A pair of recently retired judges, William L. Witham Jr. and Richard Stokes, are being brought back to the bench to help expedite cases.
“We are working in conjunction with defense attorneys and the Attorney General’s office to prioritize those cases that I think need it,” O’Sullivan said. “I think jail time is obviously a factor. We want to get those moved as quickly as possible and give everyone their day in court.”
Defendants have had the option to have a bench trial with just the judge deciding their case since the start of the pandemic, but most have chosen to wait for their Constitutionally-guaranteed right to trial by jury.
It will likely take a whole year to catch up on the backlog. “Many of those cases will resolve, typically, somewhere in the range of 90% resolve with a plea deal short of trial,” O’Sullivan said.
Jurors will see new procedures as they report for duty. A court worker will scan their paperwork to record attendance rather than a physical exchange of paper documents.
“What we’re going to do is sort of a non-contact check-in with the jurors’ barcodes and a barcode scanner on this wireless card,” said Ken Creedon, who works in jury services at the courthouse.