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Nearly a fifth of the Superior Court bench — 12 of 62 seats — is vacant, according to an internal Superior Court document, called a judicial vacancy impact statement, that I obtained.

The staffing problem only worsens this year, with several retirements on tap, including one judge who will depart in February. Meanwhile, 10 judicial nominees are pending in the Senate, and there are two seats with no nominee from the White House.

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Several factors are driving the docket jam and bloated caseloads. Below are selected excerpts from the vacancy impact statement; I am quoting them at length to drive home the depth and complexity of the problem:

The list of burdens goes on.

So, too, crime in all its ugly and deadliest forms. So, too, the catcalls from Capitol Hill — and cheap shots suggesting that city leaders are oblivious to the mayhem in our streets. The flow of arrests and prosecutions flooding the courts speaks otherwise.

Less heard, until now, is talk about the judicial emergency crippling our court system — a danger of the Senate and Biden’s own making. The D.C. court system can’t function without judges. Benches are empty. White House and Senate, do your part. Do your duty.

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The District of Columbia’s judicial system is approaching a critical breaking point. D.C. Superior Court dockets are overburdened, and judicial shortages are growing. This is an emergency that only President Biden and the Senate can resolve because it is the federal government — not the mayor and D.C. Council — that bears legal responsibility for the District’s judiciary.

Let’s dissect the problem.

Nearly a fifth of the Superior Court bench — 12 of 62 seats — is vacant, according to an internal Superior Court document, called a judicial vacancy impact statement, that I obtained.

The staffing problem only worsens this year, with several retirements on tap, including one judge who will depart in February. Meanwhile, 10 judicial nominees are pending in the Senate, and there are two seats with no nominee from the White House.

Several factors are driving the docket jam and bloated caseloads. Below are selected excerpts from the vacancy impact statement; I am quoting them at length to drive home the depth and complexity of the problem:

The list of burdens goes on.

So, too, crime in all its ugly and deadliest forms. So, too, the catcalls from Capitol Hill — and cheap shots suggesting that city leaders are oblivious to the mayhem in our streets. The flow of arrests and prosecutions flooding the courts speaks otherwise.

Less heard, until now, is talk about the judicial emergency crippling our court system — a danger of the Senate and Biden’s own making. The D.C. court system can’t function without judges. Benches are empty. White House and Senate, do your part. Do your duty.

QOSHE - The D.C. court system is breaking. Biden and the Senate must fix it. - Colbert I. King
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The D.C. court system is breaking. Biden and the Senate must fix it.

5 26
31.01.2024

Follow this authorColbert I. King's opinions

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Nearly a fifth of the Superior Court bench — 12 of 62 seats — is vacant, according to an internal Superior Court document, called a judicial vacancy impact statement, that I obtained.

The staffing problem only worsens this year, with several retirements on tap, including one judge who will depart in February. Meanwhile, 10 judicial nominees are pending in the Senate, and there are two seats with no nominee from the White House.

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Several factors are driving the docket jam and bloated caseloads. Below are selected excerpts from the vacancy impact statement; I am quoting them at length to drive home the depth and complexity of the problem:

  • “Juvenile crime is increasing, and speedy trial statutes require that judges often double and triple book trial dates to comply. Given the judicial shortage, there are only two judges assigned to separate juvenile calendars. The number of juvenile cases pending in 2023 exceeded 500. Additionally, the nature of juvenile crime has become more violent, resulting in an increased number of initial hearings and probable cause hearings when the court considers detaining a juvenile in a delinquency case.”
  • “Since 2022, the Criminal Division has seen a 54% increase in felony case filings. During that same time period, misdemeanor case filings have increased 67% and traffic matters prosecuted by the DC Office of the Attorney General have increased by 10%.”
  • “Because of the judicial shortage, the Criminal Division has had to double the misdemeanor calendar load — where there were previously seven full-time calendars, there are now four, handled by three Associate Judges and a rotation of Senior Judges.”
  • “In 2023, 8,427........

    © Washington Post


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