[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 109 (Thursday, July 7, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4917-S4918]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
By Mr. BOOKER:
S. 3144. A bill to enforce the Sixth Amendment right to the
assistance of effective counsel at all stages of the adversarial
process, to confer jurisdiction upon the district courts of the United
States to provide declaratory and injunctive relief against systemic
violations of such right, and for other purposes; to the Committee on
the Judiciary.
Mr. BOOKER. Mr. President, I rise to introduce the Clarence Gideon
Full Access to Justice Act, Gideon Act, and the Equal Justice Under Law
Act of 2016, two bills aimed at addressing the access to justice
crisis. Today, America's broken justice system is riddled with
deficiencies in our indigent defense system and gaps in legal services
to the poor. To repair those shortcomings, these bills would improve
the justice delivery system that serves people who are unable to afford
counsel.
Gaps in legal services to the poor exist at all levels of our justice
system. To fill in those gaps in the highest court of our land and
better balance the scales of justice between the government and the
defendants, the Gideon Act would establish an independent federal
public defender office charged with representing poor defendants before
the United States Supreme Court. To address the indigent defense crisis
in the states, the Equal Justice Under Law Act would create a private
right of action that allows a class of indigent defendants to sue in
federal court when systemic violations of their Sixth Amendment rights
to counsel occur.
In 1963, the Nation's highest court ruled that Americans have a Sixth
Amendment right to an attorney in a criminal case, even if they cannot
afford one. In Gideon v. Wainwright, the Supreme Court declared it an
``obvious truth'' that ``any person hailed into court, who is too poor
to hire a lawyer, cannot be assured a fair trial unless counsel is
provided to him.'' By clarifying that counsel must not only be present,
but be ``effective,'' Gideon marked a landmark shift towards creating a
justice system that safeguards equal justice under law for all.
Nearly 5 decades after Gideon, its promise of equal justice remains
unfulfilled. Today, the federal government has no entity dedicated to
furnishing legal counsel for criminal defendants in Supreme Court
cases. Rather, lawyers in private practice who volunteer their services
or public defenders who often have never argued before the High Court
are often tasked with delivering competent legal representation to the
poor in Supreme Court criminal cases.
The prosecution, however, has highly specialized lawyers from the
U.S. Department of Justice who represent its interests. With a small
cadre of lawyers from the Solicitor General's Office dedicated solely
to Supreme Court litigation, the government amasses considerable
appellate experience before the Court. As the most frequent advocate
before the Court, the Solicitor General routinely files writs of
certiorari and argues criminal cases each term. With this experience,
the government has the opportunity, foreclosed to defendants with
private attorneys, to establish familiarity and, ultimately,
credibility with the Court.
The structural imbalance between prosecutors and defendants at the
Supreme Court has a profound impact on our justice system. Without
counsel trained and experienced in Supreme Court advocacy, the
likelihood that cases are decided against criminal defendants
increases. In addition, the development of criminal precedent can far
too often tilt in favor of the government and against the civil rights
of ordinary Americans seeking justice in criminal cases.
To address these structural deficiencies, I am introducing the Gideon
Act. This bill would establish a Federal corporation called the
Defender Office for Supreme Court Advocacy, which would be dedicated to
Supreme Court advocacy on behalf of criminal defendants. The bill aims
to breathe life into the Sixth Amendment's guarantee of effective
assistance of counsel and to help level the playing field at the
Supreme Court between prosecutors and defendants.
The Gideon Act would empower the office with critical tools to
zealously represent indigent defendants at the front end, middle, and
back end of the Supreme Court advocacy process.
At the front end, known as the writ of certiorari stage, the office
would have authority to monitor noncapital Federal and State cases
seeking Supreme Court review for Federal law issues. By allowing the
office to file cert petitions in criminal cases, the office could have
critical input into which criminal cases the Supreme Court accepts to
hear and decide. By empowering the office to consult with lawyers
representing criminal defendants seeking the High Court's review, the
office can serve as a resource to lawyers inexperienced in Supreme
Court advocacy.
During the middle of the process, known as the merits stage, the
office would be empowered to zealously represent the poor. From filing
merits and ``friend of the court'' briefs to responding to the Court's
``call for views'' on complex criminal law issues to participating at
oral argument in criminal cases, the office could provide all forms of
advocacy on behalf of the poor. As such, the office would provide a
necessary counter-weight for defendants to prosecutors' specialized
Supreme Court expertise within Solicitor General's Office. It would
also provide a centralized resource for defenders to develop uniformity
on federal criminal case law.
On the back end, after a Supreme Court case is completed, the office
could help train other defenders throughout the nation on the unique
experience of practicing before the Supreme Court. In addition, the
office would have the power to participate in appellate advocacy before
the highest State courts in our land, if resources permit. This tool is
necessary to help develop criminal case law nationwide since most
criminal cases that the Supreme Court hears a term come Federal
criminal law issues arising from State courts, rather than from Federal
courts.
Today, I am also introducing the Senate companion to H.R. 5124, the
Equal Justice Under Law Act. This bill aims to address America's public
defense crisis, and I thank Rep. Patrick Maloney for his leadership on
this bill in the House of Representatives.
Today, many State and local governments have failed to provide the
funding necessary for public defenders to keep pace with the flood of
criminal cases. Without resources, many public defenders lack the
staff, training, or time to investigate each case adequately and
prepare a robust legal defense. As a result of being underpaid and
overworked, they are simply unable to provide the accused with their
right to effective assistance of counsel.
Ample evidence exists that shows the state of public defense in
America is in crisis. According to the American Bar Association,
anywhere from 60 to 90 percent of criminal defendants need publically
funded attorneys. Yet, due to a lack of resources, far too many public
defenders are unable to meet this demand. In fact, a 2013 report from
the Brennan Center for Justice concluded that public defense offices
are so overworked and underfunded that clients are not getting the
legal representation they need. Citing a funding disparity between the
prosecution and public defenders, the report found that State
prosecutors' office budgets were $5.8 billion in 2007, while State and
local public defender expenditures were only $2.3 billion.
[[Page S4918]]
Excessive caseloads are another example of how Americans' right to
counsel is defective. In 2009, the Constitution Project's National
Right to Counsel Committee--comprised of current and former judges,
prosecutors, public defenders, and law enforcement officials--released
a report entitled ``Justice Denied: America's Continuing Neglect of Our
Constitutional Right to Counsel.'' The report found that all too often
indigent defendants were provided counsel late or not at all. Even when
a public defender represented a defendant, the report showed that
lawyers' excessive caseloads made effective representation simply not
possible. In conclusion, the report recommended ``litigation to remedy
such deficiencies should be instituted.''
To help fix the indigent defense crisis, the Equal Justice Under Law
Act of 2016 would implement this common-sense recommendation into
action. The bill would create a federal cause of action that allows
indigent criminal defendants to file a lawsuit against states and
localities for systemic failures to provide effective assistance of
counsel in felony cases. Litigation to be a useful tool to remedy
systemic failures when indigent defense systems require defense
attorneys to represent more clients than they can competently represent
or otherwise fail to assure legal representation in compliance with the
Sixth Amendment's right to counsel.
The bill would require states to consult with representatives from
the public defender community prior to distributing Byrne JAG funds.
Currently, Federal defenders are eligible for Byrne JAG funds. Yet, in
practice, Federal defenders may not get the same proportion of these
funds as prosecutors and law enforcement. So this provision would
ensure that defenders are consulted before critical Federal funds are
distributed.
This access to justice legislation has the support of numerous civil
rights groups, such as the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People and the Innocence Project.
Our public defender system is broken. It is time we fix it. I am
proud to introduce the Gideon Act and the Equal Justice Under Law Act
and I urge their speedy passage.
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