California Extends Critical Criminal Trial Deadlines Amid Viral
Outbreak
Courthouse News Service
(CN) Desperate times call for unprecedented measures, even for the
courts. At an emergency meeting Saturday, Californias Judicial Council
voted unanimously to delay criminal arraignments, extend timelines for
criminal trials, and use technology wherever possible to help courts
conduct remote proceedings as they grapple with ensuring due process
while protecting public health.
The council meeting was delayed an hour by technical difficulties, adding
an ironic note that was not lost on some council members.
Our experience this morning shows us that technology is an aid, it is
not always the clean simple answer we would like it to be, said council
technology committee chair Justice Marsha Slough.
Though the council had quadrupled its phone line capacity, public
interest in listening in on the meeting was so great that the number of
people trying to call in quickly overwhelmed and crashed the
system.
I promise well get better at this, said council Administrative
Director Martin Hoshino.
Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye called the meeting on Thursday after
cancelling the councils regularly-scheduled business meeting so council
members, many of whom are trial judges, could concentrate on dealing with
problems in their own courts.
But the need for the council to step in and issue some statewide guidance
quickly became apparent. Some courthouses shuttered completely while
others continued to hold essential hearings on evictions, juvenile
cases and criminal matters in crowded courtrooms.
Last week, the California District Attorneys Association sent the
councils presiding judges committee a letter asking for some
consistency.
Right now, there are inequities in Californias courthouses, Alameda
County District Attorney Nancy OMalley wrote on behalf of the group. In
other words, some courts are implementing variations of emergency
procedures while some courts are business as usual.
She added, This lack of equity and continuity in the treatment of
criminal defendants and those who dedicate their lives to the
administration of criminal justice raises concerns regarding equal
protection under the law and now, most urgently, violates every health
professionals warning about the spread of the coronavirus.
Her letter cited one unidentified courtroom where multiple defendants
stood in close proximity to each other and their defense attorneys, in
violation of strong recommendations that people stay six feet
apart.
First Amendment advocates also weighed in with concerns about shuttered
courtrooms and unpredictable access to telephonic hearings and court
records for the press and public.
Friday night, Governor Gavin Newsom issued an
executive
order giving Cantil-Sakauye, as chair off the council, to take any
action she deems necessary to maintain operations at any court.
The purpose of this Order is to enhance the authority of the Judicial
Council and its Chairperson to issue emergency orders; to amend or adopt
rules for court administration, practice, and procedure; and to take
other action to respond to the emergency caused by COVID-19, he
wrote.
Public comments flowed in ahead of Saturdays meeting from district
attorneys, public defenders and legal non-profits. Most were concerned
about people losing their homes to foreclosure or being evicted from
housing.
It was not an issue on Saturdays meeting agenda, however.
Hoshino said the council would likely take up the issue at a future
emergency meeting.
There are other just as important areas we will need to act upon. This
is probably not the first action there will subsequent meetings to be had
along the way, he said.
Assembly member Richard Bloom, D-Beverly Hills, pressed for clarification
from the council on unlawful detainer laws.
For those facing unlawful detainees and foreclosures, the timelines are
very short. Id like to encourage you to consider carefully whether those
areas are the next to be addressed, he said. There is a good deal of
uncertainty throughout the state of California as to whether they will be
able to stay in their housing. The last thing we need right now is to
increase the amount of homelessness on our streets.
Still other public commenters were worried about inequities in the
pre-arraignment process, as the council prepared to consider delaying
preliminary examinations and bail hearings for arrestees from the
statutory 10 court days to 30 court days, along with extending the time
period for holding a criminal trial by more than 30 days.
The motivation for the proposal is understandable, but the proposal
itself is ill-advised, Berkeley Law Professor Erik Stallman wrote to the
council. Administrative delay threatens to expose in-custody defendants
to unjustifiable, life-threatening risks. We are nowhere close to as bad
as things are going to get. Any delay in proceedings should not extend to
those defendants who are in custody.
The California Public Defenders Association also weighed in on the
criminal statutory time extensions in an 8-page letter urging the council
to ensure the quick release of detainees.
Oscar Bobrow, president of the CPDA, wrote We believe social distancing
is possible in courtrooms and hallways of courthouses and is crucial
during this public health emergency to protect our clients, court staff,
each other and our families that such practices are
implemented.
The public defenders recommended temperature checks at court entrances,
limited courtroom seatings, face masks, provision of hand sanitizer, and
that defendants not be handcuffed to each other.
We import you not to suspend the protections of the right to a speedy
hearing, he wrote.
Slough noted the flood of comments like these at the outset of the
meeting.
What I would say is the extensions that are proposed today are in no way
shape or form meant to be an opportunity to sit and wait. Rather they are
meant to be an opportunity to provide courts the ability to address
arraignments and preliminary hearings as they are able to do so, she
said.
She also pointed out that the chief justice had already given the courts
permission to lower bail amounts, in some cases to zero, to reduce the
number of in-custody defendants.
For some, this isnt enough. Kathleen Guneratne, senior attorney for the
ACLUs Northern California chapter, wrote a letter asking that detainees
be released if they cannot be arranged within 10 days.
Council member Judge Jonathan Conklin of Fresno County Superior Court
also asked if courts that have previously closed will be required to
reopen.
If courts have put out notice theyre closed now until a date in late
April, will these orders require them to open prior to that? he
said.
Slough answered, The trial courts need as best they can to open to
provide relief, to function not as shuttered business offices but rather
function as true beacons of justice during real times of crisis. Frankly,
I think our Constitution demands nothing more. These extensions are not a
license to wait.
I concur, Cantil-Sakauye said. We are courts, and we are open in
crisis. And we are always essential services.
She added defendant appearances could be satisfied through remote
technology, a critical shift to protect the public and inmates themselves
from spreading infection.
People in the courts, many are first responders. They are law
enforcement, they are firemen, and we need judges who are healthy and
able to sit on the bench, she said.
I have received no assurance that the jails in California are practicing
social distancing, Cantil-Sakauye said. I have received no assurance
when they transport inmates onto a bus and into the holding cells of most
courthouses that they are practicing social distancing.
She added, This is about protecting the public, flattening the curve,
making sure courts are not vectors.
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