Quantcast
New York public defenders say unable to reach inmates in federal jails – Metro US

New York public defenders say unable to reach inmates in federal jails

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Lawyers representing inmates in New York federal jails said on Friday they had been largely cut off from their clients since in-person visits were halted last month due to the coronavirus pandemic.

“The majority of requests for a telephone consultation result in no response at all,” the Federal Defenders of New York wrote in a letter filed in Brooklyn federal court.

The group also said jail officials had not followed through on promises last month to set up regular videoconferences.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn and the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan halted in-person lawyer visits on March 13 because of the pandemic.

Since then, the Federal Defenders said, jail officials had ignored dozens of requests from lawyers “pleading on multiple occasions to get on the phone with their clients,” some of whom have imminent court dates or serious health issues.

In the last eight days of March, they said, only 18 of 59 requested calls were scheduled. Some calls that did occur had to be scheduled at times when a needed interpreter could not be arranged, the Federal Defenders said.

“There is no avoiding a simple truth: the right to counsel is a dead letter for a majority of the pretrial detainees at MDC and MCC,” the letter said. “Even amid the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic, that is intolerable.”

The group is asking a judge to order the Metropolitan Detention Center to schedule requested calls within 48 hours and schedule at least three video conferences each weekday.

They said the Metropolitan Correctional Center would not be bound by the Brooklyn judge’s order, but could abide by it voluntarily. If it did not, the Federal Defenders said they would bring a separate legal action in Manhattan federal court.

(Reporting By Brendan Pierson in New York; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Tom Brown)