Committee for Public Counsel Services v. Chief Justice of the Trial Court

CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 3, 2020
DocketSJC 12926
StatusPublished

This text of Committee for Public Counsel Services v. Chief Justice of the Trial Court (Committee for Public Counsel Services v. Chief Justice of the Trial Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Committee for Public Counsel Services v. Chief Justice of the Trial Court, (Mass. 2020).

Opinion

NOTICE: All slip opinions and orders are subject to formal revision and are superseded by the advance sheets and bound volumes of the Official Reports. If you find a typographical error or other formal error, please notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Judicial Court, John Adams Courthouse, 1 Pemberton Square, Suite 2500, Boston, MA, 02108-1750; (617) 557- 1030; SJCReporter@sjc.state.ma.us

SJC-12926

COMMITTEE FOR PUBLIC COUNSEL SERVICES & another1 vs. CHIEF JUSTICE OF THE TRIAL COURT & others.2

Suffolk. March 31, 2020. - April 3, 2020.

Present: Gants, C.J., Gaziano, Lowy, Budd, Cypher, & Kafker, JJ.

Committee for Public Counsel Services. Chief Justice of the Trial Court. Commissioner of Correction. Sheriff. Parole. Pretrial Detention. Practice, Criminal, Sentence, Parole.

Civil action commenced in the Supreme Judicial Court for the county of Suffolk on March 24, 2020.

The case was reported by Budd, J.

Matthew R. Segal (Jessie J. Rossman also present) for Massachusetts Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. Rebecca A. Jacobstein, Committee for Public Counsel Services (Benjamin H. Keehn, Committee for Public Counsel

1 Massachusetts Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.

2 Department of Correction; parole board; Attorney General; district attorneys for the Berkshire, Bristol, Cape and Islands, eastern, Hampden, middle, Norfolk, northern, northwestern, Plymouth, and Suffolk districts; and fourteen sheriffs' departments. 2

Services, also present) for Committee for Public Counsel Services. Eric A. Haskell, Assistant Attorney General (David C. Kravitz & Mindy S. Klenoff, Assistant Attorneys General, also present) for the Attorney General. Daniel P. Sullivan for Chief Justice of the Trial Court. Charles W. Anderson, Jr., for Department of Correction. Gloriann Moroney for parole board. Donna Jalbert Patalano, Assistant District Attorney, for district attorney for the Suffolk district. Thomas D. Ralph, Assistant District Attorney (Marian T. Ryan, District Attorney, also present) for district attorney for the northern district & others. Jane A. Sullivan, Assistant District Attorney (Elizabeth Dunphy Farris, Assistant District Attorney, also present) for the district attorney for the middle district & others. Robert W. Harnais (Dan V. Bair, II, also present) for fourteen sheriff's departments. Andrea Harrington, District Attorney for the Berkshire District, was present but did not argue. Robert A. Jones & Joshua S. Levy, for the special master, were present but did not argue. The following submitted briefs for amici curiae: Katharine Naples-Mitchell for Mary T. Bassett & others. Ruth Greenberg for Joseph Buckman & others. Max Bauer for Dominick Donovan & others. Liam T. Lowney, pro se. Michael Cox, pro se. Andrea James, Joneisha James, Stacey Borden, Robert Williams, Suzanne Gray, Michael Gray, Kathleen Mahan, Adelcia Miller, Damaris Muhammed, Brooke Hadley, Reyna M. Ramirez, Lauren Petit, Khadejah Al-Rijleh, Casandra Scarlet, Erika N., Paige Scott, Aaron Bray, Nana Yankah, Marsophia S. Ducheine, L.B., L.M., J.C., Lor Holmes, J.D., W.H., K.L., S.P., Joan Hunter, R.R., T.B., J.G., Selena Williams, Keondra Jean, J.B., Jude Glaubman, Nicole Sadler, Mallory Hanora, Jurrell Laronal, Annette Bartley, Fernando Phillips, Miles McKinney, Carlos R., & Ayana Aubourg, pro se. Leon Smith for Citizens for Juvenile Justice. Elizabeth Matos, James Pingeon, Bonita Tenneriello, & Jesse White for Prisoners' Legal Services of Massachusetts. Phillip Kassel, Jennifer Honig, Coco Holbrook, & Caitlin Parton for Mental Health Legal Advisors Committee. Christine M. Netski, Meredith Shih, David M. Siegel, & Martin F. Murphy for Boston Bar Association. Jessica L. LaClair for Jose Rivera. 3

GAZIANO, J. The 2020 COVID-19 pandemic has created

enormous challenges for every aspect of our communities. While

scientists are racing to discover whether any existing drugs can

help to treat the virus and improve outcomes for critically ill

patients, and others are working at top speed to develop a

vaccine, currently there is no cure and no vaccine. Health care

workers on the frontlines of the epidemic are coming down with

the virus in much higher percentages than others, while surgical

masks and other basic protective equipment are in short supply,

and hospitals with already close-to-capacity intensive care unit

beds confront the possibility of inadequate resources to care

for critically ill patients, such as lack of needed ventilators.

Everyday life is heavily disrupted; most businesses, schools,

and houses of worship are closed,3 while grocers, pharmacies, and

delivery services stretch to provide essential services to meet

basic needs, and families without paychecks worry about how to

meet those needs. The Centers For Disease Control (CDC)

guidelines recommend that, to avoid exposure, individuals limit

contact with others, maintain a distance of at least six feet

from other individuals if they are together, engage in frequent

3 See Order Extending the Closure of Certain Workplaces and the Prohibition of Gatherings of More than 10 People, COVID-19 Order 21 (Mar. 31, 2020), https://www.mass.gov/doc/march-31- 2020-essential-services-extension-order [https://perma.cc/SU87- GTAV]. 4

handwashing, and clean and disinfect frequently touched surfaces

daily in order to "flatten the curve," i.e., to reduce the

number of cases the beleaguered health care system must treat at

any one time.

On March 10, 2020, the Governor declared a state of

emergency to support the Commonwealth's response to the threat

of COVID-19. On March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization

formally declared the expanding spread of the COVID-19 virus a

global pandemic. Since then, infections have spread alarmingly,

rapidly, and at an increasing rate, both in Massachusetts and

throughout the world. In an attempt to mitigate the spread of

the disease, the Governor has imposed strict restrictions on

many aspects of everyday life, including closing business and

schools and stringently restricting public and private

gatherings. In the week between the filing of this petition and

oral argument, confirmed cases in the Commonwealth increased

more than eight-fold, from 777 cases to 6,620 cases.4

4 Of course, during that same period, the number of people tested also has increased exponentially, as more laboratories have begun processing tests. For example, in one day, March 26, 2020, 5,570 more tests were processed by the Department of Public Health than had been processed the previous day. Prior to that, between March 23 and 24, the number of residents tested doubled in two days, from 6,004 to 13,749. According to the Department of Public Health, more than 46,000 people in the Commonwealth had been tested as of March 31, 2020, resulting in 6,620 positive tests. 5

Pursuant to its supervisory authority, this court has

issued a series of orders with respect to court proceedings, new

filings, and trials, designed to "protect the public health by

reducing the risk of exposure to the virus and slowing the

spread of the disease." As the health crisis has deepened, we

have been forced to limit physical access to our court houses to

address only "emergency matters that cannot be resolved through

a videoconference or telephonic hearing, either because such a

hearing is not practicable or because it would be inconsistent

with the protections of constitutional rights," and have

directed each trial court department to issue a standing order

to determine what constitutes an emergency matter.

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