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10.04.10
ACLU Report Exposes Resurgence of Debtor’s Prisons
Cost of Incarceration Skyrockets as Poor Are Jailed Because
They Cannot Pay Fines
CLEVELAND- Poor defendants are being jailed at increasingly alarming rates
for failing to pay legal debts they can never hope to afford, according to a new
report released today by the American Civil Liberties Union. The report profiles
five states, including Ohio, who are more aggressively going after poor people who
have already served their criminal sentences. This undermines re-entry prospects,
paving the way back to prison or jail and burdening the public with yet more costs.
ACLU of Ohio Legal Director James L. Hardiman said, “Incarcerating people who
cannot afford to pay fines is unquestionably unconstitutional, and takes a tremendous
toll on our communities. Most of these people are fined for traffic tickets or
minor misdemeanors, but end up spending weeks in jail because they cannot afford to
pay the fine. In addition to the thousands of dollars that it costs to imprison
someone, those people are also less likely to remain employed and may end up
incarcerated again.”
In one example cited in the report, an Ohio woman was arrested four separate times
for failure to pay $251 in fines and court costs originating from a fourth degree
misdemeanor conviction. She served a total of 33 days in jail, more than the maximum
sentence she could have received for her original crime. On average, it costs
between $55-70 per day to incarcerate someone in a county jail. As a result, it cost
taxpayers over $1500 in incarceration costs for failure to pay a $251 fine. This
does not include the cost to arrest her four times.
Debtor’s prisons have routinely been found unconstitutional in Ohio and state law
requires that anyone who does not pay a fine have a hearing to determine whether they
are able to pay. If they cannot pay, courts must explore other options and cannot
imprison them because they cannot afford the fine. However, many mayor’s courts
and some municipal courts continue to incarcerate people who fail to pay a fine
without holding a hearing.
“While Ohio has some of the strongest court decisions and laws banning debtor’s
prisons, mayor’s courts continue to operate without necessary due process
protections and accountability from the rest of the court system,” added Hardiman.
“In effect, these rogue courts have created two standards of justice — one for the
rich and one for the poor. That is unacceptable.”
The report profiles the stories of residents around the state—from Hamilton to
Montgomery to Richland counties — who were imprisoned because they could not pay
fines. In addition to problems with mayor’s courts, the ACLU’s report also calls
for increased accountability for municipal court judges, prohibiting debtor’s
prison in juvenile courts, and frequent purging of arrest warrant dockets for
individuals who have served sufficient time or were not given full due process when
the fines were imposed.
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Read the
executive summary.
Read the
full
report.
View the ACLU of Ohio
Criminal Justice page.
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