Friday, December 22, 2006

Does Hennepin County Encourage Lawsuits?

We've all heard the tales of the inmate brought to the jail who then complains about his treatment and then walks away with a fistful of dollars. Does this really happen? Well I visited the Hennepin County Board's site for the December 12, 2006 meeting and found this:

County Attorney Claims on behalf of:
(a) Michael Undlin (2)
(b) Triple L Transportation Inc.
(c) Harold Shepard 06-c226

I don't know who (b) or (c) are, but (a), Michael Undlin, was booked into our jail and was less then happy with his stay. He was able to obtain 27 hours of our internal jail video, apparently it's not considered protected (a great idea for anyone wanting to start a reality show huh?). Now he's found his way to father Hennepin for some taxpayer dollars.

Then there's the Philander Jenkins saga. He originally claimed four of our members sexually assaulted him. The case was investigated by the BCA, then sent to the Washington County attorneys office. The claim was proven to be false. In a rare moment Hennepin County went after Jenkins for filing a false report. Hennepin County was not able to convince the jury. One reason why may be found on the Communities United Against Police Brutality (CUAPB) website:

Philander^s cases--the cafe case and the arraignment on the "false" reporting charges--were in court last week. The county dropped one of the charges in the "false" reporting case right away, since HC jail staff aren^t officially "law enforcement" officers (since they must have known that, why did they charge him in the first place?).

If the CUAPB website is correct then the Hennepin County attorney's office dropped the ball right from the gate. If we aren^t officially "law enforcement" officers, then by whose authority do we perform our duties? Another fine example of Amy Klobuchar's work!

The bottom line is this, we perform our duties under the color of law on behalf of the citizens of Hennepin County. We process, or book in, people who are lawfully arrested by police officers. Every one who comes to jail is booked against their will. Unfortunately due to the County's propensity to hand out money rather then make these people prove they were wronged, only encourages this behavior. It's the old penny wise, pound foolish saying. It may be cheaper in the short run, but in the long run it's very costly, both to the taxpayers who foot the bill and to the detention deputies (corrections officers) who feel they get no backing from the county they serve. Our clientele are tenacious, Philander Jenkins is now going after our guys in civil court. I wish Hennepin County were as dedicated to defending us, as our inmates are in going after our money. After all, they apparently have nothing to lose for trying!

As long as Hennepin County keeps handing out money, giving away internal security tapes, and not backing it's employees, the taxpayers will keep hemorrhaging money to criminals who destroy the quality of life in their neighborhoods.

Normally I don't publicly comment on ongoing cases, but hey, this stuff is already published on the internet, so as far as I'm concerned it's fair game.

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