Court-Ordered Emergency Action Needed to Address New York State’s Unconstitutional Public Defense System, NYCLU Charges (3/27/2008)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
NOTE:
Video,
Personal Statements and Expert Affidavits available at www.nyclu.org
The New York Civil
Liberties Union
today filed a request for immediate emergency relief to
address New York State’s broken public defense system.
In November, the NYCLU
and the law firm of Schulte Roth
& Zabel LLP filed a landmark class
action lawsuit that charged the state
with failing to uphold its
constitutional duty to provide effective counsel to
New Yorkers who are
accused of crimes and cannot afford to pay private lawyers.
The
situation is far too dire and the stakes too high to wait for relief,
however. There are steps that can be taken now to ease the situation in
the
short term.
“At this moment there
are New Yorkers who are being
denied justice simply because they are
poor,” said Donna Lieberman, executive director of the NYCLU. “We
look
forward to a full resolution to this urgent problem, but with lives on the
line we can’t afford to sit back and wait. Immediate action is
necessary.”
The November 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. Plaintiffs are
defendants
in Onondaga, Ontario, Schuyler,
Suffolk and Washington counties who
have
encountered these problems, but the lawsuit seeks statewide reform on
behalf of all defendants who are or will be charged with felonies,
misdemeanors
or lesser offenses and who cannot afford a
lawyer.
Currently,
court-appointed lawyers across the state are
overwhelmed by huge
caseloads and lack sufficient staff and resources to do
their jobs.
Some lack the necessary experience and training to competently
handle
their cases.
As a result of these
deficiencies, many individuals
facing criminal charges are compelled to
appear in court without a lawyer at
critical junctures, such as when
bail decisions are made. This often results in
excessive bail being set
and keeps too many people in jail awaiting trial.
Studies link high
bail to an increased likelihood of conviction.
Many public defense
lawyers also fail to: meet or
consult with clients at critical stages
in their cases; investigate the charges
against their clients or hire
necessary forensic experts; file necessary
pre-trial motions; and
provide meaningful consultation before clients accept
plea bargains,
even when this is a viable defense.
“The public defense
crisis in New
York is unfair both
to defendants and to the
lawyers who are charged with representing them,” said
lead counsel on
the case, NYCLU Staff Attorney Corey Stoughton. “Defendants are
unfairly given second-rate justice because they cannot afford to pay
private
lawyers, and public defense attorneys are not given the
resources, tools and
training they need to do right by their
clients.”
Today’s preliminary
injunction seeks emergency relief in
the five counties named in the
lawsuit: Onondaga, Ontario, Schuyler, Suffolk and Washington. This relief
must ensure
that all criminal defendants are appointed a competent,
knowledgeable
attorney with sufficient time and resources. It must
also:
·
Implement standards and procedures to ensure that
attorneys
appointed to represent indigent criminal defendants have sufficient
qualifications and training;
·
Establish caseload and workload limits to ensure that
public
defense attorneys have adequate time to devote to each client’s
case;
·
Guarantee that every eligible indigent criminal
defendant is
assigned a public defense attorney within 24 hours of arrest who is
present at every critical proceeding and consults with each client in
advance of
any critical proceeding;
·
Ensure that investigators and experts are available to
every
public defense attorney for every case in which an attorney deems that
investigative or expert services would be useful to the defense;
and
·
Establish uniform written standards and procedures for
determining eligibility for the assignment of a public defense
attorney.
The failure of the
state’s fractured public defense
system is widely acknowledged. The
inadequacy of the scheme has been
well-documented for more than 40
years in dozens of reports by legal advocacy
organizations,
professional associations and government commissions.
In June 2006, a
commission appointed by Judge Kaye
concluded that the state’s public
defense system is “severely dysfunctional” and
“structurally incapable”
of providing people effective legal representation.
Recently the
Innocence Project found that New
York outpaces almost every other state in
the
number of wrongful convictions overturned by DNA
evidence.
“A broken public
defense system impacts all New
Yorkers,” Stoughton said. “When innocent people go to
jail, the real criminals continue to roam free.”
New York is one of
only six states 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.
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