Note, Effectively Ineffective: The Failure of Courts to Address Underfunded Indigent Defense Systems
Publication Title
Harvard Law Review
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2005
Abstract
Many courts have been hesitant to acknowledge the ways in which the realities of indigent defense affect the assistance a defendant actually receives. Courts have deemed effective lawyers who were unaware of current governing law in the case at hand, lawyers who were intoxicated at the time of trial, and lawyers who were asleep. Perhaps the most pervasive problem affecting indigent defendants, however, is not that their lawyers are incompetent, but that those lawyers lack adequate resources to defend their clients. Today's public defenders are underfunded and overburdened. Their caseloads and workloads have risen to crushing levels in recent years, and caps on funding both for individual cases and for overall compensation levels have effectively rendered many lawyers ineffective. Due to the political unpopularity of criminal defendants and their lack of financial and political capital, state legislatures are unlikely to allocate significant attention or resources to the problem of indigent defense, leaving courts with the task of creating a constitutionally mandated remedy.
Although scholars and practicing attorneys have acknowledged the effects of this funding shortage, the Supreme Court has yet to address the specific issue of indigent defense funding. The Court's landmark case on effective assistance of counsel, Strickland v. Washington, established a two prong test for ineffective assistance of counsel: a defendant must show that his counsel's performance was deficient and that, but for his counsel's deficient performance, the result of the proceeding would have been different. This standard suffers from two major flaws as far as funding is concerned. First, the Strickland standard is not structured to accommodate an argument related to funding. Because the Strickland test is ends-oriented - in that it focuses on the lawyer's performance and the ultimate judgment in a case - and because funding is more of a means, funding is unlikely to arise in a discussion confined to the Strickland two-prong test. Only when a lack of funding is so severe that it causes a deficient performance as defined by Strickland - a threshold that has proven difficult to meet - does the test proceed to its second step; there is no way in which to address the generally detrimental effect that underfunding has on the quality of defense lawyering an attorney is able to provide.
Second, the Strickland standard is, by its nature, an ex post analysis; therefore, it cannot be used preemptively to challenge the effectiveness of an attorney, regardless of the limitations on time or resources that may hamper the attorney's ability to provide an adequate defense. Thus, while Strickland imposes a high bar once an attorney has failed a defendant, no recourse is available to the defendant ex ante, even when it is apparent that an attorney will inevitably provide an inadequate defense.
Because Strickland appears to be the Supreme Court's last word on the issue, discussions about the impact of funding on effectiveness have moved primarily into the state courts. This Note examines three notable and celebrated cases - State v. Peart, State v. Lynch, and State v. Smith - in which courts have been receptive to defendants' allegations that a lack of funding or resources rendered their attorneys' assistance ineffective. While many scholars have lauded these cases as innovative and praised them for their impact on indigent defense, further scrutiny reveals that these decisions have been unable to facilitate longterm, sustainable reform of the indigent defense system. To generate more effective reform, courts must adopt a more aggressive role as enforcers of the right to counsel by tackling the problem of indigent defense on a systemic level, ordering the expenditure of funds necessary to protect the right to counsel, and creating oversight mechanisms to ensure the continued implementation of their remedies.
Recommended Citation
Note, Effectively Ineffective: The Failure of Courts to Address Underfunded Indigent Defense Systems, 118 Harv. L. Rev. 1731 (2005).
Institutional Repository Citation
Lauren S. Lucas,
Note, Effectively Ineffective: The Failure of Courts to Address Underfunded Indigent Defense Systems,
Faculty Publications By Year
1890
(2005)
https://readingroom.law.gsu.edu/faculty_pub/1890
Volume
118
Issue
5
First Page
1731
Last Page
1752
Comments
External Links
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