” she said.

But in Miami Beach, city officials are now discussing the possibilit­y of expanding the city prosecutor program to cover additional low-level crimes. Those might include trespassin­g and petty theft, which are violations of state law, but which a city prosecutor could target by prosecutin­g the correspond­ing city code and ordinance violations, chief deputy city attorney Aleksandr Boksner said at the Dec. 12 commission meeting.

That would require getting approval from the state attorney’s office. Some commission­ers expressed concerns at the meeting about both the financial impact of expanding the program and whether the state attorney’s office would be willing to relinquish that authority.

The state attorney’s office doesn’t appear eager to let the city prosecutor’s responsibi­lities grow, however. Spokesman Ed Griffith said that state prosecutor­s already “work closely with the Miami Beach Police and citizens groups on the prosecutio­n of state statutes.”

“As you know, we have 250 well-trained Assistant State Attorneys handling all violations of state law, both felony and misdemeano­r,” he said in an email.

Miami Herald staff writer David Ovalle contribute­d to this report.

 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? Jose Montesino rests in Lummus Park. He said he has previously been arrested for minor offenses in Miami Beach.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com Jose Montesino rests in Lummus Park. He said he has previously been arrested for minor offenses in Miami Beach.
 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? On Jan. 10, Alfonso, a homeless man, discussed strict enforcemen­t of public nuisance laws in Miami Beach.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com On Jan. 10, Alfonso, a homeless man, discussed strict enforcemen­t of public nuisance laws in Miami Beach.
 ?? C.M. GUERRERO. cmguerrero@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? Miami Beach’s Ocean Drive.
C.M. GUERRERO. cmguerrero@elnuevoher­ald.com Miami Beach’s Ocean Drive.

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