Pennsylvania’s highest court will allow criminal
defendants to sue a county in an effort to prove a public defender’s office
isn’t adequately funded to provide the constitutional right to an attorney, a
victory for civil rights lawyers, reported the Times-Leader.
The state Supreme Court’s unanimous ruling late
Wednesday overturned a lower appellate court decision.
Mary Catherine Roper, the deputy legal director of
the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania, said Thursday that, while
the ruling is a victory, it is not a final victory for the plaintiffs — two
criminal defendants — in the lawsuit against Luzerne County in northeastern
Pennsylvania.
Those two plaintiffs, Adam Kuren and Steven
Allabaugh, have since been convicted or pleaded guilty.
But it is new avenue to force better representation
for poor criminal defendants in Pennsylvania, the only state that leaves
funding for the defense of indigent defendants entirely up to county
governments, according to the ACLU.
The 61-page ruling now means that criminal
defendants have standing to sue before their case is decided in an effort force
counties to adequately fund the public defender’s office, Roper said.
The ACLU originally filed a lawsuit in 2012 on
behalf of the chief public defender in Luzerne County, Al Flora, alleging that
funding and staffing were so low that defendants were not properly represented
and were being denied their Sixth Amendment right to an attorney.
The ACLU pressed on with the lawsuit on behalf of
poor defendants after the county fired Flora, who is being represented by the
ACLU in his illegal retaliation lawsuit against the county. Lower courts,
however, had ruled that criminal defendants did not have standing to sue.
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