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Lawsuit filed over “horrific conditions” at Franklin County Juvenile Detention Center

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* A bit of background

Pursuant to 730 ILCS 5/3-15-2(b), the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice (IDJJ) is responsible for establishing minimum standards for juvenile detention centers across the state. For the first time since 1998, the County Detention Standards were updated in 2021 to reflect current practice. Updates included the addition of portions for the Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA), and enhanced guidelines for areas such as youth grievances, mental health service requirements, visitation guidelines, educational guidelines, and restrictions to the use of confinement. IDJJ conducts annual inspections of all county detention centers to monitor compliance and offer technical assistance.

Illinois county juvenile detention centers do NOT fall under the jurisdiction of the State of Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice.

And

The Franklin County Juvenile Detention Center serves law enforcement and the juvenile justice system within 26 rural southern Illinois counties.

* From last October

A southern Illinois juvenile detention center is a “a facility in crisis.”

That’s the words used by the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice following an inspection in Franklin County.

The full, 15-page report can be found here.

During an August 2 inspection at the Franklin County Detention Center, the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice found what it calls “extremely low” staffing levels at the facility.

The report shows just eight full-time works and four part-time employees were working at the detention center at the time of the inspection.

Inspectors say they also found the facility to be non-compliant in several areas, including personal hygiene, food services and education.

* ACLU of Illinois…

A young person who has been housed at the Franklin County Juvenile Detention Center filed a federal lawsuit challenging the conditions at the facility. The lawsuit’s description of horrific conditions at the facility mirror the findings of a recent report by the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice. The youth, along with several others currently or recently detained at the facility, describe being locked into cells the size of parking spaces for 20 to 24 hours a day, unable to flush their own toilets, and struggling to sleep under fluorescent lights that never turn off. The youth held at the facility also are not provided any meaningful mental health care or allowed to attend school.

These conditions are present in a facility that detains youth as young as 11 years old. Each year, Franklin County JDC detains hundreds from multiple counties across Southern Illinois.

“The bottom line is that the officials responsible for this facility are failing to treat youth in their care as children,” said Kevin Fee, Senior Special Litigation Counsel at the ACLU of Illinois, one of the lawyers representing the unnamed youth in the lawsuit. “These youth are isolated for long periods of time with no chance to exercise their minds or bodies. There is widespread consensus that no one should be subjected to solitary confinement, let alone an 11 year old who is at such a crucial early stage in their social and emotional development. It is inhumane.”

Among conditions detailed in the complaint filed in federal court:

Nearly a year ago, in August 2022, the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice conducted an audit of the Franklin County facility and concluded that it was a “facility in crisis.” The IDJJ cited a range of problems from extended confinement to the lack of clothing and personal hygiene to a behavioral program that was standardless and vague.

“Our clients all make one thing clear – Franklin County and the leadership of the JDC have put policies in place that led to youth being detained in constitutionally inadequate conditions, and they have failed to organize and pay for the resources necessary to appropriately care for children in its facility,” added Fee. “This situation must be rectified now, so that no 11 year old is locked up in these awful conditions. We look forward to sharing all this information with a federal court.”

The federal lawsuit was filed in the Southern District of Illinois on behalf of a young person (known by his initials, L.S.) and a putative class of other youth detained at the facility. The complaint asks the federal court to ensure that immediate steps are taken to address the harms caused by the conditions and lack of services.

A full copy of the complaint can be found here.

…Adding… A bill was passed this spring to extend the jurisdiction of the Department of Juvenile Justice’s independent ombudsman to cover county detention facilities like the one in Franklin County. The governor has yet to take action on the bill.

posted by Rich Miller
Tuesday, Jul 11, 23 @ 10:21 am

Comments

  1. Wow this is depressing to read. A JTDC isn’t a jail. These kids aren’t even getting a chance.

    Comment by Boone's is Back Tuesday, Jul 11, 23 @ 12:38 pm

  2. Old enough to remember when separating Juvenile Detention from IDOC was heralded as a turning point in juvy rehabilitation.

    Comment by Flyin'Elvis'-Utah Chapter Tuesday, Jul 11, 23 @ 3:06 pm

  3. @Flyin’Elvis’-Utah Chapter

    This has nothing to do with IDJJ; the county juvenile detention centers are run by the circuit courts, not IDJJ.

    Comment by SweetLou86 Tuesday, Jul 11, 23 @ 8:24 pm

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