Hawaii officials looking at ways to reduce jail population amid virus

Dormitory-style sleeping arrangements are shown Oct. 22 in the Hale Nani annex of Hawaii Community Correctional Center, where inmates are reintegrated into the community. (NANCY COOK LAUER/West Hawaii Today)
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The Department of the Attorney General is coordinating a remote-access meeting of county and state prosecutors, public defenders and the judiciary to develop a plan for identifying certain categories of inmates for release from state jails.

The move, announced Thursday afternoon, follows the Hawaii Supreme Court ordering on Tuesday that the Attorney General and all county prosecuting attorneys to respond to a petition filed by the Office of the Public Defender seeking an order to commute or suspend jail sentences for persons serving time either as a condition of felony probation or pursuant to district court convictions for petty misdemeanors and full misdemeanors.

While Attorney General Clare E. Connors said in a press release that she recognizes the urgent need to mitigate the risk of COVID-19 spreading in the state’s corrections system, she noted the important duty of law enforcement to protect the public and ensure the fair administration of justice. A plan for collaboration among criminal justice counterparts that complements efforts already underway by county prosecutors to reduce the number of persons entering the jail system has been identified.

“Temporarily releasing inmates or suspending jail sentences could create risks of harm to victims and other persons in the community,” said Connors. “All sectors of the criminal justice system should participate in this unprecedented process of re-evaluating the need to incarcerate certain inmates in order to reduce the danger of COVID-19 spreading in our jail system.”

The Department of the Attorney General has circulated to each of the county prosecutors and to the public defender and judiciary a list of currently incarcerated inmates who are in the following categories:

• Charged with a petty misdemeanor or misdemeanor;

• Serving jail sentences as a condition of felony probation; or

• Serving jail sentences for petty misdemeanor or misdemeanor.

Law enforcement entities, public defenders and the Judiciary will meet Friday to discuss a process for evaluating the release, commutation or suspension of jail sentences for each of the inmates identified on the list.

“The process contemplates that those most knowledgeable about the inmates are able to ensure that each released person has a place to go, will not put another person at risk of harm and is properly tracked by the system. This process also is intended to ensure that any release of inmates does not further tax the limited government resources that are focused on addressing the general spread of COVID-19 in the community,” the press release from the Connors’ office read.