Palmigiano v. DiPrete

710 F. Supp. 875, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3943, 1989 WL 35714
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedApril 6, 1989
DocketCiv. A. 74-172 P, 75-032 P
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 710 F. Supp. 875 (Palmigiano v. DiPrete) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palmigiano v. DiPrete, 710 F. Supp. 875, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3943, 1989 WL 35714 (D.R.I. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

PETTINE, Senior District Judge.

In this Court’s Order of October 21, *876 1988, 1 defendants, Governor Edward DiPrete and John J. Moran, Director of the Rhode Island Department of Corrections, were found to be in contempt of court for having failed to comply with certain provisions contained in standing orders of this Court regarding the conditions of confinement at the State’s Adult Correctional Institutions (hereinafter “ACI”): the prohibition against housing pre-trial detainees in dormitories, the limitation on double-celling any pre-trial detainee for more than thirty days, and the population cap of 250 persons at the Intake Service Center 2 (hereinafter “ISC”), this last having been entered with the consent of the parties. Defendants were ordered to file with the Court by November 21, 1988 a specific and detailed plan, to be approved by the Court, which would ensure compliance with the enumerated provisions. The Court further ordered that the defendants might purge themselves of contempt by implementing, by February 20, 1989, their plan to comply with the standing orders. Finally, the Court ordered that, if defendants failed to file a plan with the Court by November 21, 1988 or if they failed to bring the ISC into compliance with the court orders by February 20, 1989, fines would accrue at the rate of $50 per day for each person held in the ISC in excess of the 250 population limit.

I. PROCEEDINGS SINCE THE OCTOBER ORDER

A. The December 1988 Plan

Shortly before the November 1988 filing deadline, defendants requested an extension of time within which to file the plan. By agreement of the parties, the deadline for submission was extended to December 30, 1988, on which date the plan was filed.

The plan, entitled “State of Rhode Island’s Initiatives to Reduce the Inmate Population at the Intake Service Center” (hereinafter the “December Plan”) outlined fourteen steps being considered by defendants and in various stages of development: some under consideration, several in the planning stage, others currently operating and one already rejected as not feasible. Of the fourteen initiatives presented, three involved facilities construction and renovation projects, 3 two involved proposals to increase staff, 4 five were program development projects, 5 two focused on the release of sentenced inmates, 6 one (already rejected as infeasible) was to relieve the especially severe overcrowding experienced at the ISC on weekends, 7 and the last in *877 volved a population planning study and development of a computerized population projection model for the Department of Corrections.

Taken as a whole, these initiatives were designed to comprise what defendants termed “a system-wide approach ... to reducing the overcrowding at the ISC.” As defendants explained:

This approach includes expansion of options for the sentenced population as well as programs for the awaiting trial population. These options will create additional bedspace throughout the ACI and will also facilitate discharge of appropriate inmates from institutional confinement. In the case of the sentenced population, the chain reaction will reach all the way back to the ISC.... In the awaiting trial context, programs and planning are under way to address the size of [the] pretrial population.

December Plan, p. 3.

Viewed in terms of their potential to effect the court-ordered reduction in population at the ISC by the February 20, 1989 deadline, only one of the proposed initiatives, the removal of sentenced (A & 0) prisoners from the ISC as a consequence of the opening of a new work release facility at the ACI, was touted by defendants as being able quickly to bring the conditions of confinement at the ISC into compliance. Describing the significance of the proposed Bernadette Work Release Center, 8 defendants explained:

The opening of the Bernadette Building by February 15, 1989 will provide immediate bedspace for up to 225 inmates. This additional capacity will enable the Department to remove from the ISC the newly-sentenced inmates who have been held there for lack of bedspace elsewhere. Assuming that the pretrial population remains at the current level, these initiatives will enable the Department to eliminate the use of dormitories for pretrial inmates and the double celling of inmates held longer than thirty days.... This activity will place the ISC in close proximity to a population level of 250.

December Plan, pp. 39-40.

Of the remaining initiatives, only four 9 were intended to impact directly the number of pre-trial detainees held in the ISC and none were offered as being able to reduce the ISC population to 250 by the February 1989 deadline. For example, although the Jail Based Notification Unit was operating at the time the December Plan was filed, and was in fact the only initiative aimed at reducing the ISC population actually in operation at the time of the plan’s submission, it was staffed with only one person. Further, while defendants planned to expand these activities by creating an ACI Pretrial Services Unit staffed by three persons, this plan was not intended to be implemented until “as soon as possible after the beginning of the next fiscal year” — in other words, at some unspecified time after July 1,1989. Similarly, the other two proposed initiatives directed at reducing the pre-trial population were far from fruition. A planned 192-bed expansion of the ISC, approved in the spring of 1988 by the Public Buildings Authority, was stalled pending the approval of the Cranston City Council. Further, defendants’ “Timetable for Emergency Construction and Renovation Programs” appended to the December Plan showed that even in a best case scenario, if the architecture and engineering contracts were awarded on January 13, 1989, occupancy of the new area could not begin until February 1991. Finally, a proposed management study, designed to lead to the development of a computerized population projection model to assist with predicting and planning for growth in Rhode Island’s prison, probation, *878 and parole populations, was not predicted to be completed until sometime in 1989.

B. The January 1989 Chambers Conference

This Court expressed its reaction to the defendants’ plan, by letter to the defendants dated January 23, 1989, thusly:

Although I find the comprehensive approach outlined in the plan to be very laudable ..., I also find that the proposals as they now stand appear to do little to alleviate the immediate overcrowding crisis at the I.S.C. At this stage in this crisis,

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Bluebook (online)
710 F. Supp. 875, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3943, 1989 WL 35714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmigiano-v-diprete-rid-1989.