Lawsuit Accuses Oklahoma of Hosting (Another) Debtor's Prison and Judicial Corruption (Again)
Lawsuit Accuses Oklahoma of Hosting (Another) Debtor's Prison and Judicial Corruption (Again)
A civil rights lawsuit filed in Oklahoma accuses three judges of essentially running a debtor’s prison, jailing impoverished residents who can’t afford to keep up with court-ordered fines and fees.Filed on Washington County on Thursday, the suit also names the Oklahoma Indigent Defense System and its board of directors as defendants. According to the Associated Press, the complaint accuses the agency of complicity, incentivizing attorneys to close cases quickly and without regard to clients’ rights or welfare.“Proceedings in Washington County provide an extreme example of Oklahoma’s broken fines and fees system,” claims the lawsuit. “No ability-to-pay inquiry is made at the time of sentencing, nor are defendants advised of their right to such an inquiry by their OIDS public defenders.”InjusticeWatch.org shares the story of Sharonica Carter, a Tulsa resident who was incarcerated at a juvenile detention center.Released in 2013, Carter was responsible for the payment of a $2,700 fine imposed when she was sentenced in 2011.Five years later, that amount has grown to $5,000.“The debt endangers Ms. Carter’s ability to afford basic necessities,” the suit states. “Her indigence and consequent inability to pay her fines and fees places her in imminent danger of repeated incarceration.”
Among the current adn former judges named in the suit is Curtis Delapp, who once sentenced a woman to four days in jail for eating sunflower seeds in court. Image by Brian Turner/Flickr. Retrieved from Wikimedia Commons. (CCA-BY-2.0)
Sources
Debtors’ prison faces Oklahoma defendants, lawsuit statesIs It a Crime to Be Poor?Lawsuit Alleges County in Oklahoma Running Debtor's PrisonOklahoma’s debtors’ prisons aren’t just a nuisance – they’re an epidemic
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.