The VI Territorial Courts’ electronic filing portal has been restricted from public access, creating delays for attorneys and residents navigating civil and criminal cases across St. Thomas and the broader U.S. Virgin Islands.
The outage disrupts a system meant to streamline legal proceedings and reduce wait times. Lawyers who depend on timely document submission now face uncertainty about case schedules. Residents waiting for hearings or verdicts may experience longer delays as court staff handle the technical backlog manually.
How the Outage Affects Local Courts
The VI Territorial Courts handle thousands of cases annually across the territory. The e-filing system allows attorneys to submit pleadings, motions, and other legal documents electronically, a process that normally speeds up docket management and reduces paper handling.
When the system goes offline, court operations fall back on older, paper-based submission methods. This creates congestion in the clerk’s office and slows the pace at which judges can review filings and schedule hearings. For residents in civil disputes or criminal matters, even a week-long outage can mean postponed hearings and extended periods of legal uncertainty.
The restriction to the docket and e-filing portal came without a clear public announcement about its cause or expected duration. The VI Territorial Courts have not released a statement detailing when service will resume.
Technical Support and Government IT Infrastructure
The Government of the U.S. Virgin Islands operates its IT infrastructure through the Bureau of Information Technology, which serves as the managed services provider for all government agencies. The bureau oversees network security, system maintenance, and technical support across territorial agencies.
When outages occur, the bureau’s service desk typically coordinates repairs and restoration efforts. The agency has emphasized cybersecurity awareness and network resilience as priorities, particularly as government services increasingly depend on digital systems.
No statement has been issued indicating whether the court portal restriction stems from a cybersecurity issue, routine maintenance, or a technical failure.
Impact on Access to Justice
Delays in court filings translate to real costs for residents. Attorneys may charge additional fees to refile documents or attend emergency hearings. People awaiting custody rulings, eviction decisions, or criminal case resolutions face prolonged uncertainty.
The territory’s court system already operates with significant caseload pressures. Court staff manage hundreds of active cases with limited resources. Any disruption to digital infrastructure adds strain to an already stretched system.
Small business owners using civil court to recover unpaid debts, landlords seeking eviction proceedings, and residents in family law matters all depend on predictable court operations. Extended outages undermine confidence in the judicial system’s efficiency.
Looking Ahead
The VI Territorial Courts and the Bureau of Information Technology should prioritize rapid restoration of the e-filing system and communicate clearly with the public about service status. Residents and attorneys deserve transparency about the cause of the outage and a realistic timeline for restoration.
In the interim, individuals with urgent court matters should contact the clerk’s office directly to determine alternative filing procedures and confirm hearing dates.










