“Overall, this was encouraging — and a bit
of a relief,” said Amanda Pyron of the Network: Advocating Against
Domestic Violence.
The first day of bail reform
in Cook County’s Domestic Violence Court began an hour late Monday as
even small cases now demanded more paperwork and closer review.
Advocates
said they were encouraged by day’s end, saying court officials appeared
to be giving more consideration to detaining people who are a threat.
“Overall,
this was encouraging — and a bit of a relief,” said Amanda Pyron of the
Network: Advocating Against Domestic Violence.
The Pretrial Fairness Act eliminates cash bail, but it allows
people to be jailed if they are charged with violent crimes such as
sexual assault and domestic attacks. Both misdemeanor and felony domestic violence charges are listed under the law as detainable.
On
Monday, there were 16 cases of misdemeanor domestic violence before
Judge Michael Hogan. Most of them involved a single count of domestic
battery.
Prosecutors sought to detain people in 14 of the cases.
The judge granted their requests in five of them after evaluating the
person’s criminal background and checking the assessment from Pretrial
Services.
Still, Pyron found the breakdown “promising” because the
proceeding “indicate that there will be judicial review of cases prior
to detention.”
“I also feel this breakdown should assuage some of the concerns
that all people accused of domestic violence would be detained, which
did not happen, even on the first day,” Pyron added.
The day started with an apology from the judge. “Still working a few kinks out of the system,” Hogan said.
The
first person to be ordered detained was a woman charged with
misdemeanor domestic battery and simple assault following a fight with
her sister and niece. The woman had three prior domestic battery arrests
and two convictions — all with different complaining witnesses.
Hogan
pointed to her history of domestic violence and the Pretrial Services
finding that she was at risk for committing other crimes.
In another case in which Hogan granted a petition to detain,
the defendant was accused of kicking his girlfriend about 20 times and
choking her until she lost consciousness. The man, 28, had four prior
domestic violence arrests all involving the same victim.
In a
case in which Hogan decided against detention, a woman was charged with
one count of misdemeanor domestic battery for allegedly striking her
husband with a wiper blade. The man was in court Monday and said he did
not wish to proceed with charges.
The woman was the sole financial
provider for their household and two children, he explained. The judge
acknowledged the victim's request to have her back home and denied the
petition to detain.
The one felony case before Hogan was Kiel
Stock, 45, who was charged with aggravated battery and discharge of a
firearm. Stock allegedly became angry when his wife, who planned to file
for divorce, returned to their home with friends to gather belongings
over the weekend.
Stock shot a gun through the wall of their bedroom into their
bathroom where his wife and friends were gathered, grazing his wife,
according to prosecutors.
His attorney said Stock believed the
group had left and was not shooting the gun with the intention to harm
his wife. Stock, the director of technology at a tech start-up, had no
criminal background.
Hogan disagreed with the attorney’s chain of
events, stating he believed Stock was firing at the victim. He ordered
Stock to remain in custody pending trial.