Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Inmate cap, procedure set for Sebastian County jail

- THOMAS SACCENTE

FORT SMITH — The Sebastian County jail is limited to 356 inmates, the same number of beds in the facility, a county committee unanimousl­y agreed.

County Circuit Judge Gunner DeLay said the cap had informally been in place since a subcommitt­ee from the county’s Criminal Justice Coordinati­ng Committee recommende­d it Aug. 18. The policy became official at the committee’s Sept. 2 meeting.

DeLay, committee chairman, said the criminal justice system isn’t looking to release anybody from the jail who would be dangerous to the community. He believes the cap will make both inmates and employees at the jail safer.

“I know the sheriff has had his hands full, and we’ve had population­s that have exceeded 400, and we don’t have beds for that many people, and so I think this is going to lower tensions,” DeLay said. “And certainly, even in the covid era, I think it’s going to be a much more medically safe community if you don’t have inmates sleeping on the floor and next to each other.”

Sheriff Hobe Runion previously said keeping the inmate population in check would also help the jail operate within its budget.

The Quorum Court establishe­d the committee in August 2017 to find ways to reduce the jail population and improve the justice system.

Among the solutions are drug, veterans and mental health courts; a crisis stabilizat­ion unit; alternativ­e sentencing and diversion programs; special accelerate­d court dockets; and electronic monitoring and signature bonds for nonviolent felonies.

The committee also adopted a procedure to implement the inmate cap, originally proposed by County Circuit Judge Stephen Tabor.

Tabor described it as a

three-step process in which the Sheriff ’s Office determines by how much the jail has exceeded the cap. It then notifies the county’s district and circuit judges, prosecutor and public defender, in addition to the Fort Smith police chief, every weekday that this happens. The office provides a list of inmates who it deems could be released on signature bonds and given court dates. The list is to contain at least twice the number of inmates needed to be released to meet the cap.

The prosecutor then weighs in on the recommenda­tions, but the judges decide who is released, according to Tabor. Tabor said he believed the criminal justice system operating under this procedure was “going OK,” an opinion shared by DeLay.

“I think so far we’ve had good cooperatio­n in terms of getting emails between the interested players on how to stay under that number,” DeLay said.

Runion said Wednesday the Sheriff’s Office has been sending lists of potential inmates to be released almost every day since the Aug. 18 meeting. The jail had released, as of Wednesday morning, 56 inmates since Aug. 27.

Prosecutin­g Attorney Dan Shue said Wednesday the judges denied release to every inmate to whom his office objected.

The committee on Sept. 2 also approved other policy options to reduce the jail population for further discussion and study.

DeLay said many of the options would require considerab­le research to determine what the cost would be to implement them, although some don’t have any cost. The committee will also likely look at how other communitie­s implemente­d the options.

DeLay said some of the options originated with the county criminal justice system. One was a suggestion by Greenwood District Court Judge Michael Wagoner to forgo failure to appear warrants on first appearance­s in court for nonviolent cases. Wagoner suggested courts instead mail offenders a notice within a week and reset the case for which these offenders didn’t appear.

Wagoner said the practice is already in place in the Greenwood District Court. His suggestion could be applied to both the Fort Smith District Court and the Sebastian County Circuit Court.

“I think so far we’ve had good cooperatio­n in terms of getting emails between the interested players on how to stay under that number.” — Sebastian County Circuit Judge Gunner DeLay

 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Saccente) ?? Sebastian County Circuit Judge Stephen Tabor speaks during the Sebastian County Criminal Justice Coordinati­ng Committee meeting Sept. 2.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Saccente) Sebastian County Circuit Judge Stephen Tabor speaks during the Sebastian County Criminal Justice Coordinati­ng Committee meeting Sept. 2.

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