Category: Defenses

Conflicts and Public Defense

On Thursday, June 20, the Supreme Court decided whether to hear Garcia v. Louisiana – a case where the Louisiana public defender was forced to decide which of three jointly charged men – all facing the death penalty – should be appointed death-qualified public defenders. Marcia Coyle wrote about the case for the National Law Journal.

Jerry D’Aquila , chief defender and supervising attorney for the 18th Judicial District Indigent Defender Board in Louisiana, assigned himself and his certified lawyers to one of the defendants and assigned non-death certified lawyers to the other two defendants – arguing that his office would go bankrupt if he was forced to assign the more expensive death-certified lawyers to all three defendants.

Although D’Aquila’s decision may have actually saved the lives of the 2 defendants represented by non-death certified lawyers (since the prosecutor eventually reduced the charges against them), that outcome should not determine whether the decision was improperly impacted by the conflict between D’Aquilla’s concern for the well being of his office and his concern for his clients.

Any decision about which particular category of lawyer to assign that is influenced primarily by financial factors cannot be an independent conflict-free decision.

Should a public defender ever be permitted to assign an uncertified lawyer in order to conserve the resources of his office?   Must he always spend the extra money? This issue wrecked havoc on the Georgia Public Defender system, which was financially undermined by its mandated representation of Brian Nichols – a capitally charged defendant who escaped from custody and killed a judge, court reporter, and sheriff’s deputy. The defense cost 2.3 million dollars and seriously impacted GPD’s operation.

For more on the Georgia case and it’s impact on the GPD, see Steve Bright and Lauren Sudeall Lucas, Overcoming Defiance of the Constitution, The Need for a Federal Role in Protecting the Right to Counsel in Georgia

 

The “Immunity” Defense

A new controversy has arisen from the already controversial authority of government prosecutors to promise or confer immunity. Recently, a defendant raised a defense that the government had authorized or permitted him to commit the charged offenses. Click here to read Prof. Bennett L. Gershman’s take on Licensing Crimes.

Commemorating Gideon’s 50th Anniversary

This week marks the 50th anniversary of the Supreme Court’s decision in Gideon v. Wainwright, in which it recognized that the right to counsel is a fundamental right that is binding on the states.  As the many posts and discussions honoring the day reveal, it’s probably appropriate to label the occasion a bittersweet one:  sweet, because the decision was so obviously right, but bitter because of the lost promise of what might have been.  We are better off with the right to counsel, without doubt; but resources, volume, and politics, among other factors, have created problems with the quality of counsel received by many.

http://www.law.com/jsp/nlj/PubArticleNLJ.jsp?id=1202592023918&Gideon_at__A_Muted_Trumpet&slreturn=20130219085253