Politics & Government
Santa Clara County Approves ‘Less Invasive' House Arrest Monitors
Supervisor Otto Lee, prompted by anecdotes of people slipping out of ankle monitors to escape custody, said the current system can fail too.

June 20, 2024
Santa Clara County courthouses are trading in ankle monitors for less conspicuous surveillance of people who are on probation or awaiting trial.
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County judges in the coming weeks can instead monitor people through wristwatch trackers or specialized mobile phones with limited functionality, after the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday approved a $3 million contract with surveillance tech company BI Inc. for what they described as more humane and less stigmatized ways of keeping tabs on people in home detention or under court orders. County officials said the new measures are cheaper and can help limit the jail population.
“They’re more modern, more functional and less invasive,” County Office of Pretrial Services Director Matthew Fisk said at Tuesday’s meeting. “It’s taken quite a while to get here.”
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But the devices — while touted as more humane — still expand carceral control beyond the jails, Board of Supervisors President Susan Ellenberg said at the meeting.
“They can reproduce the harms of incarceration by limiting family and community connections and people’s ability to find jobs or education,” Ellenberg said.
The American Civil Liberties Union has argued ankle monitors often lead people back into physical jails and prisons for minor technical violations — exacerbating racial and disability inequities and exacting high financial tolls.
“We trust and expect that whatever technology is adopted to monitor those released from custody, that it will be effective in keeping the community and victims of crime safe,” Assistant District Attorney James Gibbons-Shapiro told San José Spotlight. “We are not wedded to any particular device or technology. We are dedicated to the safety of Santa Clara County.”
Supervisor Otto Lee, prompted by anecdotes of people slipping out of ankle monitors to escape custody, said even the current system fails at times.
“I hope you ensure this device will do at least as good — if not a better job of — making sure the purpose is being served,” Lee said at the meeting.
Fisk said technology is never infallible.
“We’ll continue to work with and support clients through newer and more comfortable devices,” he said.
Ellenberg pondered other ways of getting people to make their court dates.
“Coordinating child care and providing transportation also increases court compliance,” she said at the meeting. “I urge you to continue to think creatively on how we can lessen the burden of these devices on our county.”
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