Monday, April 28, 2008
Dallas courts slowed down after adding two new judges
Email
|
Print
|
Tell us your story
|
Comment
|
I've had this story sitting in an open tab on my browser for a week meaning to mention an example of first-rate reporting on the local court system from Kevin Krause at the Dallas Morning News ("Dallas County felony courts face rising case backlog," April 20), in which we learn that Dallas criminal courts are processing cases more slowly despite the addition of two new criminal courts. Indeed, according to this chart, the backlog of pending cases rose 43% from 2004 to 2008. Reported Krause:
Criminal District Courts 6 and 7 cost Dallas County taxpayers more than $2 million per year. But since they began operating, average monthly case dispositions – or case resolutions – are down in all 17 courts.
The reasons given for this vary, depending on whom you ask. The local criminal justice system has many parts, and defense lawyers and prosecutors can contribute to slow-moving cases. Some cases are more complex and difficult than others, and thus take longer to try. But judges play a big role, too – for example, in the speed with which they hear motions and make decisions.
The two courts were the first felony courts to be created in Dallas County in more than a dozen years. Dispositions dropped immediately after the courts were added in late 2005. Judges in most of the established 15 courts disposed of fewer cases on average than the year before; some had substantial drops.
One of those judges, Becky Gregory, who lost her re-election bid in 2006, said she didn't know why her dispositions fell 22 percent in 2006. She said more trials can have an effect because they can take up to a week.
Ms. Gregory, recently nominated as a U.S. attorney by President Bush, said higher case filings can also clog a docket. Case filings in the district courts increased 2 percent in 2006. ...
Among Texas' five largest counties, Dallas County district courts have the second lowest disposition rate, behind Bexar County, according to state figures. Disposition rates are one of the few ways to measure a judge's effectiveness on the bench.
Dispositions were up slightly during the first three months of the current fiscal year. But it's difficult to get an accurate picture without at least six months of data, court officials say.
And the two newer courts are still lagging behind the others in total dispositions.
When the courts began operations in November 2005, the judges received a portion of the other judges' caseloads. Many were old cases that were more likely to go to trial and thus take longer to resolve, the judges said.
"We got all the dog cases," said Livia Liu, former judge of Criminal District Court 7. "My focus at that point was trying to get old cases moving."
Ron Stretcher, the county's criminal justice director, said the newer courts don't handle as many probation violations as the others. When a judge revokes probation and sends someone to prison, it counts as a disposition.
The newer courts also aren't getting as many cases as the others, he said. Last fiscal year, the newer courts got about 1,690 cases each, while the other courts averaged about 1,960, Mr. Stretcher said.
I was particularly interested, and disappointed, to see that much of the delay can be attributed to changes by then-DA Bill Hill implemented after the Dallas fake drug scandal, which have also contributed significantly to county jail overcrowding, Krause reported:
From 1998 to 2001, Dallas County felony judges disposed of more cases than were filed. But that trend reversed in 2002, the same year former District Attorney Bill Hill's new policy began requiring testing of drug evidence before cases are filed.
The policy was intended to prevent another fake-drug scandal but also delayed cases. With more cases coming in than going out, the pending caseload has continued to climb – by 56 percent since 2002. That translates into higher costs for Dallas County, because it means more defendants are sitting in jail – at $41 each per day – awaiting disposition of their case.
About a third of inmates in the Dallas County jail system are awaiting dispositions of felony cases, according to recent county reports. Some can sit in jail for up to a year awaiting an outcome. Only those awaiting appeal spend more time on average in the jail.
The reason the jails aren't overflowing is that, beginning last year, Dallas County reduced the high number of low-level offenders in the jail system through expedited plea deals and other measures.
Finally, Krause reports on current proposals for improving court's disposition rates, and suggests that several courts' shift toward managing probationers in DWI and drug courts might contribute to the increased backlog:
For about two decades, Harris County has used a 24-hour intake system, in which people are booked and processed around the clock. As a result, almost 60 percent of Harris County's felony and misdemeanor cases are disposed of within 48 hours.
Dallas County is several months away from instituting its own 24-hour intake system, Dallas County Commissioner John Wiley Price said.
County officials and the district judges give different reasons for the growing caseload, but all say the judges are working hard.
Judge John Creuzot, the presiding judge of the felony courts, says the new Democratic judges are taking a different approach to justice.
They try to get probation violators back on track through treatment and monitoring instead of automatically sending them to prison, he said. "To say we didn't dispose of a case is not to say we didn't deal with a case," Judge Creuzot said.
Case backlogs are an important metric, but I'm uncomfortable with Krause's assessment, however common the sentiment, that "Disposition rates are one of the few ways to measure a judge's effectiveness on the bench." That's only true if you accept the premise that a criminal court's main function is purely as a plea mill, maximizing the number of guilty verdicts as its sole measure of success. But that metric fails to measure most other things judges do.
For example, a judge who spends time exercising oversight of the probation department, which they govern as a local board, won't be disposing of cases but performs an important function that's part of her job. Similarly, the shift toward specialized drug and DWI courts assumes probationers' cases will stay in front of a judge longer and potentially come back more often. That's part of the nature of the beast - they're more labor intensive for the judiciary.
While I'm sure it's true the 2006 elections slowed down case disposition for a while, there's a good chance that trend will continue through these elections as well, so that excuse brings with it little comfort. A 43% increase in case backlog in four years borders on a crisis, particularly when it results in a full jail that the county can barely staff.
The 24/7 intake system soon coming online will help (see a discussion of the one in Harris County), but what else could Dallas do to resolve its growing backlog?
For starters, it sounds like judges need to consider expanded bond options in drug cases if the backlog from delays in testing evidence is causing long docket delays and filling up the jail. Hiring more public defenders and front-line prosecutors to move cases more quickly is one obvious solution, but that ball is in the county commissioners court's court.
What else could they do to speed up the process?

Pegasus News content partner - Grits For Breakfast
Related stories
- Pegasus News Week in View: Mayday Edition (May 1, 2008)
See more stories in:
Find...
Today
Saturday Tastings in the Wine and Beer Department Little Joey just LOVES the Saturday wine tastings at Central Market - he particularly likes the blind tastings, when he can sneak a snort while Mommie's not looking. (Great nose!) More info
Latest comments
- Bill Betzen on Dallas should rename Ross Avenue for Cesar Chavez: I just checked and there are 5 used copies of “The Accommodation: The Politics of Race in an America...
- Bill Betzen on Dallas should rename Ross Avenue for Cesar Chavez: Andrew, you have never read the book “The Accommodation: The Politics of Race in an American City” h...
- Andrew Laska on Dallas should rename Ross Avenue for Cesar Chavez: Bill, Don’t dodge by saying Ross is a compromise. You know what I am asking. Don’t dodge it. I am as...
- Bill Betzen on Dallas should rename Ross Avenue for Cesar Chavez: Andrew, The Cesar Chavez Avenue “compromise” did not start on Ross. It started on Industrial, and wa...
Latest reviews
- dmacfar139 on AllGood Cafe: Definitely must add redundancy to the raves already posted here. Tried it this morning for the first...
- dmacfar139 on Ali Baba (Richardson): This place gets a good weekday lunch crowd. Nice mix of folks, working and not. The buffet at these ...
- Mark M. Hancock on Ali Baba (Richardson): The Sunday buffet is a bargain and features some of the best Middle Eastern food in the metro area. ...
Things you can't miss
- DFW viewers prefer Republican VP candidate to McCain
- Arlington woman finds Virgin Mary image on a rotting grape
- Dallas-based Fox journalist detained (briefly) by police at Republican National Convention site
- Deal: Cindi's has rotating daily specials featuring bargain-priced blue plates and sandwich combos
Latest stories
- Texas Rangers 15, Boston Red Sox 8
- Thornwood Gallery marks its first year anniversary on Dragon Street with a Group Exhibition
- Dallas introduces slightly-faster sidewalk repair system
- Turtle Island Quartet to make a 'Trane stop at UT Dallas on September 20
- Prosecution of Uptown Dallas burglars could be hampered by warrant oopsy-daisy

Post a comment
(Requires free PegasusNews.com account.)