Releasing a person pretrial could be one method to reduce the future population for the Vigo County Jail.
That
was one idea from Mel Burks, CEO of Hamilton Center Inc., who said his
agency for the past two years has been ready to move forward on an
assessment center. Such a center would be aimed at assessing individuals
for mental and drug programs through Hamilton Center instead of
immediately sending them to jail.
Burks said Hamilton Center “is
willing and ready to assist with those individuals with an assessment
center. We are prepared to put all our energy into providing a place
where those individuals can come and be assessed before going to jail.
The assessment may rightfully direct those individuals somewhere else
instead of the jail,” Burks recently told the Vigo County Criminal
Justice Coordinating Committee, of which he is a member.
The issues at hand
Burks
was offering one suggestion to the 30-member advisory committee that
was formed as citizen groups and different parts of government —
including the judiciary — reacted to the county’s plans to build a
$60-million, 500-bed jail.
That the county needs a new jail is in
little dispute. The county essentially conceded in a still-pending
federal lawsuit that its current jail cannot keep pace and provide
incarceration that doesn’t violate constitutional standards.
One
problem becoming clear to the committee itself is that there is no
single question and no single answer when it comes to reducing the
number of people locked up, as well as determining exactly which
suspects and offenders need to be locked up.
And the numbers do appear sizable in Vigo County.
The
Vera Institute of Justice, a national non-profit that studies incarceration
issues, said that on April 20, the Vigo County jail had a population of
291, a roughly 278 percent increase in jail population from just 30
years ago. The rate of incarceration has also increased by approximately
275 percent in that same span, or about 426 people in jail per 100,000
working-age people in the county.
A county jail status report Vigo
County filed in U.S. District Southern Indiana at the end of April
shows 280 of 309 inmates at the county jail were pretrial detainees.
The
Vigo County Criminal Justice Coordinating Committee was formed in
November to take a wide-scope look at the county’s criminal justice
system. It began meeting in earnest in February.
Public opinion
The chairman of the committee said more discussion and community education are needed.
Rob
Roberts, Vigo County’s chief deputy prosecutor, said one key issue will
be the implementation of Rule 26, a bail reform program that would see
more low-risk arrestees released without bond. It would allow release of
those arrested without bail as long as a judge determines there is no
substantial risk of flight or danger to themselves or others.
The
Indiana Supreme Court adopted the rule in September 2016. Currently, 11
counties are participating in a pilot program to implement the pretrial
practices. The high court in 2017 amended its effective date statewide
to January 2020.
“It is a default position that people are to be released pretrial,” Roberts said.
And that can get tricky in terms of public opinion very quickly, Roberts pointed out.
“In
setting that type of thing up, if you look at a sampling of comments
that people have on social media regarding cases where somebody is
either released from jail on a child molestation case or put on home
detention from a reckless homicide case ... where someone may ultimately
be found to be a low risk to re-offend, or low risk to fail to appear,
or a low risk to the community based on how the pretrial screening tool
assesses that person, [then] they get released,” Roberts said in an
interview.
“That is not what people expect on these types of crimes,” Roberts said.
Somehow,
Roberts said, authorities must make it clear both that they are
following the law and the current pretrial screening measures do
actually — statistically work well.
“But it means that our county
will be handling cases potentially much differently than the past and
people could get out of jail” that previously were detained in jail.
“I
think that’s going to be controversial, or there will be quite a few
outspoken opinions on that as we move forward,” Roberts said.
Jasmine Heiss of the Vera Institute said more information on changing pretrial incarceration may be on the horizon.
The
state of New York has recently enacted statewide pretrial reform that
“does not use a risk assessment instrument at all, but instead has
created a stronger presumption of release, in some cases a mandated
release for low level offenders, all misdemeanors, some low level
felonies and the preservation of monetary bail for more serious felonies
with specific fact findings on the public safety risk,” she said.
That is projected to decrease smaller-county jail populations by 50 to 60 percent, she said.
While
Indiana already has Rule 26 in place, Hess said, New York is a new
model and the country will see how that plays out over the next few
years.
Impact of state decisions
In
2013, House Enrolled Act 1006 became the first major change to
Indiana’s criminal code in about three decades. That act separated
murder into its own crime class and expanded felony classifications into
six categories.
In 2015, additional changes to the criminal code
took effect, including sending Level 6 felonies to county jails instead
of state prisons. It also removed a “two for one” in which a person
could have two days removed for each single day served without incident.
“In
2018, Indiana added the second largest number of people to its prison
population of any state in the country, second only to Texas,” Heiss
said. “When lowering penalties or eliminating some mandatory minimum
[sentences] are paired with increasing sentence lengths,” the impact is
more people in jail, especially at the county level, she said.
Heiss said she thinks Indiana’s criminal code of “moving people from
state custody to local custody was supposed to be moving people closer
to treatment and giving them access to community-based resources, but if
those things simply have not been invested in at the community level,
then all that you have done is give sheriffs more people to house in
their facilities,” Hess said.
Bill Watson, executive director of
Vigo County Community Corrections, said there are changes in the recent
legislative session where some Level 6 offenders can go to state prison.
That includes violent offenders or those with two prior unrelated
felony convictions.
Hess said she thinks Indiana needs to make more financial investments in programs to keep people out of incarceration.
Roberts
said he thinks the “theory [of state criminal code reform] was to
reduce the prison population and invest that savings [in state expenses]
through a newly created [state] Recovery Works program. Serving those
offenders, you would be able to better develop programming,” he said.
“But
what has happened, in my interpretation, is they [Indiana legislature]
didn’t really fully understand that they were looking at the top of the
iceberg and not the full iceberg underneath. The money was drying up so
fast, there are caps now on what a person can have for treatment
programming,” Roberts said.
Hamilton Center and the Next Step
Foundation, Roberts said, are the only certified programs in Vigo County
for the state’s Recovery Works program, designed to provide support
services to those without insurance coverage who are involved with the
criminal justice system. The program is targeted to increase the
availability of specialized mental health treatment and recovery
services in the community for those who may otherwise face
incarceration.
Next Step is a community funded faith-based program
that consists of a 90-day residential program comprised of daily
12-Step meetings and weekly classes to help people overcome addiction to
drugs and alcohol.
Indiana’s, Terre Haute’s rates
Heiss
said smaller Indiana cities “like Terre Haute have much higher rates of
incarceration than our biggest cities, including places like New York,
Chicago, Los Angeles and Houston.”
And that’s occurring even as the overall national incarceration rate drops.
The Vera Institute reports the total prison incarceration rate in the United States is down 15 percent since 2008.
The
institute reports that from 2017 to 2018, there was a 1.8 percent
decline in the national prison incarceration rate, driven by a decrease
in the number of people in federal prisons, as well as greater than 5
percent declines in incarceration rates in seven states.
However,
the declines were not universal. Mass incarceration is still on the rise
in some states, such as Indiana, Texas, and Wyoming, according to the
institute.
The institute collected year-end 2017 and 2018 prison
population data directly from state departments of corrections and the
federal Bureau of Prisons on the number of people in state and federal
prisons on December 31, 2018, to provide information on how prison
incarceration is changing in the United States
In its 2018 findings for Indiana, it reports:
•
Indiana’s 2018 prison population grew by 3.3 percent over the previous
year. The only state to add more people to its prison population in 2018
was Texas, which is home to more than four times more people than
Indiana.
• From 2017 to 2018, Indiana added almost 900 people to
its prison population, to reach a total of 26,877 people incarcerated in
prison. It is one of just 19 states in which the number of people
increased in 2018.
• Indiana’s prison incarceration rate grew 2.8
percent in 2018, from 391 people in prison per 100,000 residents to 402
people in prison per 100,000 residents. Only Iowa, Vermont, and Wyoming
saw greater increases in their incarceration rate, though Indiana’s
incarceration rate was higher than both Vermont and Iowa’s at year end.
•
Between 2016 and 2018, Indiana saw the greatest growth in prison rates
in the Midwest, with a prison incarceration rate that increased 4.3
percent, while nearly all of its neighboring states reduced their use of
prison. Illinois’s prison incarceration rate decreased 7.9 percent,
Michigan’s decreased 6.3 percent, and Ohio’s decreased 3.9 percent. It’s
only neighbor to increase was Kentucky, rising 4.1 percent, which Vera
Institute reports is technically a southern state.
Defining the question
The
Vigo County Criminal Justice Coordinating Committee took a survey of
members. One area of focus, Roberts told the committee, is an increase
in potential probation officers. The increase was part of a
recommendation in a 2018 Vigo County Jail and Criminal Justice
Assessment, headed by RJS Justice Services.
That study recommended
six additional adult probation officers to help level out caseloads,
Roberts said. That would cost $63,000 per officer, plus $3,000 per
person for office, computer and phone, plus $1,000 per officer for
training. That totals $402,000 for six officers.
That caused Rev.
John Lang, a member of the committee, as well as Vigo County
Commissioner Judith Anderson, to say the committee should focus on
long-term reductions to jail population outside of the court system.
“I
am a little bit confused on the fact that I thought that this board was
trying to help find solutions and find recommendations on how to help
people with drug issues and mental issues ... with reaching out to the
people already in the community with programs and what can they do to
help, not hire more people,” Anderson said.
“I am not putting down
the fact that you say you need these people, but we have not done
anything on this committee with people who are out there that have
programs. How can we get these people in a supervised program?” Anderson
asked.
Lisa Spence-Bunnett, a member of the committee and the
County Council, said she thinks the committee is now gathering data “to
look at what our opportunities are with a recommendation keeping the
[2018 Jail and Criminal Justice Assessment] study in mind.
“We are
gathering data on some of the most impactful recommendations and what
it might take to do each one. The whole intention, I think, was to put a
whole number of things out there, not just try to cherry pick, but a
number of things to consider as a whole and then determine which would
make the most sense,” Spence-Bunnett said.
Lang said he thinks the
committee should focus mainly on “how do we keep this jail from being
overcrowded in five years. That really is the role that we have.
“We
should coordinate efforts, activities, policies and practices, that
will reduce the number of people who are actually incarcerated or cut
down the length of their stays ... and do that in a matter that still
regards the safety of the public,” Lang said.