Alabama Judge Orders Offenders to Donate Blood or Go to Jail for Unpaid Fines.

A rural Alabama judge is facing criticism, and an ethics complaint, for telling a courtroom full of defendants, many indigent, facing unpaid fines: “If you do not have any money and you don’t want to go to jail, consider giving blood today and give me back your receipt.”

 Perry County Circuit Judge Marvin Wiggins, no stranger to controversy,  also warned  the defendants that the sheriff “had enough handcuffs” for those unable to pay and unwilling to donate blood.  A formal complaint  was filed Monday with the Judicial Inquiry Commission of Alabama.

NYU law professor Tony Thompson told the Daily News, “What Judge Wiggins did was not only illegal, but was unconscionable.”  Thompson added, “States have been long prohibited from imposing unduly harsh or discriminatory practices because someone owes the debt to the public rather than a private creditor.”

The “blood donation” ultimatum was not the first of Wiggins’s controversies. According to The Birmingham News,  Wiggins was publicly reprimanded and made to work 90 days without pay in 2009 for his involvement in a voter fraud investigation.  He was also removed from the Alabama State University Board of Trustees in 2014 for “conflict-of-interest violations.”

As to the most recent  complaint, Judge Wiggins  was reportedly said to have considered  the option of giving blood, “a discount rather than putting you in jail.”  However,  it was also reported that  no defendant who  donated blood at the behest of Judge Wiggins actually received any discount on their  outstanding  fines and fees.

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