U.S. v. Williams (D. Nev.) - Motion for COVID-19 Testing Denied - Outside Court Authority
The court denied Laron Karl Williams, Jr.’s motion for immediate COVID-19 testing. Williams asked the court to order that he be immediately tested for COVID-19 should he be detained pretrial, arguing that testing is necessary to protect his Sixth Amendment right to the assistance of counsel and to prepare a complete defense. The court responded that decisions regarding the internal policies, including the discipline, care, and security of prisoners, ordinarily lie “within the province and professional expertise of corrections officials,” and thus it does not have the inherent authority to interfere with NSDC (Williams’ detention facility) on this matter. Furthermore, the court explained in the footnote that even if it had the authority to interfere with this issue, it would find Williams’ argument unpersuasive because his motion is based on generalized speculation rather than any specific COVID-19 risk, and it finds little connection between COVID-19 testing and Williams’ Sixth Amendment right to the assistance of counsel.
United States v. Williams, No. 2:20-cr-00028, 2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 105003 (D. Nev. June 15, 2020)
DETAILS
Decision
Date
06/15/2020
Practice Area
Criminal (Federal Charges)
Relief Requested
Improved Conditions
Type of Court
Federal District Court
Location
Nevada
Type of Case
Individual
Case Characteristics
Pretrial Detention [jail]
Compassionate Release Case
No
Case Tracking Number
2:20-cr-00028-GMN-NJK
MORE CASE INFORMATION
Court Name
D. Nev.
Decision
Motion Denied
Place of Incarceration
Federal Detention Center [typically federal pretrial detention]
Name of Facility
Nevada Southern Detention Center
Legal Authority
Sixth Amendment - Access to Counsel
Case Status
Decision Made
COVID-19 Positive or Symptomatic
Not Discussed
COVID-19 in Jail Prison or Detention Center
Not Discussed
Potential Research
This is the first case I encountered where the relief that the individual is asking for is COVID-19 testing. It would be interesting to see if there are more such cases and examine how courts approach this issue.
Litigation Database
Crowdsourced legal documents from around the country related to COVID-19 and incarceration, organized, collected, and summarized for public defenders, litigators, and other advocates. Created and managed by Bronx Defenders, Columbia Law School’s Center for Institutional and Social Change, UCLA Law COVID-19 Behind Bars Data Project, and Zealous. Mostly federal court opinions, but now expanding to states and legal filings, declarations, and exhibits.
This resource is designed to help lawyers, advocates, researchers, journalists, and others interested in challenging, remedying, or drawing attention to the grave risk that Covid-19 poses to individuals who are detained.