City of Cleveland Settles
Kidnapping Case
by Max Johnson
A settlement
in the lawsuit Clements vs. City of Cleveland, which was scheduled to go
to trial on February 18 in United States District Court is complete.
In the growing criminalization of poverty, this is a rare victory. Brian Davis, Director of the Northeast Ohio Coalition for the
Homeless, hailed this settlement as permanently stopping a policy of forcibly
picking up homeless people against their will.
He said, “I think this
lawsuit and the settlement will force police and city officials from examining
their interaction with the homeless of Cleveland.”
Participants
in the so-called dumping or kidnapping case alleged that the City of Cleveland
police department officers were ordered to “pick-up” and “deliver” them
to remote locations. Plaintiffs
filed the lawsuit because they were being picked up against their will by the
police and dumped. It was the
contention of the plaintiffs that this was an attempt to clean up certain high
traffic areas, and to sweep poverty out of the sight of visitors to the Downtown
business district. With the prospect of the Mayor of Cleveland having to testify
about his involvement in creating the policy, and a credible law student who was
going to testify that she witnessed the dumping, the City’s attorneys decided
to settle the lawsuit.
The City of Cleveland originally demanded that the specifics of the settlement be kept confidential, but because of pressure from the media the specifics were released. The settlement does not punish the city for engaging in such an assault on the rights of the homeless of Cleveland, but it does prevent such a policy from ever being implemented again.
The
settlement includes:
**$9,000 for
the Coalition to pass completely on to the three plaintiffs for education, job
training or housing.
**A public
statement from the city stating that activity involving violating homeless
people’s right to move around downtown will never be policy in Cleveland.
**A directive
to the police stating that they cannot pick up homeless people against their
will and deliver them to services.
**The City
will pay the costs associated with this lawsuit that the ACLU has incurred.
**The
Coalition had asked as part of the settlement that the City make some act of
contrition to all those homeless people that were dumped, but who were not named
in the suit. This was rejected by
the City. The Coalition for
the Homeless will remain vigilant in the monitoring of the civil rights of the
homeless members of our city.
By mid
March, the three plaintiffs and NEOCH had yet to receive the settlement funds.