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Sheriff Andrea Cabral is
responsible for the operation of the House of Correction, the Suffolk County
Jail, the Suffolk County Women’s Resource Center, the Suffolk County Community
Corrections Center and the Civil Process Division. The Suffolk County
Sheriff’s Department has more than 1,100 employees comprised of correctional
officers, criminal justice professionals, caseworkers and administrative staff
whose primary responsibility is upholding public safety and providing
rehabilitative support for more than 2,500 offenders daily. The average
operating budget for the Department is $100 million.
Sheriff
Cabral brings an extensive legal background and a commitment to pubic safety as
she begins her term as Sheriff.
In her 16-year career in public service, she has a demonstrated a commitment to public safety. Sheriff Cabral began her legal career in 1986 as a staff attorney at the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Department at the Charles Street Jail, working to prepare and argue motions for bail reduction for the Suffolk Superior Court. Subsequently, she served as an assistant district attorney at the Middlesex County District Attorney’s Office from 1987-1991. Sheriff Cabral specifically litigated felony cases in Middlesex Superior Court seeking fair and appropriate sentences for all cases resolved by pleas and arguing pretrial motions for the Court. Sheriff Cabral served as Cambridge Jury Supervisor and also handled more than 500 cases per year at the Cambridge District Court in the adult and juvenile sessions and investigated, prepared and tried more than 250 misdemeanor and concurrent jurisdiction felony cases.
From 1991-1993, Sheriff Cabral served a variety of roles as an attorney
at the Office of the Attorney General including work in the Torts Division/
Government Bureau and the Civil Rights/ Public Protection Bureau.
In the civil rights division, Sheriff Cabral successfully investigated
six cases of alleged police misconduct and prepared reports for submission to
the Attorney General and police chiefs accordingly.
Sheriff Cabral then began work at the Suffolk County District
Attorney’s Office in 1993 under then District Attorney Ralph C. Martin III.
From 1993-1994, she was director of Roxbury District Court Family Violence
Project. As director, she prosecuted domestic violence felony cases (including
the nation’s first stalking case) and established new administrative policies
and procedures for the processing of such cases in the Roxbury District Court.
In March 1994, Sheriff Cabral became chief of the Domestic Violence Unit at the
Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office. She supervised district and
superior court staff in preparation and prosecution of domestic violence cases
as chief of the unit. Additionally, she actively investigated, indicted and
prosecuted major violent felonies in Suffolk Superior Court. In 1998, Sheriff
Cabral was promoted to chief of District Courts and Community Prosecutions.
In this position, she effectively developed policy, staff supervision,
training case management and administration in Suffolk County’s eight district
courts and the Boston Municipal Court. Sheriff
Cabral also oversaw the staffing and supervision of all district court community
prosecutions, which included the Safe Neighborhood Initiatives and Prosecutor in
Police Stations (PIPS) Programs.
Sheriff Cabral’s published works include Obtaining, Enforcing and
Defending x.209A Restraining Orders in Massachusetts and co-authored Same
Gender Domestic Violence: Strategies for Change in Creating Courtroom
Accessibility. She has also
participated in several legal forums sponsored by the American Bar Association,
the Massachusetts Bar Association, the Massachusetts Continuing Legal Education
and the Boston Bar Association.