Hurricanes Shut Down Federal Courts in Caribbean
The federal courthouses in the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico have been knocked out by Hurricane Maria, including the one court on St. Croix that was still operating after Hurricane Irma earlier this month.
September 21, 2017 at 06:27 PM
2 minute read
Federal courthouses in the Caribbean have been knocked out by the latest blows from Hurricane Maria.
The federal courthouse on Puerto Rico remains closed indefinitely after the latest hurricane to strike the island, and the one federal courthouse on the U.S. Virgins Islands that opened after Hurricane Irma devastated the territory Sept. 6 is now also shuttered, government officials said Thursday.
The building on St. Croix, which fared significantly better during Irma and was operating during the latter part of last week, is now also closed until further notice. A spokeswoman for the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts referred questions about the specific type and amount of damage each building sustained to the federal General Services Administration, which did not get back to ALM before publication time.
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