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Pictured above, Danville, Va Police Officer E.K Thompson.  The Danville, Va Street Crimes Unit officer and supervisor is currently being sued in federal court for excessive force and refusal to provide medical treatment to man in his custody named Michael Elder.  However, E.K Thompson has had a history of illegal searches and seizures and on Appeal in the Virginia Court of Appeals case TYRONE JUNIOR MCCAIN v. Record No. 071189 OPINION BY JUSTICE S. BERNARD GOODWYN COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA April 18, 2008. Justice S. Bernard Goodwyn wrote, “A person’s Fourth Amendment rights are not lessened simply because he or she happens to live or travel in a ‘high crime’ area.” He noted that Supreme Court precedent requires specific suspicion of an individual before a search can be conducted. Also, this article will discuss the opinions in the Alvin Cooper vs Officer Worsham (E.K Thompson past partner) case decided in Danville, VA Federal Court. My article takes a look at three distinct cases and the justices opinion presiding over each case which has already been decided with the one currently pending in Danville, Va Federal Court. You will notice the similarities between the accusations and the officers that faced negative outcome for their part in an ongoing criminal investigation and disposed of litigation.

The case which is pending in Danville, Va Federal Court that was filed by plaintiff Michael Elder. The U.S Federal Judge Kiser states in the defendant’s summary judgment opinion response, that was grant in part and denied in part, “Second, Elder did not pose an “immediate threat to the safety of the officer [] or
others . . . .” Id. In fact, according to Elder, he was not resisting Thompson at all; rather, he was
pleading with him to look at the papers from the Martinsville court which, presumably, would
have showed that the “warrant” did not exist. (Elder Aff. pg. 2.) Moreover, even if I accept
Thompson’s version of the facts, Elder was only “passively resisting” by “stiffening up like a
board.” (Thompson Aff. pg. 3.) He was not forcibly resisting the arrest, thrashing about, or
doing anything that could have resulted in injury or danger to Thompson, let alone either of the
other two people present. At most, if Elder was “stiffening up like a board,” he was causing a
minor inconvenience to Thompson by “refusing to allow [Thompson] to move him.” (Thompson
Aff. pg. 3.)

     Finally, Elder was not “actively resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight.”
Graham, 490 U.S. at 396. At the time Thompson slammed Elder into the cruiser door and
deployed pepper spray, knee-nerve strikes, and the blows to Elder’s head (see Elder Aff. pg.
2−3), Elder was in custody and standing passively by the police cruiser. Again, even accepting
Thompson’s version of the facts, Thompson does not contend that Elder was “actively resisting
arrest.” 10
10 Thompson states in several places that Elder was only passively resisting. (See, e.g., Thompson Aff.
pg. 3.) John Combs, however, makes the unsubstantiated assertion that Elder actively resisted arrest.
(See Def.’s Br. Ex. D. pg. 5 (“Even when Elder was subsequently handcuffed, he continued to actively
resist the officer’s efforts to control him and continued to pose a safety risk if he was able to escape the
officer’s control.”).) Because the decision of whether qualified immunity applies is a purely legal
question, see Willingham v. Crooke, 412 F.3d 553, 555 (4th Cir. 2005), Combs’s opinion is not relevant
at this stage and will not be considered.
See Graham, 490 U.S. at 396. Given the “totality of the circumstances,” Garner, 471
U.S. at 8−9, it is difficult to conclude that, based on Elder’s version of the events, Thompson was
acting within the bounds of a reasonable officer under the circumstances

In regards to Michael Elder’s excessive force claim.  U.S Federal Judge Kiser stated in his opinion, ” Finally, Thompson incorrectly claims that Elder has not presented any evidence of his
injury, nor has he shown any proximate cause connecting his injuries to Thompson’s use of
force. To the contrary, in his Amended Complaint, Elder presented discharge papers from a
physician diagnosing him with “bilateral pepper spray irritative conjunctivitis,”
“contusions/abrasions,” and “HTN-exacerbation.” (Am. Compl. Ex. C.) Additionally, Elder was
referred to Dr. Robert Goodnight for a follow-up, and to Dr. Terry Odom to “recheck on pepper
spray injury to eye.” (Id.) Clearly there is evidence in the Record to establish that Elder suffered
an injury, and that a physician concluded that the injury was caused by exposure to pepper
spray.  The fact that the diagnosis came only hours after Thompson deployed pepper spray in
Elder’s face is clear evidence of proximate causation. Therefore, Thompson is not entitled to
summary judgment on this claim

Michael Elder vs. E.K Thompson of the Danville, Va Police Department is scheduled for trial on May 22, 2014.  Michael Elder filed a police complaint tow days after this incident. Video should have been present in regards to this complaint. However, the City of Danville, Va claims no video exists from E.K Thompson. The City of Danville has admitted that officer Thompson was working on the Street Crimes Unit the night of this event unfolding. Chief Broadfoot of the Danville, Va Police Department claims in the Danville, Va Register and Bee newspaper that, When we do a consensual encounter of someone we see at a known drug house, we record that so if there is a question about whether the interaction is improper we’ll be able to know that and take action,” Broadfoot said, “If someone makes a complaint about the officer’s behavior and questions the interaction, we can pull the video and look at it and find out why.”

Broadfoot said while he has received very few complaints, he has received complaints that what an officer did was contrary to what the law allows. Upon investigating those claims, he said what normally happens is what the complainant believes the law allows — and what is actually allowed — are completely different.

The recorded interactions are beneficial in situations like that because video is available which allows him to see exactly what happened. Broadfoot said he has not been able to sustain any of those complaints because there is video to show the officer acted appropriately.

However, no video exists of this incident with Michael Elder and Officer Thompson and under their old policy the video should have existed for at least 30 days after the incident before it could be destroyed. So how did Chief Broadfoot miss this incident, unless it was intentionally done based off the reason Michael Elder cites in his complaint.

Merle T. Rutledge Jr will be blogging about any and all updates in regards to this trial as it happens.

 

 

 

2) The second case decided by the Virginia Court of Appeals. In the early morning hours of August 9, 2005, Officer
R.V. Worsham (“Worsham”), of the City of Danville Police
Department, observed a vehicle (“the vehicle”) parked in front
of a house on Sublett’s Alley in the City of Danville. The
two occupants of the vehicle walked up to the house in front
of which the vehicle was parked and, in less than a minute,
returned to the vehicle. Worsham was familiar with the house
because he was involved in a transaction “months” earlier in
which an informant made a controlled purchase of cocaine
there.

Worsham obtained Hartman’s
information and went back to his car to check her driver’s
license and to call for “back-up” assistance. When the vehicle left, Worsham followed in his police
vehicle. Worsham observed that the vehicle’s rear license
plate had a plastic border that covered the expiration date of
the license plate. He intended to stop the vehicle for that
reason, but “before [he] could get to it to stop it for that,
it was [improperly] backing out into North Main Street.”
Worsham initiated a traffic stop. Worsham stopped the vehicle
within sight of the house where Worsham had first seen the
vehicle.

When Officer E.K. Thompson (“Thompson”), which is the same officer being sued by Michael Elder in Danville, Va Federal Court, arrived on the scene, Worsham explained to him
what had occurred and asked Thompson to watch the passenger
side of the vehicle while Worsham got the driver out. Thompson went to the passenger side of the car and asked McCain to exit the car. Thompson asked McCain if he could
perform a “frisk” or “pat-down” search on McCain. Up to that
point, McCain had complied with every request made by the
officers. McCain declined to give Thompson permission for the
search. However, Thompson ordered McCain to place his hands
on the vehicle and performed a pat-down search on him.

The appeals majority opinion states, “Although he
may have appeared to be nervous, McCain identified himself
when requested, did not make any furtive movements, and
cooperated with the police officers until Thompson asked
permission to do a pat-down search.
The Supreme Court’s decision in Terry does not permit a
generalized policy that authorizes a police officer to frisk
all persons. The totality of the circumstances, namely, the
time of day, the location in a “high crime” area, and the factthat Worsham had months earlier conducted a controlled cocaine
purchase from the house McCain visited on Sublett’s Alley, did
not create reasonable suspicion sufficient to justify
detaining and frisking McCain. No additional circumstances
developed during the course of the traffic stop that would
support a reasonable suspicion that McCain was involved in
criminal activity or was armed and dangerous. Therefore, we
hold that McCain was seized and frisked in violation of his
rights under the Fourth Amendment, and his motion to suppress
should have been granted.
Because the evidence seized from McCain should have been
suppressed, there would be insufficient evidence to sustain
convictions for possession of cocaine with intent to
distribute and the related firearms and weapons offenses.
Accordingly, we will reverse the judgment of the Court of
Appeals, vacate McCain’s convictions, and dismiss the
indictments against him.

However, it appears that Danville, Va Police Officers are ordering people to get out their car for very minor traffic infractions and also turning off the video camera in order to conceal actual evidence of what occurs during an arrest.

3. We go to case held IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA DANVILLE DIVISION ALVIN COOPER, Plaintiff, v. R.V. WORSHAM, et al., Defendants. In this case Alvin Cooper was pulled over for having a air freshener hanging from his window. What happen after this fact is disputed. U.S Federal Judge Kiser states, “In this light, Cooper did not give consent to be searched, but was ordered out of the vehicle and searched despite his original protest. The video is ambiguous as to this fact. Though it could support Defendants’ interpretation of the facts, it could just as easily support Cooper’s. This is a question of credibility which is tailor-made for a jury. As I discussed in my prior Memorandum Opinion, liability may be found for this non-consensual
search, and recovery is not barred by qualified immunity. Defendants have supplied a video recording of the traffic stop taken by the camera on the police cruiser’s dashboard. This camera records when the cruiser’s flashing lights are turned on. Unfortunately, the video does not have any sound. It cuts off before Cooper’s actual handcuffing.

Lastly, based off these three cases a possible pattern of illegal search and seizures, video evidence being tampered with and destroyed, and excessive force has been a rampant issue with Danville, Va Police Department officers and begs the question of why are these officers still on the job unless Chief Broadfoot is accepting of not having a fair and impartial investigation to explain its condonation.

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Breaking News: The Norfolk, Va Police Department has discipline two more corrupt officers Tessier and Plaza. This brings the Merle T. Rutledge Jr holding officers accountable total to 27. This is based off the illegal stop and harrassment done by these Norfolk, Va Police Officers of Merle Rutledge Jr and Vernon C. Evans – El.

Merle T. Rutledge Jr

and

Vernon C. Evans-El
plaintiffs,

vs.
Officer Plaza, Norfolk, Va Police Department officer, sued in his individual and
official capacity
And

Officers Tessier, Norfolk Va Police Department officer, sued in his
individual and official capacity
And

City of Norfolk, Va
And

John Doe 3, supervisor of the Norfolk, Va Police Department officer,
sued in his individual and official capacity

Defendants,

BRIEF OF ALLEGATIONS
On 1/6/2013. Merle T. Rutledge Jr and Vernon Evans-El was pulled over
by Norfolk Police Department officers alongside Monticello and another
street between the hours of 3 and 5pm in the City of Norfolk, Va. After being pulled over illegally by Officers Plaza and Tessier, We was
told that my 2013 registration sticker was peeled as being the reason
for the stop. During the stop they ran my license and called up the
City of Norfolk, Va impound to see if the car was taken legally and
was in the rightful possession of Merle T. Rutledge Jr. The officers claim that they got a hit on my license plate that the vehicle was abandoned. There was
nothing legally wrong with my plates or with my car in the
Commonwealth of Virginia. Also on the same date in which my car was
picked up from the City of Norfolk, Va impound. I had new
registration stickers, inspection sticker and decals put on the car which was
paid for at the Virginia DMV office in Norfolk, Va on November 14, 2012.  The stop occured in regards to this complaint on January 6, 2012.  All checks
showed that Merle T. Rutledge Jr was the rightful person in possession
of the car, he had no warrants for arrest, and the car was not abandon. During the stop a Officer Tessier asked Vernon Evans-El for identification. Vernon C. Evans-El
gave her his real legal full name, which the City of Norfolk, Va city
attorney office, as well as the City of Norfolk, Va police department
had documentation that Vernon C. Evans-El had legally changed his name
in 2009 in the Circuit Court for the City of Norfolk, Va. Officer Tessier was not satisfied with Vernon Evans-El and threaten to take
him into custody if he did not give up his social security number.
Under threat of force, arrest, and being taken into custody by Officer Tessier, Vernon
Evans-El gave her his social secuirty number. It showed no warrants
on Evans-El, but Evans-El refused to give up his social security
number until he was threaten with force, arrest, and being taken into
custody. There is no Virginia law that states police officers are
able to obtain social security numbers or make these types of threats unless they can cite a specific statute or law that allows for such invasion of privacy.
During this exchange after Merle T. Rutledge Jr was told he could
leave by Officer Plaza. The lady officer told Merle T. Rutledge Jr that he had to
stay, even though Merle Rutledge Jr, asked clearly was he free to
leave after the male officer gave him back his license and told
Mr. Rutledge that he could go. There was no legal justification for Officer Tessier to deny Mr. Rutledge Jr right of movement and to illegal seize him after Officer Plaza said that he could go. Merle T. Rutledge Jr asked the female officer was he being detained and was he not free to leave.
Officer Tessier said yes that he was not free to leave. Mr. Rutledge requested
to get out the car so he could get cigarettes while the female officer
made threats to Evans-El about his social security number. Officer Tessier stated no Mr. Rutledge could not leave and he would be leaving his car behind if he left to go right up the street to get cigarettes. This was in direct violation of the Privacy Act, 4th and 14th amendment of the United States Constitutioin, and Officer Tessier could not cite any
legal authority that required such disclosure. The
officer repeated to Merle Rutledge Jr that he was not free to leave
which made the stop a unlawful detainer and false arrest in violation of Merle T.
Rutledge Jr right to be free to leave and the seizure became unlawful
for all parties in Merle T. Rutledge Jr car.  Merle Rutledge Jr was than in City of Norfolk, VA police custody without any legal justification.   Merle Rutledge Jr
requested for a supervisor. The male officer Plaza would call the
supervisor to tell him to respond to the scene. However, the male
officer got back out of his car while the lady officer was talking to
Evans-El unwillingly because he also refuse to want to be question by
her after he gave her his real legal name of Vernon C. Evans El. He
tells Merle Rutledge Jr that he can go again and Merle Rutledge Jr
than asks where was the supervisor. This is when he knew that Merle
Rutledge Jr was not leaving until speaking to a supervisor after being
harassed by this woman officer and being told to stay after Merle
Rutledge JR was clear to leave by her fellow officer. I want this
matter investigated fully and the audio tape reviewed. I request the
audio and visual tape of this stop through the Virginia Freedom of
Information Act and any written estimates be forwarded to me by e-mail
or mail of the costs, if any. The female officer violated our 4th and 14th
amendment rights and obtain information through false pretenses from
Evans-El and Mr. Rutledge. Merle T. Rutledge Jr car was unlawfully
stopped because his plates was clear and visible to all officers. On
the audio the lady officer admits to being able to view the stickers
and plates on Mr. Rutledge Jr car. She also said it was my mother
fault for not calling the DMV and clearing it with them that the car
had been picked up from the City of Norfolk, Va impound. However, she
could not cite a statute or anything of such extra requirement in
order for a vehicle to be clear to be on the road without being
harrassed form the Norfolk, Va police department. Also her male
officer, stated to everyone that the car had been legally picked up
and the date in which it was retrieved. We challenged the
duration of this stop and the actions taken up by this police officer
and her supervisors. The 4th amendment violation and
unlawful detainment of Merle T. Rutledge Jr against this officer and
the City of Norfolk, Va police department for allowing a policy that
has become so official to threaten and force identification beyond the
Virginia law. Social security numbers and threatening everyone to
stay even though there was no legal reasoning for them to do so is
against the law and beyond unconstitutional. Prior and constructive
knowledge of these known violations in the City of Norfolk, Va police
department is so widespread to carry the enforcement of law, which is
municipal liability. All the evidence is on Norfolk, VA police
officers video and audio. This officer continued to violate every
constitutional right during a stop possible. Evans-El was arrested
before for refusal to show identification card when asked on video.
Alton Robinson was arrested after giving his full legal name for
refusing to identify himself. The City of Norfolk, Va department has
refused to correct this problem and supervise and discipline officers
who refuse to follow their instruction, unless none had been given.
This is a City of Norfolk, Va problem not just a police officer
problem.

2. Justice Souter wrote for a unanimous court. He said “a seizure
occurs if ‘in view of all of the circumstances surrounding the
incident, a reasonable person would have believed that he was not free
to leave.’” Brendlin at 4. United States v. Mendenhall, 446 U.S. 544,
554 (1980). A reasonable passenger, during a traffic stop, would not
believe he was free to leave without police permission; a “passenger
will expect to be subject to some scrutiny, and his attempt to leave
the scene would be so obviously likely to prompt an objection from the
officer that no passenger would feel free to leave in the first
place.” Brendlin at 7. United States v. Drayton, 536 U.S. 194, 202
(2002).

3. The male officer had completed his investigation when he told Mr.
Rutledge that he could leave. Due to the female officer having her
head so close to the window and Mr. Rutledge looking after the officer own safety by
asking her if he was free to leave, because he did not want to drive
off and accidentally hit her with his vehicle while engaged in a
conversation with Evans-El. She told Merle Rutledge Jr that he was
not free to leave at all and was not done with her investigation.
Evans-El was not about to be or was involved in any criminal activity
and had no reason to extend the encounter based off her own personal
motivation. Fortunately Merle Rutledge Jr did not leave because he would have been shot to death like Joshua Johnson for possibly trying to hit Police Officer Tessier after she told Mr. Rutledge that he was not free to leave.

4. Until Virginia passes a mandatory Identification card law.
Evans-El cooperated with the police and should have never been
threaten by the assertion of force or being taken into custody to hand
over a identification card and his social security number.

5. All defendants et al. are being sued under U.S.C 1983 42 and for
violations of Merle T. Rutledge Jr 4th and 14th U.S Amendment rights.

6. The supervisor that showed up at the scene tried to intimidate
Evans-El and Mr. Rutledge into not filing a complaint. The supervisor
that showed up to the scene of the traffic stop also
stated to us that a complaint would go nowhere. This is the main
reason why Im complaining against the Supervisor. It is clear that
supervisors in the Norfolk, Va police department constantly tell
citizens by filing a complaint that nothing will happen to them. It
is about time that you showed something will. It shows a complete
lack of respect for the Norfolk, Va internal affairs by your top
decision makers. He was sure to let us know that the actions of his
officers were lawful and it would be upheld by him and top “decision
makers” in the city of Norfolk, Va police department. As of May 13, 2013, the supervisor that came to the scene has yet to be discipline like Officer Plaza and Tessier.

6. A policy exists with the Norfolk, Va Police Department and its
officers that failure to show identification card when asked can have
you detained and put into custody by force, if necessary. No such
state law or ordinance exists that requires mandatory identification
card. The City of Richmond, VA tried a similar ordinance and later
had to throw it out because it was unenforceable.
Relief Sought –
Plantiffs suffered gross negligence, assault, duration of the unlawful
traffic top, unlawful seizure of my person and vehicle, emotional
distress, intimidation, obtaining information under false pretenses,
harassment, humiliation, injury to the plantiffs reputation, violation
of my freedom to travel, false imprisonment, unlawful detainment, and
a fear of police against defendants et al. Also, Plantiff seek
damages for the psychological treatment for the emotional distress
caused for no reason other than incompetence at its greatest by
Norfolk, Va Police Department Officer’s and the City of Norfolk, Va.
Also, I would like a declaration that the Norfolk, Va Police
Department and the City of Norfolk, Va violated my civil rights.

Case Notations and References:

1. Brendlin v. California, 06-8120
2. Ultimately, the Baker court held that even when conducting a
parole search, with no indication that the female passenger has done
anything wrong, the officer may not search the passenger’s bag. The
court held that although the parolee/driver consented in advance to
searches of his person, home and car, people traveling with him do not
give up their right to privacy.

Case Notations and References:

1. Brendlin v. California, 06-8120
2. Ultimately, the Baker court held that even when conducting a
parole search, with no indication that the female passenger has done
anything wrong, the officer may not search the passenger’s bag. The
court held that although the parolee/driver consented in advance to
searches of his person, home and car, people traveling with him do not
give up their right to privacy.  Pictured below is Merle T. Rutledge Jr (1) and (2) Vernon C. Evans-El, Civil Rights Activists!ImageImage

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Update on Vernon Evans-El case.  Evans-El was found not guilty  on all charges.  Evans-El case now rests in U.S Federal Court for the Eastern District of Virginia.  For more details on his case, check out my blog!  I’ve been with him every step of the way and justice was decided in his favor.  I wish him much success in his future endeavors in combating police misconduct and government abuse in the Norfolk, Va area.  I will be looking into the matter of Michael Elder and his on going battle with the justice system in Henry County and Martinsville, Va area.  There are issues surrounding his case that have left deep seeded questions of judicial integrity in our Virginia court system.  I asked him the same question that I would ask anyone that I come in contact with on particular civil rights matters.  Are you ready for a long fight?  Elder said, “Yes!”  I look forward to getting into the fox holes of police misconduct and government abuse, no matter where it exists!  Evans-El is pictured below.

 

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 This is a example of a JJPDA Act that has no teeth in the states, so I decided to use Virginia news article on anti-bias rules.  Their is no point of having state jobs in which the department has no kind of authority to enforce regulations throughout the state, but only make recommendations to policy makers that simple do not care about closing loopholes with laws that address juvenile justice seriously. 

     Furthermore, their are departments that have no teeth is the state corporation office, Virginia Human Rights Act commission, Juvenile Justice, Criminal Justice, and any department that can only recommend and refer others to do a job that will have little effect on the issue.  States can get rid of wasteful spending by eliminating figure head of issue departments.  Figure head departments just means they are only there to say that the state has a department dedicated to specific issues to refer people to, but there is nothing the individual department can do without laws passed by public officials.

     I wish they would just call these offices a place to get referred to a state law maker.  Customer service phone representatives can do the jobs of these toothless departments.  It is nothing wrong with these departments doing studies, but if the raw data is going to be put under the rug because it may compel justices to review in favor of some of our most repulsive criminals, than these departments further the degree of illness, and clearly circumvents preventions and treatment that should be addressed in all four branches of government executive, legislative, judicial, and administrative.  The fourth branch administrative is not a official but informal branch of government.  Critics actually acknowledge it as the fourth branch because it has authority to regulate specific government related matters.

     In a country where we execute the mentally ill, the mentally retarded, and even the innocent people.  Prosecutors should be sued for misconduct and punish in state/federal and civil/criminal courts.  They withhold the most compelling evidence from the defense. 

     The pattern that they tried to exempt and exclude from public records is a custom of punishing the known mentally ill that is so wide spread in the justice system that it is enforced as law.  Prosecutors have prior and constructive knowledge about a mentally ill person when bringing them to trail.  The failure of the state and even the Bar failure to train and supervise the legal system holds them accountable for mentally ill patients.  If the prosecutorial misconduct is exposed that rises above the immunity level and raises a legitimate dispute on the issue, than it would be every prosecutor/judge nightmare. 

      The appeal and overturning of convictions from a justice system that is bias, unfair, not partial, because it discriminates against the mentally ill.  This may be the only way to really have a flawless justice system.  All the studies and research that has been done on this issue, that state and it’s agents have ignored, holds them in my opinion to being a facilitator or accessory to the murder of its own citizens.

Merle T. Rutledge Jr.

Va. juvenile justice board OKs anti-bias rules

Posted to: News Virginia

myvid = “239388”; mypath = “/simpleview”;

 
 

admeld_publisher = 456; admeld_site = ‘virginian-pilot’; admeld_size = ‘300×250’; admeld_placement = ‘atf’;
The Associated Press
© June 30, 2011

By Zinie Chen Sampson

RICHMOND

Virginia’s Board of Juvenile Justice retained a ban on discriminating based on sexual orientation at its residential centers, despite concerns that it doesn’t specifically have that authority.

Gay-rights group Equality Virginia and others urged the board to continue its efforts to protect gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender youth who are in custody in the agency’s facilities. The board on Wednesday discussed what steps it could take to provide proper care to young people in the system while following the law.

The board voted 4-1 — with Chairman Barbara J. Myers the lone dissenter — to reaffirm including specific protections based on sexual orientation in Department of Juvenile Justice regulations.

Equality Virginia lobbyist Claire Guthrie Gastanaga welcomed the board’s decision to “stand for what they think is right,” but acknowledged that the issue is far from resolved as the regulations advance toward final adoption. A similar regulation that offers protection against sexual-orientation discrimination in nonresidential centers is set to take effect on Friday.

The group went against advice from a staff lawyer from the attorney general’s office who said the state constitution equally protects all people and that sexual orientation hasn’t been designated for specific protection under the Virginia Human Rights Act.

Lara K. Jacobs said that in adopting the anti-bias language, the board risks creating a right that hasn’t been enumerated by the General Assembly.

Board member Aida L. Pacheco responded: “We’re not creating a right, we’re trying to prevent discrimination.”

The board approved the anti-bias regulations last year, but the agency stripped out the reference to sexual orientation during the final approval process on advice from the attorney general’s office. The board voted June 8 to restore the protections, then called a special meeting Wednesday to address the issue.

The board also discussed the Department of Juvenile Justice’s new offender classification program.

Kate Duvall, a lawyer with the Legal Aid Justice Center’s JustChildren program, said that the new classification program amounts to a major policy shift that doesn’t line up with the department’s stated policies to make rehabilitation and re-entry top priorities.

Advocates have petitioned the board to require the Department of Juvenile Justice to halt implementation of the new classification system, saying it put too much weight on the original offense committed, isn’t based on research, and neglects other factors that would better predict misbehavior.

But Jacobs advised the board that classification of youth offenders is an operational matter. Because the board only can address policy issues, it doesn’t have legal or regulatory power to order the department to suspend the new system.

Department director Hellvi Holland called the classification system a housing system, and said no youth would be denied services. She said via teleconference that department officials met two weeks ago with advocates and parents to discuss their concerns, and another meeting is scheduled for mid-July.

About 800 young offenders are in the Department of Juvenile Justice system on a daily basis.

1.  http://hamptonroads.com/2011/06/va-juvenile-justice-board-oks-antibias-rules

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