By Nicole Russell on 6.24.09 @ 6:06AM
A new report suggests overzealous prosecution of petty crimes
doesn't pay -- for taxpayers.
If only the Denver District Attorney's Office had taken some time
to catch up on their reading, they might have saved themselves
from a recent
tongue-lashing by a federal judge. David Ebel, a judge of the
United States Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit,
awarded a female inmate $1.35 million after being repeatedly
sexually assaulted by one of the corrections officers. In his
ruling, Ebel criticized the Denver D.A.'s office for allowing the
corrections officer to plead guilty to a misdemeanor charge for
which he only received two months in the slammer and five years'
probation.
In a recent
report that will shock taxpaying Americans everywhere, the
National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL) verifies
the misdemeanor court system is in fact wasting taxpayer time and
money prosecuting petty crimes. Not only that, but the report
makes a few suggestions that could save taxpayer dollars and turn
things around -- not the least of which is to avoid
encouraging defendants to plead guilty to lesser chargers.
The report reached this conclusion after 18 months of research
reviewing courts in seven states, internet surveys of criminal
defense attorneys, conferences, and a webinar. According to the
report, not only were misdemeanor courts "incapable" of providing
accused defendants our Constitution-guaranteed due process, but
because of this, every year "millions" of these accused -- who
also happen to be minorities -- can't afford a lawyer and don't
get the justice every person in court deserves. Equally
cringe-worthy is the notion that taxpayers pay for "these gross
inefficiencies." The fact that a typically shark-infested group
like the NACDL came to such a conclusion is surprising, more
eyebrow-raising is that their proposed solutions lean
conservative and borderline-libertarian.
Misdemeanors are the lesser of its evil twin, the felony, and are
the reason most people go to court. Common misdemeanor offenses
include petty theft, disorderly conduct, public drunkenness,
curfew violations, driving under the influence, driving with a
suspended license, etc. The problem, the report concluded, is not
as much the offenses but the volume, they way they're prosecuted,
and that the whole scenario costs taxpayers too much money.
No one knows exactly how many misdemeanors occur each year but
the study reviewed twelve states and from that median, concluded
there were 3,544 per 100,000. Using that number, the report
concludes there may be as many as ten million more cases than
there were roughly thirty years ago.
Adding to that statistic is the defendant's right to due process
and the Sixth Amendment-guaranteed right to counsel. Public
defenders can hardly manage such a workload preparing very little
for each case, if at all. Because of the lack of time and
resources, lawyers end up taking short cuts many of which turn a
blind eye to justice and judges end up "pushing defenders and
defendants to take action with limited time and knowledge of
their cases. This leads to guilty pleas by the innocent,
inappropriate sentences, and wrongful incarceration, all at
taxpayer expense."
The report proposed some solutions that make literal dollars and
conservative sense. For example, right now, taxpayers spend
roughly $80 per inmate per day to lock up misdemeanants accused
of things like turnstile jumping, dog leash violations, driving
with a suspended license and feeding the homeless. It doesn't
take the mind of a lawyer to figure courts should look at the
crime again and ask: Does this crime affect public safety? Does
it warrant the cost to taxpayers? Taxpayers don't need to pay for
folks to watch cable in a detention center for staying out too
late. The report cited an example of an area in Washington state
that, in essence, diverts some of these offenses to penalties
that costs less, frees up the court more and actually generates
some income.
Mark Herman, a criminal defense attorney in Minneapolis who has
operated his own practice for twelve years agreed that such a
solution seems convincing—they're even looking to copy
Washington's example there. "There are categories of misdemeanors
that prosecuting them is a waste of money. Driving with a
suspension should not be prosecuted in a traditional sense."
Still, despite that acknowledgement, Herman disagreed with many
of the report's conclusions. He has never observed a person
forced to appear in court without an attorney unless by choice
and was disappointed in the simple nature of the recommendation
to make sure the punishment fits the crime. "It comes down to
budget. Every state is strapped. Making a first-time DUI
punishable with just a ticket might expedite the process and save
money, but it may not always guarantee the defendant justice
under the law and it's not doing public safety any favors."
A worthwhile point. Though taxpayers might be looking for some
favors, or at least some relief, too.
topics:
Law, Crime