Mississippi police unconstitutionally jailed people for unpaid fines, Justice Department says
Source: Associated Press
Mississippi police unconstitutionally jailed people for unpaid fines, Justice Department says
BY MICHAEL GOLDBERG
Updated 6:03 PM EST, February 29, 2024
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) A Mississippi police department in one of the nations poorest counties unconstitutionally jailed people for unpaid fines without first assessing whether they could afford to pay them, the U.S. Department of Justice said Thursday.
The announcement comes amid a Justice Department probe into alleged civil rights violations by police in Lexington, Mississippi. The ongoing investigation, which began in November, is focused on accusations of systemic police abuses in the majority-Black city of about 1,600 people some 65 miles (100 kilometers) north of the capital of Jackson.
In a letter addressed to Katherine Barrett Riley, the attorney for the city of Lexington, federal prosecutors said the Lexington Police Department imprisons people for outstanding fines without determining whether the person has the means to pay them a practice that violates the Fourteenth Amendment. Riley did not immediately respond to a phone message Thursday.
Its time to bring an end to a two-tiered system of justice in our country in which a persons income determines whether they walk free or whether they go to jail, said Kristen Clarke, the departments assistant attorney general for civil rights. There is great urgency underlying the issues we have uncovered in Mississippi, and we stand ready to work with officials to end these harmful practices.
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Read more: https://apnews.com/article/justice-department-civil-rights-lexington-mississippi-26757dd41d88b7d0155ce9789e4c7038