Public defenders like Sarah Ellsworth grimace as juvenile clients, some as young as 10, are escorted into Minnesota courtrooms while shackled.
"Small steps," Ellsworth often advises, so they don't trip on the irons fastened around their ankles. Some children are so small that when they do find their seats, their legs dangle.
"It breaks my heart," said Ellsworth, managing attorney of the 10th Judicial District's juvenile division. "A lot of these kids are doing stuff we've all done and just didn't get caught for."
Criminal justice reformers and child welfare advocates have long sought to bar the indiscriminate shackling of youth — a common but unevenly enforced practice across Minnesota. This spring, a bipartisan group of state lawmakers drafted a bill that could spell the end of what critics consider an archaic and dehumanizing control method in court.
Rep. Jamie Long, DFL-Minneapolis, sponsored the legislation to limit use of mechanical restraints except in rare circumstances when the court deems them necessary to protect public safety or prevent flight risk.
"These policies we're using sound out of step with modern sensibilities," Long said in an interview, noting that being shackled can result in long-term harm for kids. "You're made to feel guilty before you've even had a chance for trial."
The provision, just one among an ambitious package of juvenile justice reforms, was included in the House's Public Safety bill. But its fate hinges on a divided Legislature striking a deal to avoid a government shutdown during the ongoing special session.
At least 32 states and Washington D.C. have limited the automatic shackling of youth through legislative action or court order. Yet, Minnesota maintains no uniform guidance on the practice, meaning policies vary greatly from county to county.