ACLU of New Mexico Sues for Better Safety and Services in Juvenile Justice Facilities (11/19/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: media@aclu.org
ALBUQUERQUE,
NM – The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of
New Mexico sued the New
Mexico Children Youth and Families Department (CYFD) today for failing to ensure
safe living conditions and essential rehabilitation services for young people in
state juvenile justice facilities. The lawsuit charges CYFD with breaching
the terms of a contract it signed with the ACLU in February 2006 requiring the
agency to establish minimally adequate mental health services and protect youth
from physical assaults and threats of violence. CYFD entered into the 2006
agreement in order to avoid being sued for rights violations at that time, said
the ACLU.
“This lawsuit seeks to make sure that youth in our juvenile
justice system get a fair shot at redirecting their lives and overcoming
mistakes they made in their past,” said ACLU of New Mexico Executive Director
Peter Simonson. “New Mexico
puts its most troubled kids in prison because we don’t have adequate mental
health services. Kids are unnecessarily incarcerated and our juvenile
detention facilities become training grounds for lifelong criminals instead of
centers of genuine rehabilitation.”
Filed in Santa Fe District Court, the ACLU’s lawsuit seeks
two basic reforms:
The
establishment of minimally adequate community mental health services for the
3,000 children and youth on probation or parole due to delinquent acts, in order
to avoid the unnecessary incarceration of youth due to their mental illness;
and
A
Fundamental improvement of the safety, medical care and mental health care
provided to the approximately 300 children and youth held in delinquency
facilities.
The lawsuit cites several instances of guard-on-youth
violence, including a March 2007 incident in which staff at the
Santa Fe
County Juvenile
Detention
Center assaulted a 17-year old
resident who is developmentally delayed and suffers from auditory
hallucinations. Guards picked the youth up by his armpits and repeatedly
slammed his head into a metal classroom door. CYFD rejected a complaint
that the ACLU filed on the resident’s behalf, except to criticize staff for
failing to videotape the “take down.”
Simonson said, “Hopefully your children don’t wind up in one
of these facilities. But if they do, you want to know that the staff is
going to protect them, not brutalize them. You want to know that they’re
going to get the tools they need to address emotional problems and make
productive behavioral adjustments.”
Representing the ACLU are attorneys Daniel Yohalem and Lee
Hunt of Santa Fe, ACLU Co-Legal Director Phil Davis of
Albuquerque, and Alice Bussiere and
Maria Ramiu of the Youth Law Center of San Francisco. Yohalem is
former Legal Director for the Children’s Defense Fund.
A copy of the complaint can be found online at: www.aclu-nm.org/PDF/Complaint11_20_07
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