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Governor’s office accuses Sheriff Dart of “spreading misinformation”

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* According to Chicago Appleseed, 83 percent of the people on electronic monitoring in Cook County “had to pay a money bond to leave jail and be placed on electronic monitors.” With that in mind, here’s The TRiiBE and the Chicago Reader

While awaiting trial, Shane (a pseudonym) has worn an electronic ankle monitor and been confined to their home, a high-rise apartment they share with their elderly mother and two children, for over two years. During their confinement, they have been visited hundreds of times by sheriff’s deputies who were summoned by erroneous automatic alerts that accused Shane of leaving home without authorization.

Deputies came so often that Shane’s toddler began to think they were family friends. “He calls them his buddies because he’s so used to seeing them,” Shane said. But their oldest son understood who the deputies were. “And that’s why a lot of these children grow into men and they disrespect authority, or they feel like they hate the police because they see them doing things that are not conducted in a proper manner.”

The alerts that sent texts to Shane’s phone and deputies to their front door originated from Track Group, a subcontractor that operates ankle monitors used by the Cook County Sheriff’s Office (CCSO). Track Group sends alerts to Protocol, a call center that then sends the texts. Shane is one of hundreds of people who were similarly inundated with text alerts from Protocol while on CCSO’s pretrial home-monitoring program over an 18-month period, according to data newly obtained by The TRiiBE and the Reader.

As of press time, 2,017 people are wearing electronic ankle bracelets under CCSO’s pretrial house arrest program. They’re required to remain inside their home 24 hours a day, but can leave for “essential movement” to go to work or run errands. Sheriff Tom Dart has advocated for repealing the provisions in the 2021 SAFE-T Act pertaining to essential movement. According to a recent article by The Intercept, Dart has systematically limited people who use essential movement for work from also running errands.

The alerts, which often summon sheriff’s deputies and carry an implicit threat of being taken to jail, can be disruptive and frightening. Many of the people who were texted repeatedly said in interviews they were inside their homes when the alerts occurred. […]

In a previous story, we reported that in 2021, 80 percent of alerts were found to be false, and spoke to several people on pretrial monitoring who received frequent alerts accusing them of going AWOL even though they were inside their homes. We also chronicled the tribulations of Jeremy “Mohawk” Johnson, who documented his two-year ordeal of repeated false electronic-monitor alerts while he awaited trial on charges stemming from a 2020 protest.

Since then, we have obtained data on hundreds of thousands of text messages sent to some 10,000 people who, like Shane, were in the home-monitoring program between January 1, 2020, and June 22, 2022. The data shows that Johnson’s experience was far from unique.

During that 18-month period, most people on electronic home monitoring got a text from Protocol about three times a month, on average. But a significant number of people were texted far more often. One thousand people on home monitoring were texted an average of three times a week. Thirty people received upwards of 20 texts per week. Twenty-two people got more than 1,000 texts, an average of two a day.

Tracey Harkins, a criminal attorney who often represents defendants who are on home monitoring, said that attorneys have no choice but to advise their clients to call Protocol every time they receive a text, and to film themselves to prove they’re at home. She added that her clients have told her that the call center sometimes doesn’t pick up. “They call and the phones keep ringing and no one answers,” she said.

What a nightmare, not to mention a complete mess.

* State law allows people confined on electronic monitoring to have two, eight-hour periods of movement per week for things like doctor appointments, grocery shopping or even taking the trash to the alley. They’re still tracked during that time because they have to wear ankle bracelets, but Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart has interpreted the law to eliminate those time periods for people who already have a judge’s permission to work or go to school

Eddie Raymond needed to run to the store to grab some toilet paper on a January day this year. Under an Illinois law that had gone into effect at the start of the month, he was entitled to leave home at least two days a week to run such an errand — notwithstanding the GPS monitor affixed to his ankle that allowed the local sheriff’s office to track his every move. When Raymond contacted the sheriff’s call center to check in before leaving home, though, he was told that he didn’t have permission to go out that day. The explanation startled him.

“They said if you have work movement, you’re not supposed to get your essential days, because your essential days qualify for work,” recalled Raymond, who asked to be identified by a pseudonym to protect his privacy. “I told them that doesn’t make sense.”

Raymond had unknowingly run into a policy quietly implemented by Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart. He wasn’t getting his “essential days,” guaranteed by law, because he also had regularly scheduled permission to go to work.

* Yet, Sheriff Dart is taking a hardcore stance

“Our city is overwhelmed with violence and we’ve taken a group of people who are charged with violent offenses and saying ‘go out, we’re going to shut our eyes for two days just to see what happens,’” said Sheriff Tom Dart.

Defendants still wear their ankle monitors on their “free movement” days but their whereabouts are not tracked in real-time because the sheriff has no way to quickly sort through the legitimacy of “basic necessity” stops.

Advocates point to recent studies that have found the increased use of electronic monitoring is not a key driver of crime.

According to Chicago Appleseed, less than 2 percent of the people on EM were rearrested for Class 2+ felonies. A significant chunk of the 8.8 percent total rearrested were busted for previous warrants.

* Jordan Abudayyeh…

There is nothing in the act that prevents the Sheriff from tracking in real time those who are on electronic monitoring awaiting trial. The act clearly states the Sheriff “may promulgate rules that prescribe reasonable guidelines under which an electronic monitoring and home detention program shall operate.” The statute does not prohibit them from requiring more detail (date, time frame, location address) of where the person on electronic monitoring intends to go when granting movement. There is also nothing in the Act that says those on electronic monitoring cannot be tracked during these movements. Perhaps, instead of spreading misinformation, the Sheriff could focus on making sure his agency promulgates rules and secures the resources its needs to run an effective electronic monitoring program.

* More…

…Adding… Sheriff Dart’s office…

The only “misinformation” being promulgated comes from the Governor’s office, which signed a law without, apparently, a full understanding of the implications. There are currently more than 2,000 individuals who have been court-ordered to the Sheriff’s electronic monitoring program, and 75% of them are facing violent charges, including murder, attempted murders, aggravated criminal sexual assault, and gun-related offenses. On days that are not designated for free movement, the courts or the Sheriff’s Office approve movement for individuals based on where they are going and what they will be doing, and the Sheriff’s Office works to monitor them to make sure they are where they said they would be.

For example, if someone has approved movement to go from home to a grocery store and back home and we see the participant is five miles away in the opposite direction, we know they are likely not following the approved movement and our staff can investigate. This accountability helps to protect public safety, because it enables individuals on EM to perform tasks outside their home while serving as a deterrent against straying outside the areas they are approved to visit. With the imposition of the free movement this new law mandated, monitoring movement is impossible because there are no restrictions on where individuals can go during that time. The practical effect of free movement is that alerts about the whereabouts of individuals must be silenced and unmonitored during the hours that individuals are on free movement to avoid generating potentially millions of erroneous movement alerts each week.

It’s one thing to field criticism from advocates who have no obligation to promote public safety, but another thing entirely to hear such dismissive statements come from the state’s top elected official. Perhaps, instead of leveling snide accusations of misinformation at the Sheriff responsible for running the nation’s largest pre-trial electronic monitoring program, the Governor could focus on understanding the real challenges free movement presents, and the threat it poses to public safety. The Governor’s Office is invited to set up a time first thing Monday morning, or anytime that is convenient, to visit our Electronic Monitoring Unit so it can begin to understand the real-world effects this so-called reform has on public safety. We are confident that after educating themselves on the challenges this law has placed on our staff, the Governor’s Office will work tirelessly to provide the resources the Sheriff’s Office, as they said, “needs to run an effective electronic monitoring program.”

And…


Sheriff Dart has a long history of telling lies about pretrial justice reforms to bolster his advocacy for regressive policy proposals. We documented this history in our recent report "Obscuring the Truth."

You can read the full thing here: https://t.co/jabt5iLJUw pic.twitter.com/CUOmhLXU76

— Coalition to End Money Bond (@endmoneybond) November 18, 2022

posted by Rich Miller
Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 1:58 pm

Comments

  1. Let’s let the few prisoners that are actually still in jail out for a couple days a couple of days a week while we are at it.

    Everybody’s working for the weekend

    Everybody needs a second chance

    Everybody’s going off the deep end

    Comment by Lucky Pierre Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 2:12 pm

  2. “Spreading misinformation” is actually putting it mildly. Sheriff Dart has been telling flat-out lies about this, including at the recent budget hearing in which he told Cook County commissioners that the law requires him to “literally shut their machine off” during periods when individuals have been granted movement. That is 100% false and he knows it. Good on Gov. Pritzker for calling him out.

    Comment by charles in charge Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 2:24 pm

  3. Wonder how much Track Group, the subcontractor makes for these contracts providing such faulty services? And I wonder how much this is costing to send out deputies for false alerts 80% of the time…

    Comment by The Office Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 2:28 pm

  4. Sounds to me like Sheriff’s Dart’s complaints should be directed to Track Group and Protocol.

    I’ll bet he wouldn’t tolerate that kind of incompetent performance from the bullet resistant vests his deputies wear.

    Comment by Streator Curmudgeon Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 2:29 pm

  5. The Governor’s Office is absolutely correct. In fact, the first SAFE-T Act trailer bill deleted the word “open” before “movement” (at the request of Dart’s office) so this idea of “free movement” is completely ridiculous. When someone is on electronic monitoring, they are considered to be in the Sheriff’s custody and there’s absolutely nothing free about their movement.

    Comment by Change Agent Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 2:30 pm

  6. Judges love electronic monitoring because it’s a great way to “CYA.” If a judge allows a suspect to go free on their own recognizance or with a low cash bail and that suspect commits a new crime, the judge is then open to criticism for not locking the suspect up. But if that same suspect has electronic monitoring as a condition of his release and then commits a new crime while free, the onus shifts from the judge to the sheriff.

    That’s why Cook County’s electronic monitoring program has exploded in size since Judge Evans enacted bond reform. The same thing will happen in other counties that have electronic monitoring when the SAFE-T Act’s no-bail provisions kick in January 1st.

    Comment by Juror #1 Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 2:44 pm

  7. = Dart has systematically limited people who use essential movement for work from also running errands. =

    I am sorry, but it sounds as if Sheriff Dart is violating the law. He is advocating for eliminating the right to work so as to maintain a family, pretrial, and is in fact intefering with that right to work.

    I seem to recall that the pursuit of happiness clause references English Law which referred to the right to pursue property (i.e., the right to work so as to afford life itself).

    Perhaps Sheriff Dart, in denying the rights of the accused to continue to pursue economic activity, is violating the Civil Liberties and rights afforded to the accused in our U.S. Constitution.

    Comment by H-W Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 2:45 pm

  8. You get credit for time served for being on electronic monitoring. It beats Cook County Jail. I’m all for getting rid of EM (it doesn’t work) but I think a lot of defendants would prefer getting credit under the current system.

    Comment by Chicagonk Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 2:48 pm

  9. It would probably be wise for lawmakers to whistle him in for a committee hearing. Popping off to the press is one thing, not having the receipts when a committee calls is another. And, if everything he says is 100% true, he should welcome the scrutiny as it will only prove out his claims.

    He was just elected to his fifth term and, well, people can get a bit comfortable when they’ve encountered so little in the way of challenge for so long.

    Comment by Moe Berg Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 2:56 pm

  10. -Our city is overwhelmed with violence and we’ve

    put our resources into an expensive contract for high-error electronic monitoring and are utilizing our deputies’ time to follow up on incorrect reports because this will help reduce crime?

    Comment by Earnest Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 3:20 pm

  11. An individual on electronic monitoring enjoyed a five-finger discount while shopping at a high-end Michigan Avenue store.
    Fortunately, canine patrols put an end to his shopping spree.

    Comment by Rudy’s teeth Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 3:21 pm

  12. == It would probably be wise for lawmakers to whistle him in for a committee hearing. ==

    I think Dart would very much welcome that.

    == He was just elected to his fifth term and, well, people can get a bit comfortable when they’ve encountered so little in the way of challenge for so long. ==

    He had opponents in both the primary and general this year. He also seems to engender opposition from both the left and right, but keeps winning easily.

    Comment by OH Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 3:33 pm

  13. @Lucky Pierre

    I don’t understand your comment. More people are incarcerated in America than anywhere else in the world. Why are you under the impression we don’t have a lot of people incarcerated? Any proof?

    Comment by JJJJJJJJJJ Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 3:38 pm

  14. ===He had opponents in both the primary and general===

    LOL

    Right. Yeah. Pritzker had one of those tough primary opponents, too.

    He hasn’t had any real, sustained scrutiny, partly because he does a great job handling the media. Look at the post above. The lesser-known outlets are taking a hard look at him while the legacy TV outlet does a puff piece.

    Comment by Rich Miller Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 3:42 pm

  15. ==I don’t understand your comment.==

    People rarely do

    Comment by Demoralized Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 3:53 pm

  16. ==Let’s let the few prisoners that are actually still in jail out for a couple days a couple of days a week while we are at it.==

    “Prisoners” are people serving a sentence because they’ve been found guilty of something. People on pretrial release are presumed innocent. The fact that you don’t see a distinction is telling, and on-brand.

    Comment by charles in charge Friday, Nov 18, 22 @ 4:16 pm

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