The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia suspended jury trials at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020. Criminal trials resumed about a year later, and civil trials restarted in June.
While case counts have fluctuated in the city over the course of the pandemic, in the last month “the Omicron variant has caused an alarming explosion of cases,” Howell wrote.
On Dec. 27, for instance, the daily case rate was 273.6 per 100,000 residents—a jump from 13.2 per 100,000 a month prior.
Additionally, hospital admissions have increased in recent days.
Just 22.8 percent of Washington residents, meanwhile, have received a primary vaccination series and a booster shot, Howell noted as she suspended all trials until Jan. 24, 2022.
The suspension could be extended then, pending a reassessment of the local health situation.
Some court proceedings will take place in the coming weeks, primarily over videoconferencing. A limited number of proceedings will be conducted in person.
Health officials say the variant has driven the recent jump in COVID-19 cases across the nation, though experts are also pointing out that early data indicate the variant causes fewer cases of severe disease than the Delta strain.
Other areas have also curtailed or suspended jury trials, citing Omicron.
The District Court of Maryland and circuit courts in the state announced this week that no jury trials will take place until at least Feb. 8, 2022.
“In an abundance of caution and through consultation with state leadership, I have made the necessary decision to revert back to Phase III operations,” Joseph Getty, Court of Appeals of Maryland Chief Judge Joseph Getty said in a statement.
Some involved in the courts have criticized earlier pauses, saying they may violate the rights of defendants, including the right to a speedy trial. Suspensions also lead to backlogs of cases once trials resume, which can overburden state or federal systems.