SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : The Donkey's Inn

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: Mephisto who wrote (5702)3/17/2003 5:17:58 AM
From: Mephisto   of 15516
 


Still No Equal Justice for Poor

March 17, 2003

latimes.com E-mail story


Print

COMMENTARY
By David Cole, David Cole, a professor at Georgetown University
Law Center, is author of "No Equal Justice: Race and Class in the
American Criminal Justice System" (New Press, 1999).

Forty years ago this week, in what is undoubtedly one of
the Supreme Court's greatest moments, the court
accepted a handwritten note from Clarence Earl Gideon
as a petition for review, appointed one of the nation's
best lawyers, Abe Fortas, to represent him and ruled
that all people facing serious criminal charges were
entitled to a lawyer, whether they could afford one or
not.

As Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black wrote in a
related case, "there can be no equal justice as long as
the kind of trial a man gets depends on the amount of
money he has."

Gideon's story, memorialized in Anthony Lewis'
bestselling book "Gideon's Trumpet," is widely known.
Less widely known is that we -- the courts and the
nation -- have utterly failed to realize its promise.

Today, the right to a lawyer for those without
independent means remains captive to a political process
unwilling to pay what it would cost to make the right a
reality, and to a court supremely indifferent to the
charade that indigent legal representation often is.

The political problem is a familiar one; the last people
legislators are likely to want to spend money on are
those accused of committing crimes. In 1990, the
national average per capita spending on indigent defense
was $5.37. That year, Kentucky spent more money on the University of
Kentucky's athletic budget than it did on indigent defense.

The situation hasn't improved much since. In 2002, New York law provided that
lawyers for the poor be paid only $25 an hour for out-of-court time and $40 for
in-court time, with a per-case maximum of $1,200. That's not even enough to
cover overhead.

Virginia pays a seemingly more generous $90 an hour but caps fees at slightly
more than $1,000 per case, meaning that anything more than 12 hours on a case
goes uncompensated. Maryland and Mississippi have per-case maximums of
$1,000, no matter how much time the case takes.

You get what you pay for, and at these rates, you don't get much. Lawyers can
earn more money as legal secretaries than they can defending people facing life in
prison or death. The best and the brightest rarely sign up, and those who do find
themselves overloaded and underfunded.

The real blame must be laid at the Supreme Court's door. Because indigent
defendants are unlikely to get a fair shake in the political process, their only
protection lies in the judiciary. Yet although the high court was willing to proclaim
the right to a lawyer for all in Gideon, it has been unwilling since to require that
such assistance be competent, or even apply to all stages of a criminal proceeding.

The Constitution requires "effective" assistance of counsel, the court has said, but
it has set the bar for "effectiveness" so low that virtually anyone with a law degree
satisfies it, even if they are unprepared, inexperienced, drunk or asleep.

Unlike Gideon, Exzavious Gibson has not had any books written or movies made
about him. In 1996, Gibson, who is borderline mentally retarded and faces the
death penalty, sought to challenge the effectiveness of his trial lawyer in a
post-conviction proceeding in Georgia.

At a hearing, the state, represented by a career lawyer, had Gibson's former
attorney testify that he had acted perfectly competently in representing Gibson.
Gibson was incapable of cross-examining his former lawyer or making any legal
arguments; all he could do was ask, repeatedly, for a lawyer.

The court went ahead without a lawyer for Gibson and denied the petition.

In 1999 the Georgia Supreme Court upheld the decision, citing precedents holding
that the right to counsel does not apply to post-conviction proceedings, even when
the defendant faces death.

Relying on the same precedents, Texas rejected Leonard Rojas' appeals and
executed him in December. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals ruled that Rojas'
lawyer had forfeited all of Rojas' post-conviction legal claims by missing the
deadline for filing his appeal.

Rojas' lawyer, who had been appointed by the Court of Criminal Appeals, had no
capital punishment experience, had been sanctioned several times by the state bar
and suffered bipolar disorder.

Yet only Rojas paid for his attorney's errors. Three justices filed a highly unusual
dissent in Rojas' case, but only after he had been executed.

We are justly proud of the promise that the Gideon vs. Wainwright decision
reflects, but the question remains whether we are willing to provide more than the
mere appearance of fairness.

If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at latimes.com/archives.
Click here for article licensing and reprint options
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext