Monthly Archives: October 2022

Where’s the Sheriff? In Contempt of the Supreme Court

NYS Supreme Court Judge Blaise had a straightforward question: Where is the Sheriff? In his defense of County Sheriff David Harder, Broome County Attorney Robert Behnke had no adequate answer. Charged with contempt of court in the motion brought by Justice and the Unity for Southern Tier (JUST), Harder failed to appear.

Law and Ill-Order in Broome County

The members of JUST packing the court knew the answer: as part of a long legal contest, the Sheriff had lost the lawsuit they had brought on behalf of families and friends of those incarcerated in Harder’s jail. In his ruling on July 29th, Judge Blaise ordered Harder to reopen visitation on the pre- COVID schedule posted in the jail’s own handbook. Harder’s officers in the jail had long been telling the incarcerated that Harder wouldn’t let this happen. When the County’s appeal to delay re-opening was denied on September 22nd, Harder was thus forced to finally reopen visitation.

Yet when the County finally opened up the jail doors on September 29th, Harder defied the Judge’s ruling. To the surprise of family members knocking on the door of the jail, visitation hours were posted for highly restricted times. Harder had unilaterally reduced visiting from the pre-COVID schedule of 44 hours a week, to 15, and visiting days from five to three—with none on the weekends for persons who work or live out of town.

On the threshold of retirement, pending election of one of his former deputies, Harder was again refusing to obey state laws–and now the State Supreme Court. To observers of justice in Broome County it was another case of law and ill-order.

The JUST Response

On October 7, on behalf of JUST, Josh Cotter of Legal Services of Central NY, filed a motion and affidavits charging Harder with civil and criminal contempt of court, with personal and financial penalties.

Before the contempt hearing on October 29th, JUST members and supporters rallied in the chilly morning on the steps of the county courthouse. The gathered families and friends of the incarcerated  told numerous stories of their inability to visit daughters, sons, fathers, partners, and friends under the posted hours.

Meanwhile, fees for telephone and video calls remained exorbitant. Many of the county’s poorest residents were spending close to $1000/month to maintain contact with family in the jail and provide necessary food and hygiene products.  Banning visitation held a warped, punitive, financial logic here: the Sheriff had reaped $ millions in profits from his share of expensive calls and commissary purchases,  outside any county control. And he spent it on personal diversions, among them his second, armored personnel carrier.

Statements from incarcerated persons and family members unable to attend the rally due to work or distance repeated these complaints:

“Does this mean my mother can’t visit me?”
“I can’t visit since I work and live in Syracuse”
“I keep calling but can’t get through to book a visiting hour”
“I’ve spent $800-$1000 every month to talk to my husband awaiting trial”
“I booked a visit with the Sheriff’s office but when I came was refused the visit”
“We need to be paid back for the $ thousands we’ve spent due to him denying visitation”

Demands

JUST’s demands addressed the problems, calling for

  • Full five days with regular hours for visitation, extended to weekends for those who work
  • Pay back of exorbitant profits from video & telephone calls, and commissary purchases
  • Food that meets basic nutrition requirements, including that item never seen in years: fruit!
  • An end to the incarceration of persons with disabilities and health crises
  • Penalize Sheriff & County for defying state supreme court and violating the state constitution

At 11 am, after the rally, over 30 JUST supporters went through metal detectors to attend the hearing, where they were faced down by a phalanx of grim, armed court security.

The Court Hearing

At the hearing, Judge Blaise questioned both Josh Cotter of Legal Services of Central NY, acting on behalf of JUST and families, and Broome County Attorney Robert Behnke, defending Sheriff Harder. In earlier legal briefs, the County had defended continued denial of visitation on grounds of COVID precautions. This was, however, increasingly implausible, given that visitation had long since returned to nursing homes, all state prisons, and jails across the state. Indeed, the Sheriff had long shown indifference to COVID, never requiring his staff to get vaccinated. And when visitation opened up on September 29th, there was no social distancing or masking.

The excuse for the Sheriff’s actions put forth submitted in court by Behnke on October 28th was thus a new one: Harder’s restricted hours were said to follow a formula provided by an official of the State Commission of Correction (SCOC). This formula had never been seen before, and certainly wasn’t in any posted regulations of the SCOC. The Commission had not met and approved this application either, as is required for variances or modifications of jail practices. Nor had one of the three SCOC Commissioners, all previous Sheriffs or Wardens, signed off on it. It was, rather, a SCOC administrator who had negotiated the new visitation regime directly with Harder. This was, as the Judge suggested, a last minute invention.

As JUST’s lawyer rightly pointed out: visitation rights are guaranteed in the state constitution, and rights can’t be limited by county officials.

The Judge’s ruling is expected in a week.  Stay tuned.

***

All court documents may be found at https://bit.ly/3fdmQET.

Further information and media coverage can be found the JUST website (www.justicest.com ), Facebook page, and Instagram pages. A report by WIVT is here and WSKG here.

JUST vs Harder Court documents

May 13, 2022 document: class action suit filed by Joshua Cotter of Legal Services of Central NY filed on behalf of JUST and local family members

July 29th, 2022, decisive ruling  by Judge Oliver Blaise III of the State Supreme Court

Oct 7th court documents, calling on the State Supreme Court to hold and sanction Sheriff Harder for contempt of the court: the Memo of Law (filed), and supporting affadavits by Martin Aff (Full File) and Cotter Affirmation

Oct 11th documents, including filings by JUST, the Sheriff’s office, the County lawyer, SCOC exhibit

October 27th submission by Broome County, just prior to court hearing on 28th (see WIVT report here)

SCOC denies any correspondence on visitation hours/days:  in its filings of Oct 27th (see above) and in court on Oct 28th, the Sheriff and County lawyer justified severely shortened hours and days of visitation by saying that they had negotiated their visitation plan with the State Commission of Correction.  The SCOC in a belated (after the court hearing) response to a freedom of information request on correspondence related to visitation and staffing replied they had no such records of any converstatiosn on the matter with the Sheriff.  The response to the foil is here.

 

Pack the Court Rally Oct 28th 10am

Pack the Court Rally!
Oct 28, 10 am
BC Courthouse
92 Court St

Open the Doors of the Jail!

Join JUST as we meet to hold Sheriff Harder in civil and criminal contempt of court as he defies our winning lawsuit:   on Oct 28th  at 10 am we will rally on the steps of the County courthouse at 92 Court St and proceed to pack the court for the contempt hearings (the court facing the Court St traffic circle, NOT the Hawley St county courthouse).

Why?

In May JUST and families of the incarcerated filed charges against the Sheriff and County, demanding they reopen visitation at the county jail.  Harder and the County resisted visitation despite the fact visitation has long returned to all state prisons, county nursing homes, and jails around the state. Families had not been allowed to visit their loved in over two years. 

Having lost the lawsuit to keep the doors of the jail locked, the Sheriff backed by County lawyers now defies the court ruling to reopen according to the pre-covid visiting schedule. He has unilaterally  reduced visitation from over 40 hours, 5 days a week to a bare 15 hours/3 days.  For many of our folks, especially distant family members, this means no or very rare visits to their sons, daughters, partners, and close friends. The Sheriff’s and County’s brazenness apparently knows no bounds.

In the face of this defiance, JUST has filed civil and criminal contempt of court charges against the Sheriff, with the assistance of Josh Cotter of Legal Services of Central NY.  At stake is the ability of family members to finally, fully, visit their loved ones.  

Let the Love In!

We look forward to this hearing and yet another, hopefully final, ruling against the Sheriff and County. But popular pressure is needed. Turn out to rally and pack the court with us.

To repeat: we will hold a rally on the court house steps on Oct 28th at 10 am  and then send people in to pack the 11 am court hearing  (clearing metal detectors may take some time, thus the early start).

 Court documents and further information may be found on our website www.justicest.com ). 

 

JUST sues Harder: contempt of court (10/7/2022)

Today Justice and Unity for the Southern Tier (JUST) filed a motion in the Supreme Court of the State of New York against Broome County Sheriff David Harder for civil and criminal contempt of court (the filing and supporting affidavits may be found here). Having lost his appeal to stop the return of visitation, Sheriff Harder blatantly and knowingly refused to obey the Court by restarting visitation with days and hours of visitation drastically reduced from what the court had ordered. By our count, visitation was reduced from five days a week to three, and from over 40 hours per week to 15.  This dramatically restricts families and friends from visiting loved ones in jail.

Sheriff Harder and Broome County lawyers have continually argued against visitation citing the dangers presented by COVID– even as visitation has long been reintroduced in county nursing homes, all state prisons, and many jails across the state. The validity of this concern was evident when limited visitation began last week with no safety measures in place: no temperature checks, no social distancing, no masks by correctional officers or others, and no requirements for staff to be vaccinated.

JUST demands the Sheriff and County stop their repeated attempts to stop visitation as ordered by the courts, and calls on the court to impose sanctions on Sheriff Harder.