The Texas Indigent Defense Commission yesterday held a two-hour legislative preview (see the agenda). You can listen to an audio file of the event and see a power point presentation from commission director Jim Bethke's presentation.
MORE: Find below the jump Grits' notes from listening online to the legislative briefing. Regrettably, the audio file cuts off just before the Texas Association of County's Jim Allison got to speak.
Indigent Defense Commission executive director Jim Bethke opened by pointing out that the "right
to counsel is not discretionary, it's mandatory." March 18, 2013 is the
50th anniversary of Gideon v. Wainwright, and the commission is
sponsoring a symposium commemorating the event, "Highlighting and taking
stock of what Texas has accomplished and what Texas has still to do."
About
half of states fully fund indigent defense, said Bethke. About 2/3 of
states provide 50% or more of funding. Prior to passage of the Fair
Defense Act, Texas was one of six states that provided none whatsoever,
leaving it up to counties.
The Texas Indigent
Defense Commission is 100% funded through dedicated court fees, with
their budget capped in 2013 at $31 million, said Bethke. However, the
dedicated account brings in $34 to $35 million per year from court fees.
The board has asked for all money dedicated in that account to be used
for indigent defense and to be given authority to spend the "unexpended
balance" (UB). Right now, there is $7.2 million from defendant court
fees sitting in a TIDC account that is being used to certify the state
budget but cannot be spent without legislative permission. Getting this
authority would mean an extra $14-$18 million for indigent defense next
biennium, he estimated.
In by far their biggest ask, TIDC wants state to share indigent defense costs more equally with counties. Right now, the state covers $.15-$.17
per indigent defense dollar statewide, and the commission has proposed
in its Legislative Appropriations Request that the state increase that
to cover about 50%. Essentially TIDC is suggesting that the state pick
up the tab for all the additional indigent defense costs stemming from
the implementation of the Fair Defense Act just more than a decade ago,
about $70 million per year more than the state is putting in now. [Note: A knowledgeable reader emails to add that the increase stemmed in part from population growth and inflation, so one can't attribute all the increase on the Fair Defense Act.] That's
an impressively large request for an organization led by Judge Sharon Keller (who chairs the commission, introduced Bethke and endorsed his suggestions).
The Texas Criminal Justice Coalition's Dr. Ana Correa echoed my own views when she declared regarding the $70 million, "If you don't ask it will not be given to you," wishing them luck and pledging her support.
Half of people in county jails have not been proven guilty and need
representation, she said (actually it may be a tad higher). Shortcomings
in indigent defense can lengthen jail stays and boost county
incarceration costs, which statewide average about $63 per day,
per defendant.
The money presently coming from the
state is really coming from court fees and it's a "disgrace" the extent
to which the state relies on them, said Correa.
The Texas Public Policy Foundation's Vikrant Reddy discussed some of the ideas highlighted in this Grits post about his excellent briefing paper
on indigent defense - particularly reducing penalties for certain
offenses to fine-only levels so that counties wouldn't have to hire
attorneys, an obligation which begins with Class B misdemeanor offenses.
He advocated identifying Class B or even Class A offenses that could be
reduced to Class C without harming public safety. He also suggested adjusting offense thresholds for theft for inflation, an idea familiar to Grits readers.
Reddy
commented briefly on philosophy, messaging, and communication
surrounding indigent defense to GOP newbies entering the Legislature.
It's not true, he said, that conservatives don't care about indigent
defense. He quoted the CATO Institute declaring that indigent defense is
arguably among the most defensible areas of public spending as part of
the basic set of services surrounding criminal justice. Everyone cares
about it, he said, and the only question is how best to deliver it. I
won't iterate all he said, much of which is replicated in his paper, but
read it for more detail.
Reddy
praised Tarrant County's open file system and suggested that there are
benefits to the indigent defense system from establishing one, reducing
processing time. And he suggested a "voucher" scheme that has been tried
in other nations, suggesting it's "not completely outlandish" that such
a model might be adopted somewhere in the United States, perhaps
somewhere in Texas. Jim Bethke added that the commission is working with
the CATO Institute to establish a pilot "voucher" program.
Texas Fair Defense Project Executive Director Andrea Marsh spoke on how
local advocates can have influence and the role of her own
organization. Most ideas her group has brought forward come from local
battles, she said, creating a "feedback loop" between local issues and
state policy advocacy.
The Fair Defense Project
receives about 350 intake complaints per year, she said, with perhaps
150 of them related to people who feel they should be entitled to
appointed counsel but were denied. She described myriad administrative
failures that result in denial of counsel, often simply as a result of
lack of communication. Sometimes court staff improperly refuse to give
defendants paperwork to apply for indigent representation when they're
out on bond. And she cited examples of people denied counsel for various
improper reasons, including courts looking to non-spousal family
members for payment. Or, sometimes courts will base their assessment on
what the defendant's "future income," or what they think the defendant
"should be" making instead of analyzing their actual income and telling
the defendant, "You should be working more, you should be making more,
you shouldn't be a student you should start working," etc.,"instead of
looking at their actual current income."
Marsh went on to describe her organization's intake and litigation processes and a couple of their more high profile cases, but emphasized that in most instances her group is not looking to sue when they call counties about a problem.
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