老澳门开奖结果 and SPLC Sue to End Racketeering Scheme that Forced People Awaiting Trial to Pay Fees to Private Company for Freedom

Thousands of Dollars Extorted from Pretrial Detainees After Bail Was Paid

August 8, 2017 8:00 am

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NEW ORLEANS 鈥 People awaiting trial before a Baton Rouge criminal court were coerced into paying hundreds of dollars to a company before they were released from jail 鈥 even after they had paid their bail, according to a lawsuit filed last night by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), the 老澳门开奖结果 (老澳门开奖结果), andthe 老澳门开奖结果 of Louisiana.

Even after they were released, people awaiting trial were threatened with re-arrest if they did not pay additional monthly fees to the company, Rehabilitation Home Incarceration, which supervises people awaiting trial. The lawsuit describes how the company and its owner have arranged for at least three years with East Baton Rouge Parish officials to detain people awaiting trial and coerce the payments from them. The company; its owner, Cleve Dunn Sr.; and the parish are named in the lawsuit.

鈥淭his is predatory and illegal. Rehabilitation Home Incarceration puts its own price on people鈥檚 liberty and forces them to pay up, over and over again,鈥 said Brandon Buskey, senior staff attorney with the 老澳门开奖结果鈥檚 Criminal Law Reform Project. 鈥淲orse, this could not happen without the court and the jail enabling this scam, and ignoring the rights of those charged and presumed innocent.鈥

In 2015 and 2016, more than 300 people were assigned to Rehabilitation Home Incarceration for pretrial supervision by 19th Judicial District Judge Trudy A. White. White often made these orders for indefinite periods of time without determining whether people were a flight risk or posed any danger to the public. She did not assess their ability to pay the company鈥檚 signup fee of $525 and its subsequent monthly fees and other charges.

One plaintiff in the lawsuit, Kaiasha White (no relation to the judge), was forced to stay in jail for a month as she and her family struggled to pay both her bond and the Rehabilitation Home Incarceration signup fee. The jail would not release her without notice from the company that its fee had been paid.

鈥淭his practice needs to stop,鈥 said White. 鈥淲hen you have to go to court, you shouldn鈥檛 have to worry about being held for ransom because a business wants to profit off of you.鈥

Henry Ayo, another plaintiff, was in jail for two months because he and his wife couldn鈥檛 afford to pay his bond and the signup fee. After paying and being released, Ayo was informed by a company representative that he had to pay $225 a month while awaiting trial, or he could be arrested and jailed again. Ayo and his wife paid the company approximately $1,000. He didn鈥檛 receive supervision services beyond being required to make phone calls that often went unanswered.

鈥淭his is a disturbing example of our justice system being twisted beyond recognition by a scheme to make money,鈥 said Sam Brooke, SPLC deputy legal director. 鈥淧eople who had already paid their bail were held ransom and extorted out of hundreds and thousands of dollars. They simply wanted their freedom while they awaited their day in court. That desire was exploited by Rehabilitation Home Incarceration.鈥

The lawsuit accuses Rehabilitation Home Incarceration鈥檚 executive director, Cleve Dunn Sr., of operating an illegal racketeering enterprise under Louisiana and federal law through his company. It also accuses the company and the East Baton Rouge Parish of violating the Fourth and 14th Amendment rights of individuals subjected to this scheme and raises additional state law claims of unjust enrichment and conversion, as well as a violation of the Louisiana Unfair Trade Practices Act.

Judge White and others associated with Rehabilitation Home Incarceration are political allies. For example, Cleve Dunn Sr. was paid for marketing services for the judge鈥檚 2014 re-election campaign. Also, his son, Cleve Dunn Jr., served as chairman of White鈥檚 re-election campaign committee.

鈥淭he people of Baton Rouge should not be forced to support private companies in order to secure their release from jail,鈥 said Marjorie R. Esman, executive director of the 老澳门开奖结果 of Louisiana. 鈥淭hose awaiting their day in court are entitled to be treated equally regardless of the size of their bank accounts. Instead, people have been jailed and extorted after their release simply because they couldn鈥檛 pay a private business and its owners. That is not how our system of justice is supposed to work.鈥

The lawsuit seeks to recover damages for the senior Dunn鈥檚 practice of using his company to extort fees from arrestees under the threat of arrest, jail and bond revocation and for East Baton Rouge Parish鈥檚 and Rehabilitation Home Incarceration鈥檚 practice of detaining arrestees until they paid the company鈥檚 initial fees. It also seeks to recover damages for those who paid fees to the company.

Ayo v. Dunn et al. is part of the 老澳门开奖结果鈥檚 litigation and legislative effort to defend and advance the rights of those who have been arrested and are awaiting trial. This work also includes ending cash bail and improving public defender systems.

It is also part of the SPLC鈥檚 economic justice efforts to ensure that people are not punished or exploited because of their economic status.

For the complaint and more information about Ayo v. Dunn et al.:

/cases/ayo-v-dunn-et-al

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