A Yellowstone County resident who identified himself as a law-enforcement member urged the county commissioners to take immediate steps to address jail capacity and youth‑services placement policies, saying current practice allows many arrested suspects to be returned home without remand.
The speaker, who gave his name as Adam Holmes and later referred to himself as Adam Combs, said a recent report ranked Billings 30th worst in the nation for crime (as cited) and described a week of local Billings Police Department statistics. He alleged the county jail and youth services are refusing to remand or admit individuals in many nonviolent and violent cases, said a deputy vehicle was shot during a recent pursuit, and warned that continued inaction could lead to legal and financial consequences for the county.
In response, commissioners said the county is "actively working on a jail expansion" and noted that youth services answer to the commissioners but may decline admission for individuals for clinical or safety reasons when mental-health mandates apply. Commissioners also said some of the speaker's characterizations "may or may not be accurate" and suggested mental-health placement rules influence whether juveniles are admitted to youth‑services facilities.
The speaker asked specific operational questions about the chain of command and intake practices; the transcript records the public comment and the board's brief response but does not show further action or a formal directive recorded at that meeting.