Prisoner lost in translation
The Washington Post |
Legal breakdown
Cruz's legal problems started Oct. 15.
He was charged with being drunk in public and fighting with another man. An officer who arrived at the scene wrote in a criminal complaint that Cruz's blood alcohol level was .175, more than twice the legal limit, and that the other man had a large gash on the right side of his head from being punched and hit with a belt.
When the wounded man did not show up in court Dec. 12, the case was dismissed. And that's where it should have ended. Normally, jail officials would have brought Cruz to the courthouse for the hearing, and the court clerk would have issued a release order for him. He could have walked into freedom that day.
But neither happened.
"It seems like there was a breakdown on a couple of levels," said Tawny G. Hays, clerk of the General District Court.
From the beginning, his last name was entered as "Antonio Cruz" in court documents and as "Cruz" in jail records -- a problem that both jail and court officials say often arises with Hispanic names that tend to be long and include an also-known-as.
Col. Charles "Skip" Land, who heads the jail, said the name might explain why officials failed to bring Cruz to court Dec. 12. "Some people also come in with a hyphen between their name and then don't come up unless that hyphen is typed in," he said.
"You certainly don't want to hold someone longer than you should and deprive them of their freedom," Land added. "I'm sorry that this happened."
But even when an inmate is not present in court, he said, a clerk should issue a release order and fax it to the jail. That was not done until Kaiser alerted the clerk's office.
Hays said the clerk initially didn't type up an order because "there wasn't any reason for her to believe he was in jail" because he wasn't in court. Cruz also could have posted a $5,000 bond the night before, she said.
"This is not a good thing, and it makes me feel very badly," Hays said. She added that "what is unusual is the attorney didn't raise a flag."
Cruz's defense attorney, Joseph Thelin, said he was concerned and called the jail's records department the next day. He doesn't usually follow up on each dismissed case, but he had been worried when Cruz was not brought to the courthouse.
"They said he had been released," Thelin said. "That is where I had left it. . . . I don't think anyone intentionally lied to me. I think it was just a mix-up."
Thelin said he has agreed to help Voss with the case against the county if he ever locates Cruz.
Afraid to enforce rights
Lucas Guttentag, director of the Immigrants' Rights Project for the American Civil Liberties Union, said it is not unusual for immigrants to fear fighting the system when they have been wronged. It is not uncommon for them to slip into the shadows, he said.
"The sad truth may be that there are more people suffering wrongs who are afraid to try to enforce their legal rights than we are generally aware of," he said.
In September, the D.C. government agreed to pay $12 million to inmates who claimed that they were jailed hours and days longer than they should have been. And in March, a Guatemalan immigrant laborer, Ramiro Games, 46, who was charged with a misdemeanor in Prince George's County that often results in probation or a few days in jail, was released after spending nearly six months in jail without going to trial. Because he didn't speak English, he was unable to alert anyone that his case had not been heard.
The Prince William jail began offering English classes to inmates in January; 1,251 people have enrolled, with 233 inmates signing up in June.
Land said jail records do not indicate that Cruz ever questioned why he had not been released.
If he had, Land said, "somebody would have heard him." Of the jail's 252 employees, 30 speak Spanish. At the courthouse, four of the 34 employees who work for the General District Court can speak the language. Hays said those four are often called on to help translate.
"The object is not to send them away and say, 'I can't help you, buddy. Go learn the language.' We don't do that," she said.
Need for Spanish speakers
On a typical morning, Kaiser bounces between Spanish and English at least once every few minutes. "Archives," she tells one man. " Archivo ," she tells another.
She has worked at the courthouse for 22 years and taught herself Spanish in 1992, when she first noticed the influx of Salvadoran and Mexican immigrants in Prince William. The county has grown to 16.4 percent Hispanic, compared with 5.7 percent in Virginia, according to the latest census.
"I made the stupid mistake of learning, 'May I help you?' first," she said, adding that she would then inevitably have to tell people she couldn't understand anything else.
Since then, Kaiser has learned enough Spanish to ask about individual cases, to give directions to the appropriate courtroom, to converse on a basic level.
She even developed a course that she has taught to firefighters, several lawyers and a judge at the courthouse.
The county offers a $1,500 stipend to Spanish speakers, but the last time Kaiser took the test, she failed. She said it tested her vocabulary on everything but court matters.
"Everyone says you should just say, 'No, I don't speak Spanish,' " Kaiser said. "Then what? Just let it all fall apart?"
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