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One Detainee Dying Every Week in L.A. County Jails

As of December 31, 2023, Los Angeles County jails had recorded 34 detainee deaths in seven months—over one every week, far more than New York City’s notorious Rikers Island complex, which recorded seven deaths during the same period.

Overcrowding is blamed for the spate of dying. The jail system averaged 103% of capacity in 2023, some weeks spiking to 116%. Processing backups left detainees sleeping on the floor of the main jail’s intake area for days at a time. Those exhibiting symptoms of mental illness couldn’t even lie down but remained shackled to a chair during the wait to be processed—which could take days.

Once assigned housing, mentally ill detainees have it especially bad. In their dorm on the fifth floor of Men’s Central Jail, 90 detainees live in a space designed for 64, “shrouded in sheets or towels for a modicum of privacy,” according to a report by the county’s Sybil Brand Commission (SBC), which provides jail oversight and inspection.

That’s where a formerly homeless detainee, 50-­year-­old Masoud Rahmati, was brushing his teeth on June 13, 2023, when he was attacked by fellow detainees for reasons that the county Sheriff’s Department (LASD) called unclear. The attack was captured on video, according to family attorney Jeremy Lessem, who said “no one was paying enough attention at the time to notice.” Rahmati lay injured for nearly four hours before paramedics arrived, just in time to pronounce him dead. Fellow detainees Jaime Garcia Alfaro, Carlos Morataya and George Adrian Hernandez have been charged with his murder.

A “shocked” SBC inspector who visited the jail that month, Mary Veral, compared it to a “Third World country,” noting three large fires burning inside cells. Lack of supervision leaves detainees free to light fires for cooking, and a lack of smoke alarms leaves it up to the depleted guard force to notice and pull an alarm.

Unsurprisingly, many deaths are suicides, since jail conditions are a “recipe for hopelessness,” as SBC Chair Mark-­Anthony Clayton-­Johnson noted. But LASD doesn’t release names of detainees who die, and their cause of death is frequently misattributed; as PLN has reported, a June 2022 UCLA study found that half of “natural” deaths at the jail showed signs of physical harm. [See: PLN, Jan. 2023, p.52.]

Worse still, LASD may not be counting all jail deaths in the county. Dr. D. Pulane Lucas said in September 2023 that the death at the jail of her son, Stanley Wilson, Jr., was not included in the online database maintained by the county, nor in a separate database maintained by the state’s Correctional Health Care Services.

Asst. Sheriff Sergio Aloma shrugged off the deaths, noting that the county’s jail system is the country’s largest, admitting some 60,000 detainees every year. Guards, like all LASD deputies, also got a pass from a Los Angeles County Superior Court judge, who said they didn’t have to submit to interviews and photographs of tattoos marking membership in at least 18 “deputy gangs,” as PLN reported. [See: PLN, Oct. 10, 2023, online.]

“Watershed Moment”

On June 22, 2023, the federal court for the Central District of California approved a joint stipulation (JS) addressing conditions at the jail system’s Inmate Reception Center (IRC), part of its on-­going oversight in a case that has been pending since 1975. [See: Block v. Rutherford, 468 U.S. 576 (1984).]

For years, LASD flaunted the Court’s orders, and the crisis came to a head on February 27, 2023, when attorneys representing jail detainees and prisoners from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed for an order to show cause why defendant Sheriff Robert Luna should not be held in contempt for violating a preliminary injunction issued by the court on September 27, 2022. The Court scheduled a hearing, pressuring Luna to agree to the JS.

Under its terms, detainees may no longer be held over 24 hours in IRC—which has no beds—nor more than eight hours caged in its Clinic, or more than four hours restrained in the Clinic’s “Front Bench.” Detainees may not be kept over 12 hours in holding cells—which also lack beds—and never in a cell that is over capacity or unsanitary. Detainees must also have access to healthcare and mental health care, including pill call.

ACLU attorneys called the agreement “a watershed moment” in the suit’s 48-­year history. Their efforts were further rewarded on October 23, 2023, when the Court ordered Defendants to pay $365,274.88 in legal fees and costs to ACLU attorneys and others representing the class from Bingham McCutcheon in Los Angeles. See: Rutherford v. Luna, USDC (C.D. Cal.), Case No. 2:75-­cv-­04111.

The most lauded JS provision diverts mentally ill arrestees into 3,141 non-­carceral beds for mental health treatment, with plans to add another 1,691 beds. However, LASD estimates that 40% of its 13,000 to 14,600 detainees have mental health needs. Though not all have been clinically diagnosed with serious mental illness (SMI), that means the additional beds—a total of 1,975 on top of the county’s existing stock—are insufficient.

Days after settling the suit, on June 27, 2023, the county Board of Supervisors voted to expand a jail program that recruits and trains incarcerated peer caregivers to those suffering with SMI. The program began in 2018 and has grown to include nine volunteer mental health assistants (MHAs), who together help about 100 fellow detainees with SMI held in the jail’s Forensic In-­Patient (FIP) step-­down units—which provide more time out of cell—reminding them to take medication and show up for programming.

The Board’s vote authorizes LASD to grow the number of FIP units from 10 to 30 by 2025, noting that “the Sheriff will need to purchase or otherwise rapidly allocate key therapeutic elements to create a therapeutic physical space, which may include colorful paint, murals, aquariums, soft furniture, plants, and activity tables.”

Supervisor Holly Mitchell (D-­2nd Dist.), who voted for the measure, also wondered what the county was giving MHAs for their work. “It is their role that is making this successful, and I think that should be acknowledged in a significant, relevant way,” she said, hoping at least for special assistance in finding jobs after release for the unpaid volunteers.

Each MHA receives at least six months of “intensive hands-­on training on how to care for people with severe mental health needs,” according to Supervisor Hilda Solis (D-­1st Dist.). With the program expansion, over 600 detainees with SMI will get their help.

Founding program member Craigen Armstrong said MHAs do “everything from teaching financial literacy groups to cutting their toenails.” Since leaving death row at San Quentin State Prison after his murder conviction was tossed in 2016, Armstrong has been held at the jail while his attorney and prosecutors argue over retrying him or accepting a plea deal with a life sentence.  

 

Additional sources: The Appeal, Chicago Reader, Houston Public Media, LAist, Los Angeles Times, New York Times, Vera Institute of Justice

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Related legal case

Rutherford v. Luna

Rutherford v. Luna, 2023 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 114567

US District Court, Central District of California

June 22, 2023

ORDER GRANTING JOINT STIPULATION (Doc. 399)
On September 27, 2022, this Court granted the stipulated Preliminary Injunction ("PI"), Doc. 351, and extended the PI on December 20, 2022, Doc. 371, and March 14, 2023. Doc. 381. The PI addressed overcrowding in the Los Angeles County Jail system's Inmate Reception Center ("IRC"), delays in processing and moving incarcerated people to permanent housing, the provision of adequate medical and mental health care to people in the IRC awaiting permanent housing, and general living conditions within the IRC; it also directed Defendants to log and provide reports on people detained beyond the timeframes set forth in the PI. See generally Doc. 351. This PI was rooted in and followed numerous other past Court judgments and stipulations issued over the past 45 years, some of which set forth basic standards [*3] for the IRC. See Rutherford v. Pitchess, 457 F. Supp. 104, 109-10, 113-14 (C.D. Cal. 1978), rev'd in part on other grounds sub nom. Block v. Rutherford, 468 U.S. 576, 104 S. Ct. 3227, 82 L. Ed. 2d 438 (1984); Feb. 16, 1979 Judgment [Doc. 318-2 at 126-131]; Aug. 27, 1992 Stipulation and Order [Doc. 318-2 at 133-144]; Nov. 18, 2005 Stipulation and Order [Doc. 64]; Rutherford v. Baca, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 81431, 2006 WL 3065781, at *3-4 (C.D. Cal. Oct. 27, 2006) (Order to Show Cause) [Docs. 102, 121].

On February 27, 2023, Plaintiffs filed their Notice of Motion and Motion for an Order to Show Cause, supported by numerous class members' sworn declarations; and documents and other logs created by Defendants. The parties have fully briefed the matter, and have argued and presented the matter in court hearings. See generally Docs. 382, 379, 382. The parties also fully briefed the Court's Order to Show Cause related to the PI (Doc. 368). See Docs. 378, 383.

At Defendants' request, the Court has scheduled additional briefing on the contempt motion, as well as two days of evidentiary hearings to be held in late June, 2023. See Docs. 392-394. The parties have met and conferred, and have concluded, in light of improved conditions in the IRC resulting from the remedial actions taken in recent months by Defendants, which are detailed below, that it is in the best interest of both the class members and the Defendants that rather than continue [*4] any protracted litigation related to Plaintiffs' Motion, that the parties instead resolve to enter into a stipulated, permanent, and enforceable order memorializing the remedial efforts that Defendants have proposed to take and are currently taking to address the root causes of overcrowding, delays, and deteriorating conditions in the IRC, and to ensure compliance with the PI (Doc. 368), the 2005 Stipulation (Doc. 64), and the 1979 Judgment. These remedial efforts are designed to address the root causes of the conditions in the IRC.

The Court has reviewed the parties' Joint Stipulation (Doc. 399) and concludes that it is fair, and protects the interest of class members.

Accordingly, IT IS SO ORDERED:

Defendants, their officers, agents, employees, attorneys, assignees, and all those in active concert with them are hereby permanently restrained and enjoined from:

1. Holding an incarcerated person in the IRC for more than 24 hours. The IRC consists of a reception and booking area; a classification area; a bath area; the IRC Clinic (which includes the IRC Clinic Front Bench); a series of holding cells; and Module 231, an overflow module in Twin Towers Correctional Facility. This order shall [*5] not apply to Module 231. In the event a person shall remain continuously in the IRC for more than 24 hours, Defendants shall document the following:

(a) the name and booking number of the person and the date and time the person first entered the IRC;

(b) the reasons why the person remained in the IRC longer than 24 hours;

(c) the date and time the person was removed from the IRC; and

(d) the location of the person after removal from the IRC.

Plaintiffs shall be provided with this documentation upon request.

In the event that a person leaves the IRC to go to court or is placed in permanent housing after leaving the IRC, the 24-hour clock shall stop and shall begin anew if the person returns to the IRC. If a person leaves the IRC for medical treatment at another facility within or outside the Los Angeles County Jail System, the 24-hour clock shall be paused and shall resume when the person returns to the IRC, unless the person is housed at IRC 231 directly upon return from medical treatment. In the event that a person leaves the IRC for medical treatment at another facility within or outside the Los Angeles County Jail System, the 24-hour period shall begin anew if the person returns to the IRC after [*6] an absence extending twelve hours or more, where the person has been provided a bed off-site.

2. Holding an incarcerated person on the IRC Clinic Front Bench, handcuffed, chained, or tethered to a chair or any other object, for more than four hours. In the event a person remains on the Front Bench for more than four hours, Defendants shall document the following:

(a) the name and booking number of the person and the date and time the person was first placed on the Front Bench;

(b) the reason(s) why the person is on the Front Bench;

(c) the date and time of initial mental health screening;

(d) the date and time of any subsequent mental health or medical evaluation;

(e) the date and time each person was removed from the Front Bench temporarily, how long the person remained untethered, and the reason why (e.g., escort to bathroom, mental health screening);

(f) the date and time each person was permanently removed from the Front Bench; and

(g) the location of the person after removal from Front Bench.

Plaintiffs shall be provided with this documentation upon request pursuant to the terms of the parties' HIPAA-compliant protective order (Doc. 362).

3. Holding an incarcerated person in an IRC holding [*7] cell for more than 12 hours total, or holding more people in a holding cell than its rated capacity by the Board of State and Community Corrections. See Doc. 347-2. Moving a person from one holding cell in the IRC to another holding cell in the IRC does not re-start the 12-hour clock unless the person is provided with a bunk and bedding, as defined by Cal. Code. Reg. Tit. 15 § 1270,1Link to the text of the note in accordance with Cal. Code. Reg. Tit. 24 § 1231.2.2. In the event that a person is detained in a holding cell for longer than 12 hours, Defendants shall document the following:

(a) the name and booking number of the person and the date and time of placement;

(b) the reason(s) why the person was in holding cell or cells for more than 12 hours;

(c) the type of placement;

(d) the date and time of release;

(e) the number of persons in the cell at time of placement; and

(f) the identification of the particular holding cell.

Plaintiffs shall be provided with this documentation upon request. In the event that a person leaves an IRC holding cell to go to court or is placed in permanent housing after leaving the IRC, the 12-hour clock shall stop and begin anew if the person returns to the IRC. If a person is provided with a bed in the holding cell, or leaves a holding cell to a temporary housing location with a bed or the person's former permanent housing location with a bed, the 12-hour clock shall pause and shall resume when the person returns to an IRC holding cell without a bed, unless the person is moved to such a location for more than 12 hours, in which case the clock shall stop and begin anew if the person returns to the IRC.

4. Holding an incarcerated person in the IRC Clinic cage, when locked, for more [*9] than eight (8) hours total. In the event that an incarcerated person is held in the IRC Clinic cage, when locked, for more than eight hours, Defendants shall document the following:

(a) the name and booking number of the person and date and time of placement;

(b) the reasons why a person was in the Clinic cage for more than eight hours;

(c) the type of placement;

(d) the date and time of release;

(e) the number of persons in the cage at time of placement.

Plaintiffs shall be provided with this documentation upon request.
5. Holding an incarcerated person in the IRC Clinic area, cage, or any cell in the IRC when that location is not in a clean and sanitary condition, with access to functioning toilets, potable drinking water, clean water to wash, and sufficient garbage receptacles.

6. Holding an incarcerated person in the IRC clinic area, cage, or any cell in the IRC without providing ongoing access to adequate medical and mental health care, including but not limited to regular pill call.

* * * *

7. Defendants have provided detailed corrective action plans that they assert will address a number of root causes for why class members spend more than 24 hours in the IRC before receiving permanent [*10] housing, spend more than four hours at the Front Bench, spend more than 12 hours in the holding cells, and why conditions in the IRC deteriorate to unsanitary conditions or to such an extent that class members do not receive adequate health care or medications. Defendants assert that these plans have brought them into substantial compliance with these requirements. See, e.g., Docs. 378 at 3-10, 378-1, 384, 396.

8. As part of these corrective action plans, within 30 days of when this Order is entered by the Court, Defendants shall take the following remedial actions to address conditions in the IRC to the extent they are not already being undertaken (collectively, "the Remedial Actions"):

(a) The Sheriff shall issue a Unit Order specifically setting forth and putting all personnel who work in the IRC on notice of the requirements set forth in paragraphs 1-6 above.

(b) Defendants have trained and shall continue to train all personnel who work in the IRC on the requirements set forth in paragraphs 1-6 above. All new personnel who begin work in the IRC shall receive such training within 10 days of when they begin work in the IRC, and all personnel in the IRC shall receive annual refresher [*11] training addressing these requirements in a format determined by Defendants.

(c) The Sheriff has created a new supervisory position in the IRC which is filled by a sergeant on each of the three shifts of Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department ("LASD") personnel who cycle through the IRC each day (the "IRC Sergeant"). The IRC Sergeant shall monitor Defendants' compliance with the requirements set forth in paragraphs 1-6 above 24 hours each day, seven days each week.

(d) Defendants have implemented and shall maintain a new data tracking system -- the Shared Intake Management (or "SIM") System -- in the IRC, which tracks, in real time, for each incarcerated person in the IRC the following information, among other information: (1) how long that person has been in the IRC; (2) whether, and for how long, that person has been handcuffed, chained, or tethered in any other way to the IRC Clinic Front Bench; and (3) how long that person has been locked in an IRC holding cell or IRC cage. The SIM System further provides an alert to IRC staff when any violation of the provisions set forth in paragraphs 1-4 are approaching in the case of any inmates, and, to the extent any of the time limitations [*12] set forth in paragraphs 1-4 above are exceeded, it allows Defendants to generate a report setting forth such instances and an opportunity to explain why the time limitation was exceeded, supported by records tracking the movement of the individual in question between the time he entered the IRC and the time he exited the IRC.

(e) The County has increased the number of Correctional Health Service ("CHS") employees designated to provide mental health services in the IRC, and shall maintain a staffing plan to include (1) two managers; (2) four supervisors; and (3) 24 clinicians, consisting of psychiatric social workers, psychologists, and mental health nurses.

(f) To address unexpected CHS staffing shortages in the future in the IRC, the County shall cross-train 10 CHS employees who do not work in the IRC on the complex work demanded of CHS staff in the IRC so they can provide overtime hours when needed to account for CHS staffing shortages in the IRC.

(g) The County has embedded a psychiatric staff stationed in the IRC consisting of the full-time equivalents of 2.75 psychiatrists and 6.25 psychiatric nurse practitioners (with two additional psychiatric nurse practitioners on-boarding who [*13] will be added to this staff). The county shall maintain a staffing plan of 2.75 FTE psychiatrist and 8.25 FTE psychiatric nurse practitioners. Currently, this staff provides 24/7 psychiatric coverage in the IRC from Tuesday through Friday, 10-17 hours on Saturdays, 14 hours on Sundays, and 21 hours on Mondays.

(h) Defendants shall implement and maintain a Bridge Medication Policy and practice whereby a clinician in IRC the will attempt to ascertain during screening whether a person has a valid prescription(s) for medication by contacting any pharmacy, doctor's office, medical clinic or other medical or mental health provider, or family member(s) who may be able to verify the prescription(s) was prescribed and that it is valid. If the clinician verifies a person's prescription, that information will be provided to a prescribing provider, who will determine whether to bridge the medications or provide an alternative based on their evaluation. If the prescription cannot be verified, and that person leaves the IRC prior to an evaluation by a psychiatric provider, the person shall be expedited for a psychiatric evaluation, and shall be seen no later than within 24 hours from the time of [*14] the attempt to bridge the person's medication.

(i) Additionally, Defendants shall maintain the psychiatric staff referenced in paragraph 8(g) above in order to provide, to the greatest degree possible, persons with mental health conditions or symptoms a psychiatric assessment for medication in the IRC before transferring to permanent housing. A person will be referred for a psychiatric evaluation while still in the IRC to determine whether they should be prescribed medication if: that person states they are taking medication, states that they want or need to take medication, has a documented history of receiving medication during a prior incarceration, has a history of mental illness, asks for a psychiatric evaluation, or exhibits symptoms indicating a need for a psychiatric evaluation. Those class members who receive a psychiatric referral in the IRC, but do not receive a corresponding psychiatric assessment in the IRC, shall be referred to Psych Line without requiring a clinical interview.

(j) Defendants have implemented and shall maintain a new, robust cleaning schedule in the IRC which is staffed by newly-hired janitorial crews and supervised inmate work crews. In addition, Defendants [*15] have instituted the use of a "IRC TRO Compliance Inspection Checklist" in the IRC, which each shift's IRC Sergeant must complete, at a minimum, twice per shift (to be done once per shift by the Sergeant and once per shift by the Sergeant or the Sergeant's designee (which may include the cleaning crew present in the IRC during a shift), for a total of at least six times per day). The IRC TRO Compliance Inspection Checklist requires the IRC Sergeant (or the designee) to note whether each area of the IRC is occupied or vacant; whether there are concerns with toilet paper, trash, water fountains or toilets, or needed repairs or other notes related to sanitation, and to identify corrective actions taken based on the observations noted in the checklist.

During in-person visits to the IRC, Plaintiffs' counsel may view and request copies of the TRO Inspection Checklist. Plaintiffs' counsel may also review checklists for certain days by emailing the IRC Chief and County Counsel.

9. In addition to the Remedial Actions set forth above, the County is committed to ending bottlenecks in the IRC by depopulating the Los Angeles County Jail ("LACJ") through the diversion of incarcerated persons from [*16] the LACJ into non-carceral settings, and particularly by diverting incarcerated persons from the LACJ with serious mental health conditions into non-carceral settings (hereinafter referred to as the "County's Diversion Efforts"). There is currently an inventory of approximately 3,141 non-carceral beds being used to divert people who would otherwise be incarcerated at the LACJ that periodically become available. The County shall add new beds to the inventory, and plans to add 1,527 additional beds overseen by the Office of Diversion and Re-entry ("ODR") and 164 additional beds overseen by the Department of Mental Health ("DMH") for a total of 1,691 beds, over the next two fiscal years. The County is finalizing funding for Fiscal Year 23-24 for the first year of this ramp up (814 total additional beds).2Link to the text of the note Furthermore, the County has authorized the Department of Health Services ("DHS") to enter into a contract with the California Department of State Hospitals for approximately $629 million in State funding to increase the number of ODR beds for those accused of felonies found incompetent to stand trial ("FIST") from 794 to 1,344 over five years.3Link to the text of the note The County plans to add to this inventory [*17] of non-carceral beds overseen by ODR and DMH in future years and shall use its best efforts to identify future funding to add non-FIST beds.

10. Through this Stipulation, Defendants shall continue, and, where applicable, put into place the Remedial Actions and Diversion Efforts set forth above in paragraphs 8 and 9 respectively to reach and sustain substantial compliance with the requirements set forth in paragraphs 1-6. Under the terms of this Stipulation, Defendants shall not be in substantial compliance with the requirements of paragraphs 1-4 unless, at a minimum:

(a) fewer than 25 persons who are processed through the IRC in a calendar month are held in the IRC for more than 24 hours in violation of Paragraph 1 (and no person is held in the IRC in a calendar month for more than 36 hours);

(b) there are no more than four (4) days in a calendar month where more than five (5) people are held for more than 24 hours in violation of Paragraph 1;

(c) no more than five (5) people in a calendar month are handcuffed, chained, or otherwise tethered to the IRC Clinic Front Bench for more than four (4) hours in violation of Paragraph 2 (and no person is tethered to the IRC Clinic Front Bench for [*18] more than six (6) hours); and

(d) no more than fifteen (15) persons are kept in an IRC holding cell or the IRC cage in a calendar month in violation of paragraphs 3 and/or 4 (and no person is kept in an IRC holding cell for more than 18 hours or in the IRC cage for more than 12 hours).

11. No later than the 10th of each calendar month, the County shall notify Plaintiffs if it believes Defendants have reached substantial compliance with the requirements of paragraphs 1-4 above during the previous calendar month. Plaintiffs shall notify Defendants within ten days thereafter if they disagree with any conclusions of substantial compliance.

12. To maintain flexibility in how Defendants manage the IRC, Defendants may modify the Remedial Actions at Paragraphs 8(a), 8(e)-8(g) as Defendants deem appropriate, upon achieving six consecutive months of substantial compliance with Paragraphs 1-4, provided Defendants continue to achieve substantial compliance with the requirements of paragraphs 1-4 above in the IRC. Defendants shall notify Plaintiffs no later than 14 days in advance of any proposed modifications to their Remedial Actions. Moreover, nothing in this Stipulation shall prevent Defendants from instituting [*19] additional or more robust Remedial Actions than set forth above (i.e., increasing IRC staffing, replacing the SIM System with a more comprehensive tracking system which expands on the SIM System's capabilities, etc.).

13. Plaintiffs reserve the right to file any enforcement action with the Court based on any failure by Defendants to reach or maintain substantial compliance with the requirements of paragraphs 1-6 above subject to the following conditions: (a) Plaintiffs shall not file any such enforcement action prior to 60 days from the date this stipulation is entered by the Court, in order to allow Defendants the opportunity to implement the Remedial Actions set forth above in a manner to achieve substantial compliance; (b) any such enforcement action brought by Plaintiffs shall be predicated on Defendants' failure to be in substantial compliance with the requirements of paragraphs 1-6, and not based on Defendants' failure to fully implement the Remedial Actions and/or the County's Diversion Efforts, unless those failures to do so contributed to Defendants' failure to meet substantial compliance with the requirements of paragraphs 1-6; and (c) Plaintiffs shall only file any such enforcement [*20] action after first meeting and conferring with Defendants in an attempt to resolve the issues that would be the subject of the enforcement action, and, if those issues cannot be resolved by the Parties, mediating any remaining disputes with the federal magistrate judge assigned to this case or any other magistrate judge in the Central District of California provided a mediation can be calendared within ten (10) days. There shall not be a requirement to hold such a mediation if there are emergent situations that arise in the IRC which pose a serious risk of immediate harm to class members.

14. Defendants shall file with the Court, on a quarterly basis, starting on or before October 15, 2023, a report detailing for each of the three months of the previous quarter:

(a) the status of implementing the Remedial Actions;

(b) whether Defendants believe they are in substantial compliance with paragraphs 1-6 above, including data showing performance with paragraphs 1-4 as set forth in Paragraph 10;

(c) the County's progress in bringing on-line new non-carceral beds pursuant to the County's Diversion Efforts, as well as its status in funding additional non-carceral beds scheduled to be added to the [*21] inventories of ODR and DMH after June 30, 2025 pursuant to the County's Diversion Efforts; and,

(d) the impact the County's progress in adding non-carceral beds to the inventories of ODR and DMH is having on eliminating backlogs in the IRC.

Either Party at any time may request a status conference with this Court to address the issues raised in any quarterly status report filed with the Court.

The Court further finds that the relief granted by this stipulation satisfies the requirements of 18 U.S.C. § 3626(a)(1)(A) in that it is narrowly drawn, extends no further than necessary to correct the violations of Plaintiffs' federal rights, and is the least intrusive means necessary to correct the violation of Plaintiffs' federal rights. The Court retains jurisdiction to enforce this and any subsequent remedial orders.

The Court orders that the remaining briefing schedule on this Motion (Doc. 398) and the hearings scheduled for June 27-28, 2023, are hereby vacated.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

DATE: June 22, 2023

/s/ Dean D. Pregerson

Hon. Dean D. Pregerson

United States District Judge

Footnotes
1Link to the location of the note in the document
Title 15, § 1270 requires that

The standard issue of clean suitable bedding and linens, for each incarcerated person entering a living area who is expected to remain overnight, shall include, but not be limited to:

(a) one serviceable mattress which meets the requirements of Section 1272 of these regulations;

(b) one mattress cover or one sheet;

(c) one towel; and

(d) one blanket or more depending upon [*8] climatic conditions. Policy and procedure shall require that items (a), (b), and (d) above be provided prior to the first night in the facility.

[. . .]

Temporary Holding facilities which hold persons longer than 12 hours shall provide an incarcerated person with bedding and linen that meet the requirements of (a), (b), and (d) above prior to their first night in the facility and every night thereafter.

2Link to the location of the note in the document
The 814 beds in FY23-24 are part of the 1,691 beds planned for the next two fiscal years.

3Link to the location of the note in the document
The growth of FIST beds funded by this contract for the period up to June 30, 2025 is included in the County's anticipated growth of diversion beds through June 30, 2025. Specifically, the County's anticipated growth of 1,691 beds through June 30, 2025 will include 316 added FIST beds funded by this contract by June 30, 2025.