Oregon鈥檚 Supreme Court chief justice wants government leaders to come together to address systemic issues driving the state鈥檚 deepening public defense crisis.
Chief Justice Martha Walters, who leads the state鈥檚 judicial branch, asked legislative leaders and Gov. Kate Brown Tuesday to help plan a summit to find solutions for public defense and public safety.
鈥淚 envision the Summit as a way for us to discuss and agree on longer-term changes to our public defense and public safety systems to make them stronger and more effective,鈥 Walters wrote.
Since last fall, a shortage of public defenders has left hundreds of indigent criminal defendants without an attorney 鈥 a right afforded by the U.S. Constitution that the state has violated repeatedly. Oregon contracts its entire trial-level public defense systems to groups of attorneys and nonprofits. With courts operating in a limited capacity during much of the pandemic, caseloads for public defenders have built up to the point those lawyers are unable to take on new clients.
In Washington County, 11 people in custody are without an attorney, court staff said Wednesday. In Multnomah County, more than 260 people are without an attorney. Of those, 22 are in custody.
While public defense is highly decentralized in Oregon, it鈥檚 run by the Office of Public Defense Services largely through securing and paying contracts to public defense firms. OPDS is part of the Oregon judiciary. Walters is responsible for appointing the commission members who hire and oversee the agency鈥檚 executive director.
The lack of public defenders has exposed the role they play in the state鈥檚 public safety system.
In Multnomah County, judges have dismissed 35 cases, over the objections of prosecutors, because the state has been unable to provide a public defender, according to a memo dated Tuesday from the district attorney鈥檚 office. Many of those defendants could still be indicted later by a grand jury.
鈥淥nly the most serious person crimes are moving forward,鈥 the memo states. The office 鈥渋s unable in any meaningful manner to prosecute felony crimes other than the most serious person crimes.鈥
In a , Multnomah County District Attorney Mike Schmidt said that prior to the pandemic, the county鈥檚 circuit court would hold 25 to 30 jury trials per week. During the last two years, the county has averaged three to five.
鈥淭he backlog of cases will take years to resolve, and in the meantime, prosecutions are taking far, far longer than they did prior to the pandemic,鈥 Schmidt wrote. 鈥淓vidence gets stale. Victims move on or move away. Memory becomes foggy. Justice is delayed, if not denied.鈥
Leading up to the summit, Walters said she鈥檒l host a series of meetings with prosecutors, judges and public defenders starting next week. She said the state needs to move faster to address its 鈥渋mmediate crisis.鈥 Her first meeting will be next week in Multnomah County where, she noted, a lack of staffing at the sheriff鈥檚 office has made it challenging to assist with attorney-client visits 鈥渃ritical to case resolution,鈥 as well as transporting people in custody to court hearings.
鈥淭he current crisis is having a real impact on defendants who have a constitutional right to counsel, on courts鈥 ability to resolve cases, on the safety of our communities,鈥 Walters wrote.
The public defense crisis has been most acute in Multnomah, Marion, Washington and Lane counties, to hire more public defenders and support staff. In her letter Walters wrote, 鈥減roviders have found it more difficult than anticipated to do that hiring and are also facing the unanticipated loss of experienced counsel.鈥
鈥淚 would say that鈥檚 very true,鈥 said Jessica Kampfe, executive director of Multnomah Defenders Inc., one of two public defense nonprofits in the county. 鈥淲e hired two lawyers, planning to use the funds as well as an investigator and support staff. We were on our way to hiring a third (attorney).鈥
At the same time, more experienced attorneys are leaving.
鈥淚n the last month, I鈥檝e had five lawyers quit,鈥 Kampfe said. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 hire my way out of this problem if I can鈥檛 stop the bleeding.鈥
Caseloads and staffing challenges have prevented her office from taking new clients charged with felonies since February. On Monday, Multnomah Defenders Inc. and Metropolitan Public Defender, the largest public defense nonprofit firm in the state, will temporarily stop taking new clients charged with misdemeanors in the county.
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