Pubdate: Fri, 02 Feb 2007
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2007 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Alison Leigh Cowan
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?247 (Crime Policy - United States)

LATE FOR COURT: CONNECTICUT CASE DRAWS SCRUTINY

NORWALK, Conn. -- Some call the "failure to appear" charge a 
prosecutor's best friend because it is relatively easy to prove and 
can swiftly bring a defendant to the bargaining table. Others see the 
long-accepted but little-discussed practice of punishing late or 
absentee defendants as a crutch for overworked judges to maintain 
decorum and keep criminal cases from clogging their courtrooms.

Now such criminal charges are being challenged in Connecticut, where 
nearly 1 in 10 of the cases not involving motor vehicles that ended 
in convictions over the past five years included a conviction for 
failure to appear. Those found guilty of what could be a procedural 
misstep can face up to five years in prison.

Bringing the issue into the open is the case of Ayanna Khadijah, 34, 
who was convicted of the felony version of failure to appear after 
she failed to wake up from a nap and arrived 45 minutes late to court 
one day in August 2003. Her case is extraordinary because she fought back.

It was the only court date Ms. Khadijah missed among 45 sessions over 
three years defending herself against a set of drug charges that were 
eventually dismissed, in 2005. Ms. Khadijah, a single mother with a 
criminal history, received a suspended three-year sentence on the 
failure-to-appear charge.

She had spent the day before she was late for court at her job as a 
community organizer and then delivered newspapers from 1 to 8 a.m. 
Prosecutors argued that she should have known better than to work all 
night before a court appearance.

Connecticut's appellate court overturned her conviction last fall 
after concluding that the inadvertent doze was not a willful shirking 
of responsibility. But the state is appealing to the State Supreme 
Court for fear the widely used tool could become harder to wield.

"We thought it set a bad example," said John A. East III, a senior 
assistant state's attorney, who argued in court papers that rather 
than rely on her boyfriend to rouse her, Ms. Khadijah should have set 
an alarm or perhaps brewed herself a strong cup of coffee.

But Gerald B. Lefcourt, a past president of the National Association 
of Criminal Defense Lawyers, said the case "is really right out of 
Catch-22." "There's no way to win when you have a system that is so 
inflexible and so lacking in understanding," he said.

At least 30 states treat failure to appear as a crime that stands 
alone, according to information in American Law Reports, with most 
tying the severity of the penalty to the seriousness of the underlying charge.

Statistics on how often such cases are filed or lead to convictions 
are hard to come by, because the Federal Bureau of Investigation 
lumps the information it collects into a catch-all bin it calls 
"other offenses."

New York State's Division of Criminal Justice Services said its 
records showed 444 convictions on bail-jumping last year and 465 the 
year before -- a fraction of Connecticut's 6,539 in 2006, and fewer 
even than the 596 in Norwalk (these numbers include those related to 
motor-vehicle charges).

Asked why New York's figures were so much lower than those across the 
state line, a spokesman for the agency, Mark Bonacquist, said he was 
"not making any comment as to whether our statutes are similar to Connecticut."

Here in Norwalk, some lawyers contend that prosecutors and judges are 
overusing the charge to solve all manner of other problems. Norwalk 
ranks sixth among Connecticut's 35 courts -- including many that are 
far larger and busier -- for the total number of failure-to-appear 
cases disposed of last year, and had by far the highest rate of 
conviction on such cases, just shy of 55 percent, of the courts with 
the highest volumes.

"Failure to appear should be a last resort," complained Jon L. 
Schoenhorn, a Hartford lawyer who is the president of the 
Connecticut's Criminal Defense Lawyers Association. "You can only put 
so much pressure on parties to move cases along before the pressure 
is seen as an abuse of discretion."

Alfred Blumstein, a criminologist at Carnegie Mellon University, 
called the Connecticut situation "mind-boggling."

"Showing up late for court is certainly inappropriate but to be 
convicted of it as a felony sounds so extreme," he said. If a 
defendant is not there when called, he wondered of the courts, "Can't 
they juggle their schedules a little bit?'"

Ms. Khadijah, who twice went to prison in the 1990s on drug and other 
charges, said she did not set out to take on the criminal justice 
system. Rather, she said, her focus over the last decade has been on 
supporting herself and her daughter, now 5, of whom she once lost custody.

"Because I'm a felon, it's hard to get a job," said Ms. Khadijah, a 
high school graduate who worked in a factory packing Nivea skin 
cream, delivered pizzas, and worked at a law firm. She has also been 
evicted for failure to pay rent, and sought bankruptcy protection in 
2005 to cancel the $30,000 she owed her criminal lawyer, Sam Kretzmer.

The missed court date stemmed from a February 2002 police raid of the 
Round Tree Inn on Westport Road, where Ms. Khadijah was living. She 
was charged with possession of narcotics and risk of injury to a 
child, though she accused the police of entering her room without a 
warrant and claimed that the drugs they found were not hers. Court 
records show Ms. Khadijah kept 20 court dates over the next 18 months 
without a hitch.

She knows the drill cold. Dress respectfully, so court officials see 
that you understand the severity of the charges. Arrive early, 
leaving plenty of time to clear the metal detectors. Sit politely, 
even if you must wait all day to be called.

"We used to be there at 9 a.m. and leave at 5 p.m. every day, just 
like I worked there," Ms. Khadijah said of herself and her boyfriend, 
Darri Woodhouse, a co-defendant in the drug case.

According to her testimony in the failure to appear case, Ms. 
Khadijah arrived home from her Norwalk Hour paper route at 8 a.m. on 
Aug. 13, 2003, the second day of jury selection for the drug trial. 
She sat on the couch and told Mr. Woodhouse to wake her if she dozed. 
He didn't.

Instead she was roused by a telephone call from her lawyer about 11 
a.m., 15 minutes after she had been instructed to arrive. Ms. 
Khadijah raced to the courthouse full of apologies, getting there at 
about 11:30 -- minutes after Judge Susan Reynolds had dismissed 
jurors and ordered her charged with failure to appear in the first degree.

Ms. Kretzmer had assured the judge that her client was on her way and 
asked for five minutes' grace. "This is not a cocktail party," the 
judge replied. "This is the most important thing in her life, and 
she's 45 minutes late."

The judge offered to vacate the arrest if Ms. Khadijah entered a 
guilty plea instead of going to trial, an offer her lawyer rejected. 
The charges were dismissed five months later by a different judge, 
who agreed that the police had erred by entering without a warrant.

So prosecutors pressed on to trial in January 2004 on the lone 
remaining offense -- failure to appear.

"It's like hitting an ant with a hammer," said Mary Anne Royle, a 
lawyer who has been helping Ms. Khadijah with her appeals. Mr. 
Schoenhorn, the leader of the state's criminal defense bar, called 
the decision to continue the prosecution after the drug charges 
disappeared "a sour-grapes type of vindictive act."

But Mr. East, the prosecutor, said "we have to be aggressive" in 
pursuing such cases.

"Failures to appear are a big problem in our courts," he said. "They 
clog up the docket and cost the state a lot of money."

Ms. Khadijah was convicted of failure to appear once before, 16 years 
ago, a misdemeanor that led to the first of her two stints at the 
York Correctional Institute in Niantic and that she said was a proper 
response by the system.

That conviction was used to cast doubt on her testimony in her recent 
failure-to-appear case.

As that case undergoes further review, both sides acknowledge that 
precedents on the subject are skimpy, since the issue rarely gets 
litigated. Both sides cite a 19-year-old Washington, D.C., case about 
a habitually late lawyer who overslept one day, called the court to 
say he would not be coming and went back to bed, according to the 
appellate panel's summary.

Connecticut prosecutors note that the resulting contempt charge stood 
on appeal, while Ms. Khadijah's lawyers use the case to highlight the 
contrast between the lawyer's response and her efforts to race to 
court once awakened.

Other lawyers reached back 23 years to find a Connecticut case, 
Gionfrido v. Wharf Realty, in which a plaintiff's lawyer left 
Middletown for Hartford on a lunch break to retrieve a file and was 
26 minutes late returning to court because he "lost track of time" 
and hit traffic.

The Middletown judge dismissed the lawsuit moments after the lunch 
break ended when the plaintiff's lawyer did not show up. The 
Connecticut Supreme Court called the dismissal "harsh" but ruled that 
the lower court had not abused its discretion in light of the need to 
process cases "in a timely and efficient manner."

The treatment of tardy defendants is hardly uniform. On a recent 
morning here, some no-shows got a pass, in the form of a letter 
reminding them of their obligation to appear in court. Others had 
their bond increased. At least one was ordered rearrested.

Neatly dressed in a cowl-neck sweater, flowing skirt and brown wig to 
hide hair loss she said stems from stress, Ms. Khadijah arrived 
promptly for a 10 a.m. appearance on her most recent arrest, in 
December, in which she was accused of reckless driving and criminal 
mischief in a vacant lot. "Because I've been in trouble before, I'm 
an easy catch," she said afterwards of her seeming inability to stay 
out of court.

After 73 other names and nearly three hours, Ms. Khadijah's name was 
called. She stood.

The exchange took less than one minute.

"Are you Ayanna Khadijah?" Judge Reynolds asked, as if they were 
meeting for the first time.

"Yes," said the defendant.

The judge instructed the prosecution to talk to other people involved 
in the December case. Ms. Khadijah was told to return in four weeks 
for another appearance. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake