- Law.com: 50 years ago 'Gideon' affirmed the right to counsel
- The Crime Report: Chasing Gideon
- NY Times: Gideon's muted trumpet
- NY Times: The Right to Counsel: Badly battered at 50
- NPR: 50 years after key case, problems defending the poor persist
- The Atlantic: Eric Holder: A 'state of crisis' for the right to counsel
- The Atlantic: In Texas, from a chief justice, welcome candor about unequal justice
- Houston Chronicle: Budget cuts threaten Sixth Amendment right
- Los Angeles Review of Books: Pleading Out: America's broken indigent defense system
- Heritage Foundation: Gideon v. Wainwright: Celebrating 50 years of constitutional protection
That doesn't necessarily mean we're doing a great job on this issue today, especially given the massive caseloads carried by some appointed attorneys in major Texas cities. But I was certainly pleased to learn Texas was ahead of the rest of the country on this topic.
5 comments:
Big overview here, gets at important issues like plea bargaining: http://lareviewofbooks.org/article.php?type=&id=1508&fulltext
Good one, added it to the bullet list.
Hi,
best blog
congrats!
Hey Grits, hope you have a good time at the event.
While it's Gideon's B-Day and all, I'd like to stick an afterthought candle in for a good archival measure.
It was going to stand for the birthday of no bills / decisions addressing the Condoning of Plea Bargaining Abuse, but since it's mentioned above, I'll simply include: - *the B-Day of no bills / decisions addressing the right to a Legally Competent Counsel at all stages of a criminal investigation.
Any and all segments / niches of the legal profession (involving felony / misd. jury trials) being devoid of mandatory Credential Verification procedures is simply criminal at the jump. Thanks.
*Those thinking that such a bill / decision aren’t needed are asked to ponder this - Hospitals don't allow Orderlies or Janitors to perform consultations and / or operations and it didn't take a bill / decision to block the unqualified from Dabbling.
With that, until the Legislature and the U.S.S.C. wakes the hell up, I'm calling on hospitals to stop discriminating against Orderlies & Janitors' right to operate without ample knowledge and / or experience. How hard can it be to replace a liver anyway? And while I'm on a friggin role, I'm going to advocate for the right for Landscapers to be able to perform Lasik on rainy days in the great state of confusion, aka: Texas. Thanks.
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