A lawsuit filed by three former inmates says the Smith County Jail is keeping people detained for weeks beyond their sentences. It also alleges dozens more in the county, southeast of Dallas, may have suffered the same fate.
Complaints of inmates being held longer than their sentences have surfaced in other counties, including Dallas.
The suit, filed recently in federal court, claims Ladarion Hughes, Angela Alonzo, and Demarcus Lively were incarcerated beyond their sentences for 27, 33, and eight days, respectively.
Alonzo鈥檚 family had even attended her court appointment in spring 2022.
鈥淎fter finding out she was entitled to immediate release, [they] waited outside of the Jail,鈥 the petition reads. 鈥淎fter waiting outside of the Jail for eight hours, Alonzo鈥檚 mother and child finally gave up and left the Jail without her.鈥
It would be another month before Alonzo returned home.
The nonprofit Texas Fair Defense Project is representing the former inmates in the suit.
鈥淎ny time someone is in custody, they鈥檙e not only being separated from their families, but they're also losing an opportunity to work and to both contribute to society financially and to support their family,鈥 said TFDP Attorney Nathan Fennell.
The suit names the Smith County Sheriff鈥檚 Office, which runs the jail, as a defendant, as well as the Smith County District Clerk and District Attorney.
鈥淲e are aware of the lawsuit, but we do not comment on pending litigation,鈥 Smith County District Attorney Jacob Putman said through a spokesperson.
The problem, according to the lawsuit, is with the way Smith County processes and moves criminal case files, particularly after the parties arrive at a plea agreement and the judge approves it. The court clerks send documents to the sheriff鈥檚 office, who then has to transmit the records to the state to approve the inmate鈥檚 release.
The suit says the county does not have a way to prioritize the cases of incarcerated people who should be out.
鈥淪mith County鈥檚 policies, practices, and customs include no method for identifying people who are entitled to release on or about the date they are sentenced, nor does it prioritize processing their sentencing paperwork over less time-sensitive tasks,鈥 the petition states.
The Texas Fair Defense Project is also seeking certification of the suit as a class action. Fennell said they were aware of 15 people who had similar experiences to the named plaintiffs 鈥 possibly many others.
He also said there are 鈥渃ertainly鈥 other counties keeping people in custody beyond their sentences.
四虎影院 recently reported on a woman detained in Dallas County Jail who stayed more than a week over her sentence.
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