Enforcing the right to effective assistance of counsel
The big news of the weekend thus far, for me at least, has been the announcement by the NYCLU that it is filing suit in New York, alleging Constitutional violations by the State for its failure to provide adequate resources to public defenders.
From the press release:
“Every day, in courtrooms throughout the state, New Yorkers are denied justice simply because they are poor. Justice should not depend on your ZIP code or the size of your wallet,” said Donna Lieberman, executive director of the NYCLU. “We filed this lawsuit today as a last resort, in response to the constitutional deficiencies identified by a commission appointed by Chief Judge Kaye to evaluate our public defense system, and the failure of lawmakers to compel the state to repair what is clearly a broken and unjust system.”
The class action lawsuit charges that a lack of adequate funding, oversight and statewide standards is denying New Yorkers accused of crimes their lawful right to competent, qualified and timely representation at all stages of the justice process, a violation of the U.S. Constitution, the state constitution and the laws of New York.
It is extremely annoying that it has to come to this. New York could have, at the very least, learned from Connecticut. It was a CCLU and ACLU lawsuit in Connecticut – Rivera v. Rowland – that forced the legislature to increase funding by millions and double the number of positions in the system. The settlement of that lawsuit led to a wholesale revamping of the public defender’s system in CT, with better pay, more positions, more training, lower caseloads. This was in 1999. Now, almost 8 years later, New York is facing the same crisis.
It is great, on the other hand, because this will undoubtedly force New York to take action. New York is one of only 6 states remaining that have no statewide responsibility or oversight mechanism for public defense and remains among a minority of states, including Alabama and Mississippi, that have failed to join the movement toward full state funding.
Make no mistake: this is not a panacea. Caseloads will still be high, public defenders will still be understaffed, berated and maligned. However, they will be in a better position to fight those charges and the charges brought by the State against indigent defendants.
For more, read the ABA’s report entitled “Gideon’s Broken Promise” and The Spangenberg Group‘s report to NY’s Indigent Defense Commission.
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about 4 years ago
It would be nice if the Georgia ACLU would file something similar, but since they fired all their lawyers.. guess it won’t be happening.
about 4 years ago
[quote comment="8207"]It would be nice if the Georgia ACLU would file something similar, but since they fired all their lawyers.. guess it won’t be happening.[/quote]
Heh. I don’t doubt that something momentous will happen in Georgia. However, they need to figure it out soon. The circus has gone on long enough.
about 4 years ago
It is even more than annoying it has come to this. Maddening, maybe.
You are very right that no matter what happens it will not be an instant cure for anything. But like Bill Murray says in Groundhog Day-”Different. Different is good.”
The same old thing has been going on for way too long. Any change is good. As an upstate NY PD, I welcome the suit.
The truly sad part is that the culture of ineffective institutional counsel is so deeply ingrained in many places in New York that some of the lawyers themselves will be shocked that some people think these allegations are a big deal.
about 4 years ago
Long Time PD:
The culture of sub-standard representation is ingrained not only in states without a well-funded public defender system, but also in states that have flourishing, established divisions that provide representation to the indigent. It is also not limited to public defenders.
Some of the things I’ve seen passed off as “representation”….
about 3 years ago
maybe folks should quit committing so many crimes that way they wont need representation