At Fault Lines, Noel Erinjeri writes about the ACLU’s lawsuit against the Orleans Public Defender and its chief, Derwyn Bunton, following the decision to refuse to take on more cases than it can ethically and constitutionally handle.
In its introduction, the complaint on behalf of three detained defendants both explains the obvious and makes a critical error:
3. However, OPD has refused to accept Plaintiffs as clients due to budgetary shortages and excessive caseloads. OPD has instead placed Plaintiffs on a waiting list for appointed counsel. OPD’s refusal to represent Plaintiffs means that they must languish indefinitely in jail without counsel until OPD secures adequate resources to provide them with an attorney.
That these three defendants “languish indefinitely in jail” is certainly true. That they do so because of OPD, however, is certainly wrong. The Orleans Public Defender didn’t arrest them. They didn’t set bail. They certainly didn’t set unmakeable bail. And the OPD neither has the wherewithal to “secure adequate resources,” nor has somehow neglected to do whatever it is the ACLU apparently thinks they should have done to “secure adequate resources.” Continue reading
