Tens of Thousands Still Detained Longer than Law Allows, NYCLU Study Finds (1/31/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: CONTACT: media@aclu.org
Coalition Responds with Rally for "Charge or Release" Bill NEW YORK-- More than one third of the people who are arrested and arraigned
in New York City must wait more than 24 hours in jail before even seeing a judge
or being informed of the charges against them, according to a New York Civil
Liberties Union study released today.
"New York City must meet its legal obligation to arraign arrestees in a
timely manner," said Donna Lieberman, Executive Director of the New York Civil
Liberties Union.
This pattern of long processing times means that people arrested even for
minor offenses may have to leave children without childcare, miss days of
school, or lose their jobs, all because the justice system cannot process them
within the period of time mandated by the courts, Lieberman said. New Yorkers
responding to the findings rallied on City Hall steps today to urge the City
Council to reintroduce and pass the Charge or Release bill, which aims to solve
the prolonged detention problem.
The new study, "Justice Delayed, Justice Denied: A Study of
Arrest-to-Arraignment Times in New York City," analyzed 13 months of New York
Police Department (NYPD) data and found that the police detained thousands of
New Yorkers each month for 30, 40 or even 50 hours before arraigning them. Each
of these prolonged detentions defies a 1991 ruling in which the Court of Appeals
held that the NYPD and other city agencies are legally obligated to present
people for arraignment within 24 hours of their arrest.
"New York has continued to violate the rights of the people it arrests
even after the Court of Appeals ruled that arrestees must see a judge within
24 hours of their arrests,” said Lieberman. “The city is failing to comply
with the law, and it's up to the City Council to set things right."
Reasonable arrest-to-arraignment time is more than a technical Requirement,
according to the study. Arraignment before a judge is the first occasion when
arrestees are formally informed of the charges against them. It is also
the first occasion on which they learn of their right to be represented by
counsel and to seek bail. And until arraignment, people who have been arrested -
even those charged with low-level offenses - may not have a chance to inform
friends and family that they are being detained at all.
The Charge or Release bill aims to overcome city agencies' failure to end
prolonged detentions by creating a law that forces those agencies to deal with
the problem head-on. When the bill was introduced last City Council session it
drew strong support from members of the public who had been detained, as well as
lawmakers (the Council's Black, Latino, and Asian Caucus endorsed it unanimously
and 23 Council Members signed on as co-sponsors) and dozens of legal, academic
and community-based groups.
In light of the new data showing that the bill is still necessary, today's
rally urged the City Council's new leadership to reintroduce it and to shepherd
it through the legislative process.
"Prolonged detention does not make our city any safer," said Udi Ofer, Senior
Legislative Counsel with the NYCLU and Project Director of the Bill of Rights
Defense Campaign, which spearheaded the movement to introduce the Charge or
Release bill. "The majority of arrestees detained for longer than 24 hours are
eventually charged with low-level offenses such as violations or misdemeanors.
Many people who are arrested spend time in jail only when they are waiting for
arraignment. It's time for the City Council to ensure that city agencies
coordinate themselves and solve this problem."
Data analysis for the study was conducted by Yanilda Gonzalez, Project
Associate for the Bill of Rights Defense Campaign. Organizations endorsing the
Charge or Release Bill include Harlem Neighborhood Defender Services, the Grand
Council of Guardians, the Legal Aid Society, Bronx Defenders, 100 Blacks in Law
Enforcement Who Care, Association of Legal Aid Attorneys UAW Local 2325, Met
Council on Housing and Democracy for New York City.
The report is available online at http://nyclu.org/pdfs/cor_report_013106.pdf
More information about the Bill of Rights Defense Campaign is available
online at www.nycbordc.org
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