Lawsuit Filed by ACLU and Justice Groups Against Santa Clara County Court Over Jailings

The ACLU and a Stanford legal clinic are suing the Santa Clara County Superior Court, alleging it forces poor people wanted on low-level warrants to be jailed just so they can get in front of a judge who will likely decide they don’t belong in jail.

The lawsuit filed Monday contends that the South Bay is out of step with a multitude of other California county courts that allow people wanted for non-violent arrest warrants to voluntarily appear in court, without first going to jail, to sort out their warrants as well as their eligibility for remaining free.

As a consequence of the Santa Clara County court policy, the lawsuit asserts, people with arrest warrants who can’t afford their bail amount must surrender and be admitted into jail before they can get assigned a court date and have the chance to argue for why they should be out of custody while their case is adjudicated.

The suit lists Nikolaus Jackson O’Neill Rogge and the civil-rights group Silicon Valley De-Bug as plaintiffs.

Carlie Ware Horne, a former county deputy public defender who is now clinical supervising attorney at the Stanford Law School Criminal Defense Clinic, said the court has created a two-tiered system where people with the means to post bail for these warrants — typically in and around the range of $10,000 to $25,000 — can opt out of having to go to jail before they get an initial court date.

“A policy that excludes people from court unless they have money or are willing to give up their freedom doesn’t make any sense,” Ware Horne said in an interview. “It makes sense to adopt a policy that encourages people to take responsibility even if they’re poor, come to court, and have due process.”

Emi Young, a staff attorney with the criminal justice program for the ACLU Foundation of Northern California, added: “Equal access to the courts shouldn’t depend on your ability to pay.”

The county Superior Court declined to comment on the lawsuit Monday. But in a previous statement to this news organization — given in June after the plaintiffs sent a letter to the court in demanding the end of the jailing policy — the court argued it was on firm legal ground, noting that “the same challenge was already presented to the Sixth District Court of Appeal which denied the request.”

The lawsuit’s objective is to compel the Superior Court to rescind the jailing policy, and the plaintiffs argue that it has only been in place since July 2022, which they say is evidence that allowing voluntary court calendaring is workable. They also point to policies in other jurisdictions: Out-of-custody defendants with active warrants can schedule a same-day court appearance with their criminal clerk’s office in Contra Costa, Monterey, Napa and Sonoma counties, and Riverside, Alpine, Colusa, Inyo, Lassen, Merced, Trinity and Nevada counties. Those county courts carve out specific days and times each week for people to address or clear active warrants.

O’Neill Rogge is held up as the lone individual plaintiff in the new lawsuit, which recounts his experience of learning he was the subject of a non-violent arrest warrant while being backgrounded by a South Bay job-training program to which he was applying. The lawsuit states after he tried to request a court date with the local criminal clerk’s office, he was told that he had to post $10,000 or surrender to jail custody.

According to the lawsuit, O’Neill Rogge eventually surrendered at the county jail. He was held there for three days, which included him being transported to and from his court arraignment during which a judge cited his lack of criminal history in ordering him released on his own recognizance. And by the time his release was processed, he was let out of jail at 2 a.m. with no public transportation available to him to get home, according to the suit.

FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Swift Telecast is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials, please contact us by email – swifttelecast.com. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Leave a Comment