Letter o' The Week: Defenders to A.G. Barr re COVID-19 and Decarceration
Santa Rita, hear our prayer.
Players: Hon. Attorney General William Barr.
Letter from the Co-Chairs of the Defender legislative committee, Arizona
Defender Jon Sands, Federal Defenders of New York Executive Director David
Patton, DSAG Chair and WD Pa. Defender Lisa Freeland, the hard-working attorneys of the Sentencing Resource Counsel, and
COVID-19 guru AFPD Miles Pope.
Facts:
On March 26, 2020, Attorney General Barr issued a “Memorandum for Director of
Bureau Prisons”, authorizing the release of federal inmates in response to
COVID-19. See NYT article here.
Despite that step,
barriers remained to release.
On April 1, 2020, the
Defenders wrote to AG Barr and urged him to exercise his authority under the
CARES Act to allow the BOP to transfer more people to the “relative safety of
home confinement.” Letter of Federal Defenders at 2, available here.
The Defender’s letter
is chilling. It recounts the scientific findings that “prisons and jails [are]
tinderboxes for the spread of disease . . . our jails are petri dishes.” Id.
at 4. The Defenders emphasize the obvious: “CDC recommendations such as social
distancing are impossible to achieve in our federal prisons and immigration
facilities as things currently stand.” Id. (citation omitted).
With exhaustive
documentation, the Defenders explain that a “chorus of public health experts
has confirmed that immediate decarceration is necessary to avoid a humanitarian
crisis in our prisons and jails.” Id. at 5.
This argument is
buttressed by grim reality. For example, the Cook County Jail in Chicago went
from two positive COVID-19 cases, to 101 confirmed cases, in a week. Id.
at 6 (emphasis added). Similarly, the infection rate in New York’s Rikers
Island is seven times higher than New York City, and seventy-five
times higher than the United States. Id.
Why is a
jail in Chicago, or in far-off New York, relevant to the Ninth? Well, as Governor
Cuomo warned, “Look at us today . . . where we are today, you will be in four
weeks or five weeks or six weeks. We are your future.” See article here.
New York’s future has started, in the Ninth.
On April 4, an inmate at Santa
Rita Jail (where almost all NorCal federal inmates are held) tested positive
for COVID-19. See article here. Staff have also tested positive at the jail. See Mercury News article here.
As noted above, in
just one week a Chicago jail skyrocketed from two positive cases, to 101. (And 270 staff and detainees are positive as of April 4). Does a similar fate
await Santa Rita, after its first two positive cases? The dozens of “orange”
and “red” inmates housed there bodes ill. See Santa Rita Jail Corovirus
Updates web page here.
Is this all just alarmist
defense rhetoric? No: the deaths have already begun. Last week, the Northern District
lost its first defendant to COVID-19 -- one of the post-conviction inmates who died in the FCI
Oakdale facility in Louisiana. See Marshall Project article here.
That defendant had been
sentenced by Judge Davila, and been represented by a NorCal CJA Attorney– who
is also now hospitalized from COVID-19. The virus is here, our
defendants have already died in federal custody: Santa Rita succumbing to
wide-spread infection is not a question of if, but when.
Notably, over three
hundred county inmates have been released from Santa Rita since the
shelter-in-place was implemented on March 17. See article here. Those releases were the result of commendable and courageous joint action by
District Attorneys, jail staff, and the defense bar.
By marked contrast,
out of several hundred federal pretrial inmates incarcerated at Santa Rita, roughly half-a-dozen have been released since the beginning of shelter-in-place (and those only
after fierce litigation).
(More county inmates have been released from Santa Rita, than federal inmates detained there!)
Who bears the blame
for these frozen federal prisoners, now condemned to play viral Russian
roulette? Who cares? It is a crisis too big for finger-pointing. What matters is
fixing it. The solution is clear: a summit of the USAO, the federal defense
bar, and Pretrial Services, to methodically identify the most vulnerable pretrial
inmates and propose stipulated release orders.
If the county D.A's and P.D.'s can find common ground, we Feds can too. Let’s meet, and let’s act,
before Santa Rita becomes the next Cook County Jail.
Image of inmate calling from Alameda County Jail from https://www.sfgate.com/news/bayarea/article/Former-Inmate-Sues-County-Over-Barbaric-13170082.php#photo-15550277
Image of Cook County Jail from https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/coronavirus/cook-county-jail-now-reports-210-inmates-have-tested-positive-for-covid-19/2250366/
Steven Kalar, Federal Public Defender, N.D. Cal. Website at www.ndcalfpd.org.
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.Labels: COVID-19
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