The juvenile justice system and jail of Rutherford County, Tennessee became a subject of state-wide, [1] [2] [3] [4] national [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] and international controversy [10] [11] [12] [13] in the 2020s, when a journalistic investigation revealed a pattern of abnormal and illegal incarceration of hundreds, perhaps thousands, of children in the county's juvenile jail at a rate ten times the state's average. [1] [5]
In 2000, Rutherford County created the post of Juvenile Court Judge. The post was filled by then-Democrat (later Republican) elected Judge Donna Scott Davenport, [5] [9] who was scheduled to (and did) retire at the end of her eight-year term, in August 2022. [14] Davenport controlled the county's juvenile justice procedures. [1] [6]
In 2003, Judge Davenport issued a memo which was interpreted to order that, after a summons is issued, law enforcement officers must always physically arrest the child, and take them to the county's detention center—despite Tennessee state law which requires that, for many juvenile misdemeanor offenses, police officers must release children with a citation or a summons, and not take them into custody. [5] [9] [15]
By April 2008, county authorities were reporting 2,000 children booked into the jail annually—200 to 300 of them from neighboring counties lacking facilities. [16]
In 2008, the county built a $23,300,000 expansion of the county jail—including a 43,000 sq ft (4,000 m2) "juvenile detention center." [5] [17] County officials repeatedly compared the jail to a business—one commissioner saying he wished that the jail could be a "profit center". [18] Correctional superintendent Alan Miller described the adult jail as a "workhouse like environment [that would] allow [the county] to benefit from workhouse labor." [17]
Subsequently, the county government began soliciting other counties in Tennessee and surrounding states to send their "detained youth" to the Rutherford County juvenile jail for incarceration, at $175 per day per child. In a promotional video, the county indicated that over 20 Tennessee counties had contracted with Rutherford's juvenile jail. [1] [18] The marketing video, "What Can the Rutherford County Juvenile Detention Center Do For You?” features images of children in black-and-white striped prison uniforms, and is narrated by Judge Davenport, who designed that juvenile court's unique, extralegal system of incarcerating children. As of 2021, 39 Tennessee counties were contracting with Rutherford County to imprison youth, along with the U.S. Marshals Service. [19]
During the following years, the juvenile court's sole presiding judge and local authorities colluded in the arrest and incarceration of hundreds of children, some as young as seven years old, on various misdemeanor charges, including schoolyard fights, truancy and cursing. At Judge Davenport's instruction, all arrested children were to be jailed immediately in the detention center, pending adjudication and assessment. [1] [6] [20] [9]
Research by Nashville Public Radio and ProPublica found the Rutherford County juvenile incarcerations to be far out of the national norm for juvenile arrests, and further discovered that the county authorities had charged some of the children under non-existent laws, as directed by Judge Davenport. The researchers found that, among Tennessee children referred to juvenile court, the statewide rate of incarceration was 5%, but in Rutherford County it was 48%. [1] [5] [9] [20]
Once delivered to the jail by law enforcement officers, the children were evaluated through a filter system designed by Davenport and implemented by Rutherford County Juvenile Detention Center Director Lynn Duke, in 2008, [21] to determine the level of risk they were thus deemed to pose, and the level of restraint and duration of confinement for the child to be subjected to. Decisions were reportedly made with undefined and arbitrary criteria, rather than the precise categories specified in Tennessee law. In particular, racial minority children were disproportionately among those jailed, the researchers found. [1] [5] [9]
In 2016, 11 African-American elementary school children in Rutherford County, ranging in age from 8 to 12, were detained or jailed, or both, after allegedly witnessing a fight between a 5-year-old and a 6-year-old. Some of the children were alleged to have been guilty by being present at the fight, and were alleged by authorities to be guilty of "criminal responsibility for conduct of another" — a non-existent law. [1] [5] [22] [9] To settle a lawsuit in 2017, Rutherford County agreed to $397,500 in payments to the 11 children, and the officer who signed the charges was briefly suspended, while other officers involved received 1-day suspensions or reprimands. [20] [9]
Also in 2016, a 15-year-old was placed in solitary confinement for 5 days with only a mattress and toilet. The family filed a complaint against the Rutherford County Juvenile Detention Center, with support from the ACLU. Judge Davenport responded by issuing an order suspending the use of solitary confinement, in the juvenile jail, temporarily. [5] [3] Another child was jailed four days while denied his psychiatric medication, [6] [9] and Judge Davenport ordered a developmentally disabled child into indefinite solitary confinement. [5]
Class action federal lawsuits resulted, and though not admitting fault, the county accepted a ban on any further solitary confinement of children in its custody. [5]
In May 2017, a federal court ordered Rutherford County to stop using their "filter" system, [5] [9] noting that it "departs drastically" from ordinary juvenile detention standards. The court wrote that the "illegal detention" is causing "irreparable harm every day" to children in the jurisdiction. [5]
In June, 2021, Rutherford County settled with plaintiffs in a class action, by agreeing to payments up to $11 million, [23] with individual payouts estimated at around $1,000 per wrongful arrest, and about $5,000 per unlawful detention [5] [9] [23] —though, again, the county, "denies any wrongdoing in any of the lawsuits filed against it." [5] However—though an estimated 1,450 potential claimants were believed to be eligible [23] [24] —within a month of the October 29, 2021 deadline for filing a claim, [23] [24] [25] only a fraction had been contacted, and only 200 had filed claims. [23] [24] The settlement amount was amended to $5.1 million in December 2021. [26] The settlement was subsequently denied by the county's insurer, Lloyd's of London, which wrote that the county was aware of its illegal juvenile detention practices prior to its coverage by the insurer, but "concealed or misrepresented material facts" to obtain the policy, effectively voiding the insurance policy. The county filed a federal lawsuit against the insurer in December 2022, claiming the policy as valid. [27]
Despite various complaints being filed to various entities, the child-arrest-and-incarceration practices of Rutherford County continued (as of early October 2021). [5] [6]
However, following the October 8, 2021 publication of the ProPublica / Nashville Public Radio investigation, various state legislators called for investigations and reform, and the "concerned" Tennessee governor's office called for "appropriate judicial authorities [to] issue a full review." [9] [20] [28]
In August 2022, Republican Juvenile Court nominee Travis Lampley won the judgeship, stating the goals of restoring confidence in the court, and pledged "to uphold the integrity of the family unit". The Rutherford County Commission is assembling a new Juvenile Detention Board to "oversee incarceration operations", effectively replacing Judge Davenport as oversight for juvenile detention staff, led by Director Lynn Duke. [29]
In January 2023, State Representative Mike Sparks introduced House Bill 720 [30] to the Tennessee General Assembly, undertaking to protect juveniles from interrogation without a guardian present. Representative Gloria Johnson, one of two Democrats who had sought to oust Davenport in 2022, remarked, in 2023, that Davenport "didn’t care about the laws... They ignored the laws and created their own... I don’t know if it would stop that", in reference to the proposed legislation. [31]
Donna Scott Davenport was the sole judge of the juvenile justice system for the county, appointing magistrates (formerly Referees), setting rules and presiding over cases that include everything from children accused of breaking the law to parents accused of neglecting their children. [32] She held her position as Juvenile Court Judge from its creation in 2000 until her retirement in 2022. [33] Davenport first took the bar exam about a year after finishing law school but only passed on the fifth time. She was admitted to practice law in 1995, nine years after getting her law degree. Davenport created a "process" different from federal or local norms that asks law enforcement to arrest, transport to the detention center for screening and then file charging papers. The process ordered by her was amended later after she declared that even kids accused of minor violations like truancy must be taken into custody and transported to jail. [32]
On October 12, after a PBS News Hour broadcast singled out Judge Davenport as the principal responsible party for an extralegal juvenile incarceration system that she had designed herself, [6] Middle Tennessee State University announced that Davenport was no longer on the university's faculty. [1] [28] [34]
In February 2022, Kyle Mothershead, a lawyer representing the 2017 class-action plaintiffs, stated that Rutherford County had illegally arrested and incarcerated minor children prior to Davenport's appointment as its juvenile court judge in 2000. [35]
The juvenile justice system under Judge Davenport is narrated in a four-part podcast, The Kids of Rutherford County. [36] Released in October 2023, the series is produced by Serial Productions and The New York Times in partnership with ProPublica and Nashville Public Radio, and hosted by Meribah Knight of WPLN. [37]
Rutherford County is a county located in the U.S. state of Tennessee. It is located in Middle Tennessee. As of a 2023 estimate, the population was 367,101, making it the fifth-most populous county in Tennessee. A study conducted by the University of Tennessee projects Rutherford County to become the third largest county in Tennessee by population by 2050. Its county seat is Murfreesboro, which is also the geographic center of Tennessee. As of 2010, it is the center of population of Tennessee. Rutherford County is included in the Nashville-Davidson–Murfreesboro–Franklin, TN Metropolitan Statistical Area.
Murfreesboro is a city in, and county seat of, Rutherford County, Tennessee, United States. The population was 165,430 according to the 2023 census, up from 108,755 residents certified in 2010. Murfreesboro is located in the Nashville metropolitan area of Middle Tennessee, 34 miles (55 km) southeast of downtown Nashville.
Bill Ketron, Jr. is a Tennessee politician who was the Mayor of Rutherford County, previously serving as a member of the Tennessee Senate for the 13th district, which was composed of Lincoln, Marshall, and Maury counties, as well as part of Rutherford County from 2003 to his resignation in 2018. He won the August 2 general election for mayor and assumed office on September 1, 2018, resigning from the Senate on the previous day. In the May 3, 2022 Republican primary, Ketron lost reelection to former state representative Joe Carr, who went on to win the general election to succeed him.
ProPublica, legally Pro Publica, Inc., is a nonprofit investigative journalism organization based in New York City. ProPublica's investigations are conducted by its staff of full-time investigative reporters, and the resulting stories are distributed to news partners for publication or broadcast. In some cases, reporters from both ProPublica and its partners work together on a story. ProPublica has partnered with more than 90 different news organizations and has won several Pulitzer Prizes.
The Daily News Journal, commonly abbreviated to DNJ, is a newspaper serving Murfreesboro, Tennessee, Rutherford County, and surrounding communities. It is Rutherford County's sole daily newspaper. It publishes print and digital content. Published in Murfreesboro, it serves as the primary local newspaper, with competition from The Murfreesboro Post and other publications. The newspaper is not in competition with The Tennessean of Nashville, as both are owned by Gannett. Gannett acquired DNJ from Morris Multimedia in 2004.
Aleta Mae Grillos Arthur Trauger is a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee. As of May 1, 2024, her rulings have set 117 precedents of case law.
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) people in the U.S. state of Tennessee may experience some legal challenges that non-LGBTQ residents do not. Same-sex sexual activity has been legal in the state since 1996. Marriage licenses have been issued to same-sex couples in Tennessee since the Supreme Court ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges on June 26, 2015.
Mark Allen Pody is an American politician, elected as a Republican member of the Tennessee Senate from the 17th district, encompassing Cannon County, Clay County, Dekalb County, Macon County, Smith County and Wilson County. Pody resides in Lebanon, Tennessee.
The Islamic Center of Murfreesboro (ICM) is an Islamic community organization located in the town of Murfreesboro, Tennessee, United States. Established in the early 1980s, the ICM supports about a thousand congregants, drawn from local permanent residents and numerous students at Middle Tennessee State University.
The Rutherford County Sheriff's Office (RCSO) is the primary law enforcement agency in Rutherford County, Tennessee. The RCSO is responsible for patrolling the 626-square miles of the County and its 250,000+ residents. The RCSO currently employs 178 sworn law enforcement officers and 135 Detention Officers as Deputy Sheriffs. The Rutherford County Sheriff's Office was founded in 1804 and Samuel McBride was elected the first sheriff. In the wake of former sheriff Robert Arnold's suspension from office, and subsequent federal corruption plea, the Rutherford County Commission appointed Mike Fitzhugh as interim sheriff on January 12, 2017.
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Mike Sparks is an American politician. A Republican, he represents District 49 in the Tennessee House of Representatives.
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In May 2020 a 15-year-old Black sophomore from Beverly Hills, Michigan was incarcerated at a juvenile detention center for failure to complete her homework during virtual school. The teenager, referred to as Grace to conceal her identity, had been on probation for previous charges for theft and assault at the time of sentencing. Advocates and her defense team argued that she was not receiving the accommodations required by her Individualized Education Program (IEP) for her attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) after her classes moved online due to coronavirus. Advocates also called the ruling evidence of systemic racism in the county's juvenile justice system.
Donna Scott Davenport is the first judge to have overseen the Rutherford County, Tennessee juvenile justice system, filling the newly created position in 2000. She is also a former adjunct professor at her alma mater, Middle Tennessee State University (MTSU). She presided over the juvenile court and legal system for the county, appointed magistrates, set protocols, directed police and heard cases involving minors, including parents charged with child neglect. Despite published reports that Davenport operated juvenile court outside of the tenets of law, including by her own admission, Davenport remained on the bench until retiring at the end of her term in September 2022 while lawmakers debated ending her tenure sooner. Her actions while on the bench are the subject of a four-part podcast, The Kids of Rutherford County.
The Promise: Life, Death and Change in the Projects is a podcast produced by Nashville Public Radio.
The Kids of Rutherford County is an investigative journalism podcast about the Rutherford County, Tennessee juvenile arrest and incarceration scandal. It is hosted by Meribah Knight and produced by Serial Productions, ProPublica, and Nashville Public Radio.