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Judge Lipman Oversees New COVID Protections for Jailed Inmates

It isn’t a Get Out of Jail card, but it’s one of the next best things. On Friday, US. District Judge Sheryl Halle Lipman of Tennessee’s Western District approved an agreement between civil rights advocates and the Shelby County Sheriff’s office that will improve health conditions in jail and protect people from the ravages of COVID-19.

Judge Lipman

The agreement guarantees that the jail will implement rigorous monitoring and reporting; additional jail inspections; improved airflow and ventilation measures to keep people safe from airborne transmission of COVID-19; better quality protective equipment for people being detained in the jail; continued efforts to expedite release for those who are disabled and medically vulnerable; improved social distancing; and other enhancements that will better protect people living and working in the facility.

Judge Lipman  stated from the bench that she believed it to be in the community’s interest to stop the spread of COVID and that the measures put in place in the facility are designed to do that. She said the point is to get as many safety features into the jail as possible and keep detainees as safe as possible. She went on to say that containing the spread of coronavirus helps within the community as well as in the facility, and that the effort put in to reach and protect the safety of the detainees is in the public interest and critically important.

The agreement was reached in a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee; the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation; Just City; Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison; and Memphis attorneys Brice Timmons and Steve Mulroy on behalf of people incarcerated at the Shelby County Jail.

The lawsuit followed a court order that urged the jail to address numerous public health lapses identified after two expert inspectors — one appointed by the court —  issued reports expressing alarm at the tactics employed at the jail to contain the virus. Among the  conditions the inspectors uncovered at the jail were a failure to test new arrestees, even those clearly displaying COVID-19 symptoms; open airflow between areas of the facility where COVID-positive and quarantined people were detained and areas where others not yet exposed to the virus were detained; a lack of fresh masks; staff members wearing masks below their chins when speaking; and inadequate availability of cleaning supplies, hand sanitizer, and soap.

Among the plaintiffs in the case at high risk of serious illness or death from contracting  contract COVID-19 were several  pretrial detainees — one with progressive multiple sclerosis and heart disease dependent on an immunosuppressant; another with diabetes and hypertension; and another with hypertension and an irregular heartbeat, who previously had a heart attack. 

These plaintiffs had alleged that the jail temporarily made improvements to certain conditions in anticipation of forthcoming  inspections by a court-appointed inspector and knowingly allowed those improvements to lapse shortly after the inspections occurred, putting the lives of those who live and work at the facility at risk.

“This case and agreement shine a light on conditions in the Shelby County Jail and how officials there are responding to the COVID-19 crisis,” said Andrea Woods, staff attorney with the ACLU’s Criminal Law Reform Project. “While the work will continue, we applaud the court’s approval and commitment to ensuring that inspections and other monitoring continue until the pandemic is over.” 

“This agreement could quite literally mean the difference between life and death for our clients and many others who live and work at the Shelby County Jail, and in the wider Memphis community,” said Stella Yarbrough, ACLU of Tennessee staff attorney. “Far too many people are held in conditions that daily threaten their health, safety, and human dignity, especially during this pandemic, and we are relieved that conditions at the jail will now be improved.”

Josh Spickler, executive director of Just City, stated, “In Shelby County, the number of presumed innocent people being held in cages is extraordinarily high. This settlement will bring some much-needed accountability to those responsible for their well-being, but the real work is only beginning — we must break our community’s addiction to pretrial detention.”

University of Memphis law professor and former Shelby County Commissioner Steve Mulroy, one of the plaintiffs’ lawyers, said, “This case sparked jail improvements and continued monitoring which would not have occurred without our filing. It’s helped protect the health of thousands of Shelby Countians, most of whom have not been convicted of any crime.”

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COVID-Related Suit Filed Against Sheriff’s Office on Inmates’ Behalf

A new federal suit has been filed against the office of the Shelby County Sheriff seeking emergency action on behalf of inmates currently infected or under threat of  “severe injury or death” as a result of 

the COVID-19 outbreak.


Filed Wednesday afternoon jointly by the American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee; the American Civil Liberties Union; Just City; Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP; and attorneys Brice Timmons and Steve Mulroy, the suit is a federal class action lawsuit.


As a press release issued by the plaintiffs puts it, the suit “asks for identification of medically vulnerable individuals held at the jail and the immediate release of vulnerable people, most immediately those who are detained solely on the basis of their inability to satisfy a financial condition of pretrial release, or solely on the basis of a technical violation of probation or parole unless the county demonstrates that an individual poses a flight or safety risk.”

The statement notes that, “as of April 30, 192 people at the jail had tested positive for COVID-19, and one jail employee had died.” It further points out that “[s]tatewide, the greatest number of deaths from the virus have occurred in Shelby County” and that, according to the latest reports, “86 percent of inmates at the Shelby County Jail were there pretrial.”


The lawsuit alleges that the sheriff’s office is violating the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution as well as the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Rehabilitation Act. The plaintiffs warn that “an outbreak at the jail would spread widely in the community, draining the Memphis area of limited resources to fight the pandemic.”

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Sheriff’s Deputy Rescues Dogs From House Fire

This dog was held in Deputy Tartt’s patrol car until homeowners arrived.

Shelby County Sheriff’s Deputy Darius Tartt can now add “volunteer firefighter” to his resume. The patrol deputy came upon a house fire Wednesday afternoon and managed to rescue two dogs from the home before firefighters arrived.

Tartt was patrolling when he noticed the residential fire in the 7200 block of Peppermill Lane. He called for help from the Shelby County Fire Department and then approached the home to see if anyone was inside. And that’s when he heard barking.

Tartt forced his way inside the home and began searching for the dogs and any people inside the home. No humans were there, but he located two large dogs cowering under a bed. Tartt grabbed one dog, and the other one made a run for the backyard.

The dog Tartt grabbed was placed in his patrol car until the homeowners arrived. Shelby County Fire was able to extinguish the flames, which apparently resulted from a lightening strike.

These dogs were rescued from a house fire by Sheriff’s Deputy Tartt.

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Shelby County Sheriff’s Office to Sell Seized Property

Need a beat-up 1993 Dodge pickup truck? Or how about a single-engine Cessna plane? Both items will be sold in a Shelby County Sheriff’s sale on Wednesday, November 28th.

A new feature on the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office website lists items to be sold in auctions of seized property. Items range from major purchases (such as the plane) to everyday goods (i.e. computers).

Often, property is seized when a loan is defaulted. For example, a creditor could get a court order for deputies to seize a person’s real estate or other valuable goods. Most of the money from those sales goes back to the creditor, although the sheriff’s office receives a small fee for conducting the auction.

Other items are seized by the Shelby County Narcotics Bureau. Officers may confiscate a vehicle used in drug sales or a computer used to store information about stolen goods. Proceeds from those sales are used to purchase new equipment for the narcotics bureau.

For more, go to the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office website.

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5-Year Plan Presented to Law Enforcement Consolidation Group

Saying it was just a “starting point,” County Commissioner Mike Carpenter officially presented his consolidation proposal to the law enforcement consolidation task force on Wednesday.

“I don’t think this is an air-tight proposal. … This is open to discussion,” Carpenter said.

Carpenter’s plan suggests creating a Public Safety Commission that would guide a five-year consolidation process of the Memphis Police Department and the law enforcement duties of the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office. If, during that time, consolidation was not working or was costing too much money, the bodies involved could opt not to go forward.

But some task force members said they needed more time to come up with a viable proposal.

“If it takes five years to execute [the plan], we need to take longer than 90 days to choose that path,” said Mike Heidingsfield, head of the Memphis Shelby County Crime Commission.

The task force’s next meeting is November 28th.