Debtor Prison https://truthvoice.com Wed, 22 May 2019 09:22:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0.3 https://i0.wp.com/truthvoice.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-truthvoice-logo21-1.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Debtor Prison https://truthvoice.com 32 32 194740597 ACLU Sues Wash. County For Operating ‘Modern-Day Debtors Prison’ https://truthvoice.com/2015/10/aclu-sues-wash-county-for-operating-modern-day-debtors-prison/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=aclu-sues-wash-county-for-operating-modern-day-debtors-prison Sun, 11 Oct 2015 09:22:35 +0000 http://truthvoice.com/2015/10/aclu-sues-wash-county-for-operating-modern-day-debtors-prison/
Jayne Fuentes is one of three plaintiffs in a lawsuit accusing Benton County of having "modern-day debtors' prisons."

Jayne Fuentes is one of three plaintiffs in a lawsuit accusing Benton County of having “modern-day debtors’ prisons.”

After years of drug addiction, Jayne Fuentes feels she’s close to getting her life back on track, as long as she doesn’t get arrested again — but not for using drugs. She fears it will be because she still owes court fines and fees, including hundreds of dollars for her public defender.

Fuentes hopes to change that. She’s one of three plaintiffs in a lawsuit filed this week by the American Civil Liberties Union of Washington, charging that Benton County, Wash., where she lives, “operates a modern-day debtors’ prison.”

Fuentes first told her story to NPR in 2014, in our investigation called Guilty and Charged. That series showed how in all 50 states, defendants are now handed a bill for more and more of the costs of their own trials, sentences and supervision when they leave jail. That can be a hardship for many indigent defendants. And, around the country, when they fall behind on payment, they may end up serving jail time.

That was particularly so in Benton County, where last year, an NPR analysis of jail records found that about 1 out of every 4 people in jail for a misdemeanor offense was there because he failed to pay court fines and fees.

The ACLU lawsuit says people in Benton County who are homeless, unemployed or just out of prison get sent to jail when they can’t pay their court fines, which can add up to hundreds or thousands of dollars.

Fuentes says she owes “tens of thousands of dollars” to the county Superior Court, where she faced felony drug charges, and almost $2,000 to the District Court, which handles misdemeanors.

Since leaving prison in 2011, she’s repaired relationships with her family. She has stayed sober, left a treatment house earlier this year and moved into an apartment with a roommate. She also bought an old, used car and, in July, finally found work, a part-time job making sandwiches at a fast-food restaurant. But she lives from one paycheck to the next, and there have been months — especially before she got her job — when she missed or was late on the $65 monthly payment she has to make to the courts.

When that happens, she says she gets a letter stating that the court can issue a warrant for her arrest. She worries about going back to jail.

Guilty And Charged

In 2014, NPR published a yearlong investigation that included more than 150 interviews with lawyers, judges, offenders in and out of jail, government officials, advocates and other experts.

“I would lose my job, my house, my car, my life and my freedom, for not being able to pay a fine,” Fuentes says.

She says she’s willing to pay what she owes the court, but shouldn’t be penalized for months when she has no income. Her debt grew when she was in prison. Every year, including when she was behind bars, there was a 12 percent annual interest rate added by the state to her debt to Superior Court.

Among her debts, she says, are several hundred dollars to pay for her public defender. The NPR survey found that’s common. In 2014, 43 states allowed indigent defendants to be charged a small fee or even hundreds of dollars for a public defendant.

Benton County, NPR found, collects just a fraction of the fines and fees it’s owed, but it still collected $13 million in 2012. Across the country, municipalities have come under scrutiny for the way they raise revenues through court fines. Earlier this year, the U.S. Department of Justice issued a report critical of Ferguson, Mo., for arresting people and charging them court fines and fees and then jailing them if they did not pay. There are 90 municipalities in St. Louis County, and some of them were collecting 20 to 60 percent of their municipal budgets in court fines. Since then, state lawmakers have put stricter limits on how much counties can raise, capping the amount at 10 percent as of 2017.

Officials in Benton County did not respond to a request for comment. But in the past, judges have said they give defendants multiple chances to reset the amount they owe, before ordering them to jail.

Vanessa Torres Hernandez, an attorney with the ACLU of Washington, says resetting fines is not enough because a person’s ability to pay can change quickly, if he loses a job or there’s a family emergency.

“There is a growing local and national recognition that debtors-prison systems are unproductive,” says Hernandez, and “as a society we all benefit when we give people who have made mistakes and gone through the criminal justice system real opportunities to pay their debts to society and rebuild their lives.”

By Joseph Shapiro for NPR.org

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N.H. Judges Illegally Jail Poor People Who Can’t Pay Fines https://truthvoice.com/2015/09/n-h-judges-illegally-jail-poor-people-who-cant-pay-fines/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=n-h-judges-illegally-jail-poor-people-who-cant-pay-fines Sat, 26 Sep 2015 09:17:36 +0000 http://truthvoice.com/2015/09/n-h-judges-illegally-jail-poor-people-who-cant-pay-fines/

Debtor Prison

 

The New Hampshire chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union released a report today that details the practice of judges jailing poor people who can’t afford to pay fines – a practice that’s illegal.

The report includes a few case studies, including Richard Vaughan. On July 8, 2014, Vaughan stood before Second Circuit Court Judge John Peter Cyr in Littleton.

Vaughan owed $895 from a DWI charge. It had been a while since he made a payment toward the debt, and Judge Cyr asked Vaughan how he’s going to pay it.

“Your Honor,” Vaughan said, “I’ve been out – I had an interview at Pizza Hut the day before yesterday. I’ve applied at Applebee’s, and a lot of places, and I’m just really trying hard to get a job right now so I can pay this fine.”

The ACLU’s Gilles Bissonnette said, during this hearing, the court should have given Vaughan the option of a public attorney, and the court should have tried to figure out if he had enough money to pay the fine.

“Mr. Vaughan has no idea what his rights are,” said Bissonnette. “And he’s sitting there, and I think you can hear it from his voice, terrified. He did not go in that day thinking that he was going to be jailed and then moments later he was ordered to go to jail for 18 days. I mean, that is an amazing amount of time.”

Infographic: How many who went to jail had lawyers?

Estimates for defendants’ legal representation generated by the ACLU-NH study methodology detailed above. Data via the ACLU-NH report on debtors’ prisons in N.H.

A widespread problem?

Eighteen days in jail – that’s a day for every $50 dollars in debt. That’s state law.

But there’s also federal law going back to the 1800s, and Supreme Court decisions in more recent years. And here comes a word you’ll hear a few times in this story: willful. The law is clear that you should only go to prison for willfully not paying a fine.

“So what we talk about in our report is just how clear and how settled the law is – and unfortunately how systemic it is in New Hampshire for that constitutional principal to not be followed,” said Bissonnette.

Buzz Scherr, a professor at the UNH School of Law and a coauthor of the report, said courts are making two errors here: poor people shouldn’t go to jail for not paying fines they can’t afford; and when judges threaten jail time, they often aren’t offering public attorneys to poor people.

“The shocking thing about the report is…what we’re seeing is a non-application of those two principles” said Scherr. “It’s not a misapplication. They’re just no ability-to-pay hearings occurring. And none of these people – in 50 percent of the cases, we estimate – nobody is getting a lawyer.”

Here’s what the numbers tell us: In 2013, the year the report analyzes, the circuit court system heard 83,000 cases related to fines. And in 289 of those cases, courts jailed people for not paying. The ACLU pulled court records and analyzed 39 of those cases to draw larger conclusions.

The ACLU concludes poor defendants were routinely jailed without determining if they were able to pay the fine. And in most cases, the defendant wasn’t offered a public attorney. The report details three examples.

But Ed Kelly, the judge in charge of the circuit court system, said the ACLU’s number don’t add up to a statewide problem.

“I think it would be wrong for anyone to form conclusions based upon any three cases,” said Kelly. “I mean, candidly, you or anybody listening to this report would have to ask themselves, ‘Are there three instances in my life, in my work, over the last year that I would not want somebody to be recording and listening to?’ ”

Infographic: Circumstances leading to jail time for defendants with unpaid fines

Percentage estimates were extrapolated from the sample group of 2013 debtors’ prison cases studied by the ACLU-NH. All counties but Merrimack County provided defendant files for study. 

The burning house

Dennis Suprenant was one of the minority cases the ACLU identified where the defendant did have an attorney.

“I will say this – he’s not going to be leaving here today until he pays his attorney’s fee,” said Judge Thomas Bamberger during Suprenant’s hearing in the Nashua Circuit Court, February 2014. “They’ve been due since December of 2012. So that has to be paid today. That’s $302.50.”

Suprenant was homeless and owed attorney’s fees, but was about to start a new job. Public defender Suzanne Ketteridge and the judge debate the points.

Ketteridge: But he has done something. He paid for – he went into rehab, he got a —

Judge: Uh-huh.

Ketteridge: — job. That has to count for something.

Judge: Yeah, it does. It allows him to pay his OCC fees.

Ketteridge: And if he can’t come up with the money today, what will happen.

Judge: Then he’ll go to jail until he pays it.

Ketteridge: Which will send —

Judge: That’s what happens.

Ketteridge: Which means he’ll lose his job, he’ll go right back to where he was before.

Judge: Uh-huh….

Judge Bamberger ordered Suprenant to pay $90 on the spot – everything he had to his name – and then told him to pay the rest by Friday, or face jail time. Gilles Bissonnette says the next day the ACLU filed an emergency petition to the state Supreme Court, which overturned Judge Bamberger’s decision.

“The letter of the law here is to consider the circumstances of his life,” says Bissonnette.

Two weeks later, a similar case went before the same judge. Alejandra Corro was supposed to pay off her fine by doing community service. She started to do just that, but then her house caught fire. She had to pass her two sons, ages two and three, to a firefighter through her second-story window. Corro spoke to WMUR at the time.

“I am thankful somebody was watching over me and my children – very much,” Corro told WMUR.

In court, Corro was not willfully not repaying the fine. The fire disrupted her ability to pay, she contended. Judge Bamberger disagreed and sentenced her to nine days. Corro spent the night in jail. Then the ACLU filed an emergency petition with the Superior Court, and she was released.

Infographic: Circumstances of defendants jailed without ability-to-pay hearing

New Hampshire moment in the spotlight

The ACLU is quick to point out Judge Bamberger is not a rogue judge – they document cases throughout the state. And Peter Edelman, a law and poverty expert at Georgetown University, said debtors’ prison is a practice gaining attention around the country.

“Of course all of it undermines the concept that we’re a nation that believes in the rule of law,” said Edelman. “So it’s very, very scary, really, that this goes on at such a great level.”

And to the extent that it happens at all in New Hampshire, Judge Kelly, the head of the circuit courts, said he’s grateful the ACLU report shines a light on the problem.

“Not even one person, not even one person should ever go to jail for nonpayment of a fine when the reason is an inability to pay – period, end of discussion,” Kelly said. “What I would like to do is get to a place, and frankly I don’t think it’s going to be very difficult, where the [ACLU] and I can walk arm in arm together to the rules committee and to the Legislature and say, ‘We agree. These changes need to be made.’ ”

That process might start right away. Supreme Court Chief Justice Linda Dalianis released a statement today saying the head of the circuit courts and the reports’ authors will sit down to look through the state’s procedural rules, and begin to draft out possible changes.

For more on the study, you can read the entire ACLU-NH report right here:

By Jack Rodolico for NHpr.com
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