Sixth Amendment Center, the Right to Counsel in Maine, 2019
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The Right to Counsel in Maine EVALUATION OF SERVICES PROVIDED BY THE MAINE COMMISSION ON INDIGENT LEGAL SERVICES April 2019 6AC SIXTH AMENDMENT CENTER The Right to Counsel in Maine: Evaluation of Services Provided by the Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services Copyright © 2019 by the Sixth Amendment Center. All rights reserved. Publication Number: 2019.002 SIXTH AMENDMENT CENTER PO Box 15556 Boston, MA 02215 www.sixthamendment.org PREPARED BY The Sixth Amendment Center is a non-partisan, non-profit organization providing technical assistance and evaluation services to policymakers and criminal justice stakeholders. Its services focus on the constitutional requirement to provide effective assistance of counsel at all critical stages of a case to the indigent accused facing a potential loss of liberty in a criminal or delinquency proceeding. PREPARED FOR The Maine Legislative Council is a ten-member body consisting of five members from each legislative chamber, including: the President of the Senate, Speaker of the House, bi-cameral Republican and Democratic Floor Leaders and their Assistant Floor Leaders. The Legislative Council governs the administration of the Maine Legislature. executive summary In 1963, the U.S. Supreme Court declared in Gideon v. Wainwright that it is an “obvious truth” that anyone who is accused of a crime and who cannot afford the cost of a lawyer “cannot be assured a fair trial unless counsel is provided for him.” In the intervening 56 years, the U.S. Supreme Court has clarified that the Sixth Amendment right to counsel means every person who is accused of a crime is entitled to have an attorney provided at government expense to defend him whenever that person is facing the potential loss of his liberty and is unable to afford his own attorney. Moreover, the appointed lawyer needs to be more than merely a warm body with a bar card. The attorney must also be effective, the U.S. Supreme Court said again in United States v. Cronic in 1984, subjecting the prosecution’s case to “the crucible of meaningful adversarial testing.” Under Gideon, the Sixth Amendment right to effective counsel is an obligation of the states under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Through legislation enacted in 2009, the legislature created the Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services (MCILS) and commanded that it: “provide efficient, highquality representation to indigent criminal defendants, juvenile defendants and children and parents in child protective cases, consistent with federal and state constitutional and statutory obligations”; “ensure the delivery of indigent legal services by qualified and competent counsel in a manner that is fair and consistent throughout the State”; and “ensure adequate funding of a statewide system of indigent legal services, which must be provided and managed in a fiscally responsible manner, free from undue political interference and conflicts of interest.” Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1801 (2018). Since its inception, MCILS has never used governmentally employed attorneys to provide representation. Instead, MCILS either pays attorneys $60 per hour or, in Somerset County, pays a consortia of attorneys a fixed fee under contract. Maine is the only state in the country that provides all indigent defense services through private attorneys. There are two principal reasons that other states have moved away from using only private attorneys to provide all indigent defense services, and Maine has struggled with both since the creation of MCILS. First, it is difficult to predict and contain costs in a private attorney system. A system can estimate future caseloads based on prior year trends and apply average estimated costs per case, by case type, to calculate what funding will be required to deliver its mandated services, but there is no guarantee that past averages will continue to apply to future years. Second, it is difficult to iv THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine supervise private attorneys to ensure they can and do provide effective representation. For example, despite the statutory command for MCILS to provide “high-quality” representation, the State of Maine expects MCILS to maintain oversight of nearly 600 attorneys, handling cases in 47 courthouses presided over by approximately 90 justices, judges, and magistrates, with a staff of just three people (excluding financial screeners that perform no oversight functions). In 2017, the Maine legislature created the Working Group to Improve the Provision of Indigent Legal Services that determined that MCILS does not have systemic oversight and evaluation of attorneys and is in need of stronger fiscal management and recommended an independent assessment. In March 2018, the Maine Legislative Council contracted the Sixth Amendment Center (6AC) to evaluate right to counsel services provided by MCILS and to recommend any needed changes. Limitations of time and resources prevent most indigent defense evaluations from considering every court, public defense system, and service provider in a given state, and so this study looks closely at five counties: Androscoggin, Aroostook, Cumberland, Somerset, and York. Chapter 1 (p. 5 to 23) provides introductory information on the history of the right to counsel in Maine, an explanation of Maine’s justice systems, and the study methodology. Chapter II (p. 24 to 35) begins the assessment by evaluating Maine’s attorney qualification, training and supervision and makes the following finding: FINDING 1: MCILS attorney qualification standards are too lenient, resulting in an excessive number of attorneys on panels, and there are no attorney recertification requirements. MCILS has only limited new attorney training and lacks requirements that ongoing attorney training relate to defense-specific subject areas. MCILS lacks appropriate supervision of attorneys. Under MCILS’ qualification requirements, an attorney who graduated from law school two years ago and hung out their shingle in a private practice, with no supervision or training, can have two jury trials and two judge trials and then be appointed to represent indigent defendants in every type of criminal case other than a homicide or sex offense. More worrisome perhaps is that indigent defendants charged with Class E crimes, carrying up to six months in jail, can be represented by an attorney who just received their bar card and completed a single training course in criminal law, as long as the lawyer has an email address, telephone number, and a confidential space to meet with clients. MCILS does not require attorneys appointed to represent the indigent to obtain training in the fields in which they provide indigent legal representation (beyond that required to first be placed on the roster for appointments in operating under the influence or domestic violence cases). Similarly, MCILS has not established any requirements for Executive Summary supervision of attorneys appointed to provide indigent legal representation. After the start of the assessment, MCILS identified 25 attorneys statewide to serve as resource counsel and provide mentoring to less experienced attorneys. However, these attorneys are each capped at providing only 10 hours of mentoring per month, and the resource counsel attorneys do not have authority to require any mentee to cooperate. Chapter III (p. 36 to 62) assesses how and when in the criminal justice process defendants are informed about their right to counsel, how they are approved or denied for MCILS services, and when attorneys are appointed to represent indigent defendants. After a description of the criminal process in Maine, Chapter III makes four findings: Finding 2: Although the courts’ advice of rights video has many admirable qualities, few courts follow up with a colloquy to ensure that indigent defendants saw the video and comprehend their rights before waiving counsel. Some prosecutors in some jurisdictions engage in plea discussions with uncounseled defendants, and some courts actively encourage such negotiations. These practices result in actual denial of counsel. In every courtroom observed in all of the sample counties, the same video is played before the judge is on bench enumerating defendants’ rights. No one ensures that defendants have watched the video, understand the language spoken in the video, or have the mental capacity to understand the video, and it is often the case that tardy defendants enter without ever seeing the video at all. Moreover, under U.S. Supreme Court case law a plea negotiation is a critical stage of the case, meaning the negotiation cannot happen unless counsel is present or the defendant’s right to counsel has been knowingly, voluntarily, and intelligently waived. Despite this, throughout the sample counties, prosecutors talk to uncounseled defendants to negotiate guilty pleas. This was most prevalent in the south where larger court populations, and not enough lawyers of the day, exacerbate the problems. Finding 3: Oversight of financial screeners by MCILS creates the appearance of a conflict of interest with its duty to provide zealous representation to indigent defendants. MCILS employs eight people to conduct financial screening of defendants who request appointment of counsel. Indigent defense systems must require their participating attorneys to adhere to their ethical duty to zealously defend in the stated interests of the client, including advocating against the imposition of fines, fees, and other assessments. MCILS cannot assure that appointed attorneys fight against the imposition on indigent defendants of fees related to the cost of the defense, while v vi THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine MCILS is simultaneously tasked with trying to collect fees assessed for the cost of representation. A situation in Cumberland County transformed this appearance of a conflict of interest by MCILS into an actual conflict of interest. A statewide hiring freeze left vacant the MCILS financial screener position that covered Cumberland County. At the time of our site visit, the MCILS lawyers for the day were signing as notaries the financial affidavits of the defendants they advise and represent, which are then submitted to the court. This process places the lawyer in the position of a potential witness against the client, in the event the affidavit is challenged. Finally, conflict of interest concerns aside, having lawyers perform at $60/hour a service that is normally performed by a financial screener paid $12.75/hour is simply not cost efficient governance. Finding 4: MCILS’ “lawyer of the day” system primarily serves the need to move court dockets, while resulting in a lack of continuous representation to the detriment of defendants. There is often a critical gap in representation while a substantive lawyer is identified and appointed. Additionally, the lawyer of the day practices under the Somerset contract result in a direct conflict of interest. MCILS provides for a “lawyer of the day” to appear at 48-hour hearings for in custody defendants and at initial appearance for out of custody defendants. The number of lawyers serving as lawyer for the day is generally insufficient to even meet with, much less actually provide representation to, the number of defendants scheduled on each day’s docket. For example, on an average day in Cumberland County’s Portland District Court there are two lawyers for the day to handle 80 defendants. The lawyer for the day system provides limited representation because it is only “for the day,” not for the case. In most instances the “lawyer of the day” does not continue with the case. Instead, courts make a formal appointment off of a roster of MCILS approved lawyers. Some judges like to select the individual attorney to appoint in a given case, some leave it to their clerks to do after the hearing, and some use a rotational system where the next attorney on the list is appointed. However, a gap in representation occurs when those appointments are delayed. The lawyer of the day program in Somerset County produces a direct conflict of interest. The contract attorneys can be hired by non-indigent defendant who appear in court while the contract attorneys are serving as lawyer for the day. That is, the attorney could reject a defendant for appointed counsel and then accept the case as a private retainer. This central role of the contract attorneys in meeting as lawyer for the day every person who is hailed into court creates a monopoly of sorts, as attorneys outside of Somerset County said they are effectively prevented from establishing a practice in Somerset County. That is, the contract attorneys keep not only all the Executive Summary assigned work but also most of the private work, since the contract has provided them a personal introduction to all defendants. Finding 5: Despite there being many excellent assigned lawyers providing representation to the indigent accused throughout Maine, there are also too many attorneys throughout the state who do not perform adequately. In one of the studied counties, the Sheriff estimated, due to the volume of prisoner complaints, that about 25% of assigned attorneys do not visit their clients in jail to prepare their cases. He was also concerned about attorneys not accepting calls from the jail. He said prisoners stop calling when their calls are not accepted. Consistent with that report, one judge estimated that 25% of assigned counsel have not met with their clients before the first dispositional conference date. She reported that up to 10% of attorneys withdraw or become a second chair if the case goes to trial. MCILS data tends to confirm these observations of the sheriffs. For example, the 6AC requested three years of data on jail visits on cases billed out of Cumberland County. The data reveal a number of attorneys that often visit clients, but a concerning number of folks that do not. For example, in 2017, one attorney billed MCILS $111,771 for cases arising in Cumberland County, including $3,024 for 96 jail visits. By contrast, another attorney billed MCILS $171,880, but did not bill any time for even a single jail visit. Certainly it is possible, though unlikely, that the attorney simply decided it was not worth the time to bill jail visits, but the point is that MCILS and the State of Maine do not know because of a lack of oversight. The final substantive chapter, Chapter IV (p. 63-70), assesses the extent to which MCILS ensures that lawyers have sufficient time to work on cases, especially in relation to attorneys being assigned too many cases. This Chapter makes one finding: Finding 6: Despite the lack of MCILS workload limits, excessive caseloads may not be an issue in most counties in Maine. However, insufficient time is an issue in Somerset County, where the combination of high caseloads and the fixed fee contract system produce financial incentives to dispose of cases without adequate preparation. Even factoring in “lawyer of the day” duties in most jurisdictions, the attorneys with the most cases handled in Aroostook, Androscoggin, Cumberland, and York Counties do not appear to have excessive appointed caseloads. The one place where there are definitely time sufficiency issues is in Somerset County. Over the past six years, the average number of hours spent per indigent defense case has declined. For example, in FY 2013, on average the lawyers spent 6.78 hours per adult case in FY 2013. By FY 2018, the number dropped to 2.99 hours on average per adult criminal case (a decrease of approximately 56%). Importantly, MCILS does not require from the Somerset vii viii THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine County Project reporting of adult criminal cases to be distinguished by severity, which would allow MCILS to more accurately track attorney workloads. That said, 2.99 hours per adult criminal case is extremely and unreasonably low, even if every case was a class D or E charge. Chapter V (p. 71-85) discusses attorney compensation and evaluates MCILS ability to provide fiscal oversight of state resources. The Chapter makes two findings: Finding 7: MCILS’ fixed fee contract causes a financial conflict of interest. MCILS’ hourly rate is inadequate to both cover overhead and provide lawyers an adequate fee. Fixed fee contracts, in which a lawyer earns the same pay no matter how many cases he is required to handle, create financial incentives for a lawyer to dispose of cases as quickly as possible, rather than as effectively as possible for the client. In FY 2017, the average fee per case under the Somerset contract was $573.16, slightly higher than the average billed by the assigned counsel elsewhere (statewide $554.80). The average hours per case spent in Somerset, at 3.27, was much lower than the statewide average of 9.25 (assuming the 2017 rate was $60/hour), resulting in the Somerset hourly rate paid for counsel being $174.97. So, in Somerset County, the State of Maine is paying attorneys three times the rate it pays everyone else and getting approximately one third less work. The hourly compensation rate in Maine ($60/hour) is not enough to cover overhead and ensure a reasonable fee. As a comparison, the South Dakota Supreme Court set public counsel compensation hourly rates at $67 per hour in 2000. To ensure that attorneys are perpetually paid both a reasonable fee and overhead, the court also mandated that “court-appointed attorney fees will increase annually in an amount equal to the cost of living increase that state employees receive each year from the legislature.” Assigned counsel compensation in South Dakota now stands at $95 per hour. For comparison purposes, a $95 hourly fee in South Dakota in 2019 is equivalent to a $114.95 hourly fee in Maine in 2019. Finding 8: A significant number of attorneys bill in excess of eight hours per day, five days per week, for 52 weeks per year. MCILS does not exert adequate financial oversight of private attorneys. “Over-billing” was a topic raised frequently throughout the state. In Maine, attorneys do not submit vouchers under penalty of perjury. No statutes or MCILS rules limit attorney hours by day or by year. MCILS conducts no audits. Not surprisingly, a review of MCILS vouchers over the past five years generated serious concerns in some instances about whether limited taxpayer resources are being used effectively. Executive Summary If an attorney works eight hours per day, five days per week, for 52 weeks a year, that attorney should make no more than $124,800 at the current $60 per hour MCILS rate. In FY 2018, 25 attorneys billed MCILS in excess of 40 hours per week. The top biller in FY2018 billed more than 88 hours per week. As part of this review, the 6AC reached out to the Federal Defender Services Division of the Administrative Office of the United States Courts. Although they are not allowed to confirm the number of cases appointed, the Federal Defender Services, Legal and Policy Division, confirmed that eight of these 25 lawyers received federal court appointments during this same time period. To remedy these issues, Chapter VI (P. 86-96) sets out a series of recommendations: RECOMMENDATION 1: The State of Maine should remove the authority to conduct financial eligibility screenings from the Maine Commission for Indigent Legal Services. The reconstituted Task Force on Pretrial Justice Reform should determine the appropriate agency to conduct indigency screenings. RECOMMENDATION 2: The State of Maine should statutorily bar communication between prosecutors and unrepresented defendants, unless and until defendants have been informed of their right to appointed counsel, a judge has conducted the legally required colloquy, and a defendant has executed a written waiver of the right to counsel in each case to ensure that all waivers of the right to counsel are made knowingly and voluntarily. RECOMMENDATION 3: Except for ministerial, non-substantive tasks, the State of Maine and the Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services should require that the same properly qualified defense counsel continuously represents the client in each case, from appointment through disposition, and personally appears at every court appearance throughout the pendency of an assigned case. RECOMMENDATION 4: MCILS should use its current statutory power to promulgate more rigorous attorney qualification, recertification, training, supervision, and workload standards. The State of Maine should statutorily require financial oversight by requiring that MCILS limit the number of permissible billable hours, subject to waiver only upon a finding of need for additional capacity. The State of Maine should fund MCILS at a level to ensure rigorous training and effective substantive and financial oversight of attorneys. RECOMMENDATION 5: The State of Maine should statutorily ban all public defense contracts that provide financial disincentives to or that otherwise interfere with zealously advocating on behalf of the defendants’ stated interests, including the use of fixed fee contracts. Maine should require that any public defense contract include reasonable caseload limits, reporting requirements on ix x THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine any private legal work permitted, and substantial performance oversight, among other protections. RECOMMENDATION 6: The State of Maine should fund MCILS at a level that allows private attorneys to be compensated for overhead expenses plus a reasonable fee (i.e., $100 per hour). MCILS should be authorized to provide additional compensation of $25 per hour for designated case types such as murder, sexual assaults, and postconviction review. RECOMMENDATION 7: The State of Maine should authorize and fund MCILS at an appropriate level to employ state government attorneys and support staff to operate a statewide appellate defender office and a Cumberland County trial level public defender office. THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine EVALUATION OF SERVICES PROVIDED BY THE MAINE COMMISSION ON INDIGENT LEGAL SERVICES April 2019 TABLE OF CONTENTS I. INTRODUCTION The birth of the right to counsel The right to counsel in Maine Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services The current study 5 5 6 9 11 Methodology 12 U.S. Department of Justice application of assessment criteria 14 Assessment criteria Maine’s criminal justice system Law enforcement Prosecution Trial courts II. ATTORNEY QUALIFICATIONS, TRAINING & SUPERVISION Finding 1 Attorney qualifications 12 18 19 20 21 24 25 27 Attorney training & supervision 30 Massachusetts Committee for Public Counsel Services example 32 III. EARLY APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL Summons or arrest 36 38 Bail setting (following arrest) 39 Probable cause determination (following warrantless arrest) 40 Finding 2 42 48-hour hearing (in custody) or initial appearance (out of custody) 41 Advice of rights video 43 Denial of counsel to defendants receiving suspended sentences 43 Prosecutors negotiating pleas with unrepresented defendants Chilling of the right to counsel Finding 3 Indigency determination Reimbursements assessed against indigent defendants Finding 4 Appointment of counsel Continuous representation from appointment through disposition 44 45 45 46 49 51 53 53 Delayed appointment of counsel 56 Conflict of interest in Somerset County 56 Institution of prosecution & arraignment Finding 5 Contact with in custody defendants Motions practice Use of investigators Case preparation and zealous advocacy 57 57 57 58 60 60 IV. SUFFICIENT TIME 63 V. ATTORNEY COMPENSATION & FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT 71 Finding 6 Finding 7 Fixed fee contract Hourly rate Finding 8 Attorney billing Financial oversight 66 72 75 76 79 79 83 VI. RECOMMENDATIONS 86 Recommendation 2 88 Recommendation 1 Recommendation 3 Recommendation 4 Recommendation 5 Recommendation 6 Recommendation 7 86 89 90 91 92 94 Appendix A Appendix B Appendix C 97 100 103 Chapter I Introduction The birth of the right to counsel The adversarial system of justice is rooted in the very fabric of our nation.1 Many of the people who arrived on the shores of our continent had been subject to persecution in their native courts, so they were not content to adopt the justice systems of their mother countries. Having experienced tyranny first hand, the people of America’s colonies were suspicious of concentrated power in the hands of a few. The English justice system was transitioning during the colonial era from what today would be called the “inquisitorial model” of criminal justice. The presumption of innocence does not exist in the inquisitorial system. Instead, because the judge makes a final verdict based on the evidence that he himself has collected, there is a presumption of guilt inherent in the trial proceedings. In the inquisitorial system of justice, the burden of proof rests with the defendant accused of a crime to establish his own innocence. Until the 1800s in England, the accused in most felony cases were prohibited from having an attorney represent them other than to argue legal points to the judge – a defendant was own their own in proving the facts of a case to show their innocence. An individual’s right to liberty in the American colonies came to be recognized as self-evident, and there therefore needed to be a high threshold to allow government to take away the liberty endowed in each and every individual. With the introduction of defense lawyers in colonial America,2 criminal trials started to become actual trials. Procedural rules started to be written down and codified. Evidence, including hearsay, could no longer be introduced without restraint. Allegations of criminality were increasingly contested. See generally Randolph Jonakait, The Rise of the American Adversary System: America Before England, 14 Widener L. Rev. 323 (2009), available at http://widenerlawreview.org/files/2009/06/01jonakait-final-323-356.pdf. 2 As an example of the degree to which the new world Americans were committed to the right to counsel, the following preamble accompanied the right to counsel law passed on March 11, 1660 in the colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations: Whereas it doth appeaere that any person . . . may on good grounds, or through mallice or envie be indicted and accused for matters criminal, wherein the person is so [accused] may be innocent, and yett, may not be accomplished with soe much wisdom and knowl¬edge of the law to plead his own innocencye, &c. Be it therefore inacted . . . that it shall be accounted and owned from henceforth the lawful privilege of any man that is indicted, to procure an attorney to plead any point of law that make for clearing of his innocencye. 1 6 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine This was the birth of the adversarial system3 – a system based on the simple notion that the truth is best made clear through the back and forth debate of opposing perspectives. When the north American colonies revolted against the British crown, the right to counsel was quickly enshrined in all but one of the original 13 state constitutions.4 Having thrown off the shackles of a tyrannical monarchy, the patriots were not about to create a new tyranny through the federal government that could infringe on the rights of individuals. Thus, the framers of the U.S. Constitution created a Bill of Rights to specifically protect personal liberty from the tyranny of big government. All people, they guaranteed, are free to express unpopular opinions, or choose one’s own religion, or take up arms to protect one’s home and family, without fear of retaliation from the government. Preeminent in the Bill of Rights is the idea that no one’s liberty can ever be taken away without the process being fair. A jury made up of everyday citizens, protections against self-incrimination, and the right to have a lawyer advocating on one’s behalf5 are all American ideals of justice enshrined in the first ten amendments to the United States Constitution and ratified by the states in 1791. The right to counsel in Maine Although the 1963 U.S. Supreme Court case Gideon v. Wainwright6 is often haled as the point in time when states began to appoint counsel to represent indigent defendants, the simple truth is that most of the states were already providing counsel in felony cases before the landmark case was handed down.7 Randolph Jonakait, The Rise of the American Adversary System: America Before England, 14 Widener L. Rev. 323, 353 (2008) (“[A]n adversary system was widely in operation before the nineteenth century began. Attorneys for the prosecution and defense presented and challenged evidence. The judges did not dominate or orchestrate factual presentations, but acted as arbiters between the two sides and gave instructions to the juries. Defense lawyers were not limited to only one part of the trial, but participated at every stage, from jury selection, opening statements, and the presentation and challenging of evidence to summations. Perhaps most important, the attorneys acted as advocates. Evidence was marshaled to support theories of the cases. Juries were not just left on their own to contemplate the meanings of and inferences to be drawn from the evidence, but rather lawyers’ arguments on both sides were directed to the juries to support advocates’ theories of the case. These are examples of a full adversary system, and the number of examples and the lawyers’ skilled performances at least indicate that a full adversarial process was not a rare aberration but an accepted way of trying American cases even at the end of the eighteenth century.”). 4 Virginia was the lone state without the right to counsel in its constitution. See William Beaney, The Right to Counsel in American Courts 17-1, n.47 (U. Mich. Press 1955). 5 U.S. Const. amend. VI (stating that in “all criminal prosecutions” the accused shall enjoy the right, among others, to “have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence”). 6 372 U.S. 335 (1963). 7 Only thirteen states did not provide counsel in all felony cases at the time of the Gideon decision. Among the states that provided the full right to counsel is Nevada - the first state to require not only the appointment of counsel in all cases (including misdemeanors) but also the payment of counsel for services rendered (1877). For a fuller understanding of the events leading up to the institutionalization of the right to counsel in Nevada, see the Sixth Amendment Center report Reclaiming Justice, available at 3 I. Introduction 7 The geographic territory that is today Maine was part of Massachusetts at the time the United States Constitution was adopted and followed the custom of appointing counsel in serious cases. With statehood in 1820, Maine adopted its own constitution, stating that “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall have a right to be heard by the accused and counsel to the accused.”8 The Maine legislature codified the right to appointed counsel in capital cases in 1870.9 In the 20th century, “in spite of the absence of statutory or decisional fiat, individual Justices . . . almost uniformly felt a moral and social obligation to furnish counsel to indigent persons charged with felonies in the Superior Courts. Their practice of making informal appointments, and the willingness of members of the bar to perform such unpaid public service, long preceded Gideon v. Wainwright and doubtless explain the absence of this issue before the Courts of Maine.”10 Maine’s commitment to the right to counsel and its general practice of appointing counsel to the indigent accused of felony charges is perhaps best demonstrated in 1962 when Maine’s then-Attorney General Frank E. Hancock joined an amicus curiae brief in support of Clarence Earl Gideon’s right to an attorney.11 At the time, Maine was among the 15 states that did not require counsel in all felony cases. Nonetheless, Maine advocated for the Supreme Court to determine that the Fourteenth Amendment requires states to provide Sixth Amendment lawyers to the indigent accused in all felonies. The United States Supreme Court agreed, announcing it to be an “obvious truth” that anyone who is accused of a crime and who cannot afford the cost of a lawyer “cannot be assured a fair trial unless counsel is provided for him.”12 The Maine legislature responded to the Gideon decision promptly by enacting P.L.1963, Chap. 273, “which required both the Justices of the Superior Court and Judges of the new District Court system to assign counsel for indigents charged with felonies and permitted it (without compensation) in cases of misdemeanors.”13 Four years later, the Maine Supreme Judicial Court ended the practice of distinguishing between felony and misdemeanors cases, declaring in Newell v. State: We are convinced that the time has come when due process demands that we abandon the felony-misdemeanor distinction as a basis for appointment of counsel and construe our own constitution to require appointment of counsel for needy persons charged with serious misdemeanors, unless waived. . . . Therefore, we hold that all indigent http://sixthamendment.org/reclaiming-justice/. 8 U.S. Const. amend. VI. 9 See Newell v. State, 277 A.2d 731, 734 (Me. 1971). 10 Newell v. State, 277 A.2d 731, 735 (Me. 1971). 11 See Brief for the State Government Amici Curiae, Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335 (1963). 12 Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335, 344 (1963). 13 Newell v. State, 277 A.2d 731, 735-36 (Me. 1971) (emphasis added). 8 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine persons who are without attorneys and who are facing criminal charges which might result in the imposition of a penalty of imprisonment for a period of more than six months or a fine of more than $500 or both . . . must be informed by the Court of their right to appointed counsel and must have such counsel appointed unless they waive this right.14 The next year, the U.S. Supreme Court extended the right to counsel to all misdemeanors with a potential jail sentence regardless of duration.15 The Fourteenth Amendment requires Maine, as it does all states, to enforce Sixth Amendment case law. Since Gideon, the U.S. Supreme Court has expressly clarified that the Sixth Amendment requires the appointment of counsel for the poor threatened with jail time in misdemeanors,16 misdemeanors with suspended sentences,17 direct appeals,18 and appeals challenging a sentence imposed following a guilty plea where the sentence was not agreed to in advance.19 Children in delinquency proceedings, no less than adults in criminal courts, are entitled by the Fourteenth Amendment due process clause to appointed counsel when facing the loss of liberty.20 Moreover, the appointed lawyer needs to be more than merely a warm body with a bar card.21 The attorney must also be effective,22 subjecting the prosecution’s case to “the crucible of meaningful adversarial testing.”23 Newell v. State, 277 A.2d 731, 737-38 (Me. 1971). Argersinger v. Hamlin, 407 U.S. 25 (1972). 16 Argersinger v. Hamlin, 407 U.S. 25 (1972). 17 Alabama v. Shelton, 505 U.S. 654 (2002). 18 Douglas v. California, 372 U.S. 353 (1963). 19 Halbert v. Michigan, 545 U.S. 605 (2005). 20 In re Gault, 387 U.S. 1 (1967). “[I]t would be extraordinary if our Constitution did not require the procedural regularity and the exercise of care implied in the phrase ‘due process.’ Under our Constitution, the condition of being a boy does not justify a kangaroo court.” Id. at 27-28. “A proceeding where the issue is whether the child will be found to be ‘delinquent’ and subjected to the loss of his liberty for years is comparable in seriousness to a felony prosecution. The juvenile needs the assistance of counsel to cope with problems of law, to make skilled inquiry into the facts, to insist upon regularity of the proceedings, and to ascertain whether he has a defense and to prepare and submit it. The child ‘requires the guiding hand of counsel at every step in the proceedings against him.’ . . . [T]he assistance of counsel is essential for purposes of waiver proceedings, [and] we hold now that it is equally essential for the determination of delinquency, carrying with it the awesome prospect of incarceration in a state institution until the juvenile reaches the age of 21.” Id. at 36. 21 As the Court noted in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 685 (1984), “[t]hat a person who happens to be a lawyer is present at trial alongside the accused, however, is not enough to satisfy the constitutional command.” 22 McMann v. Richardson, 397 U.S. 759, 771 n.14 (1970) (“It has long been recognized that the right to counsel is the right to the effective assistance of counsel.”). To be effective, an attorney must be reasonably competent, providing to the particular defendant in the particular case the assistance demanded of attorneys in criminal cases under prevailing professional norms, such as those “reflected in American Bar Association standards and the like.” Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 688-89 (1984). 23 United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 656 (1984). 14 15 I. Introduction “States are free to provide greater protections in their criminal justice system than the Federal Constitution requires,”24 but they cannot provide less. Though the federal Constitution does not require it,25 Maine statutorily guarantees appointed counsel to indigent defendants in post-conviction review proceedings from a criminal conviction, a judgment of not criminally responsible by reason of insanity, or a delinquency adjudication.26 The U.S. Supreme Court has yet to expand Gideon’s promise to civil matters, but Maine provides a right to counsel to indigent parents/custodians in child protection proceedings and to individuals in hearings for their involuntary commitment to a psychiatric hospital or involuntary treatment therein.27 Today in Maine, all indigent legal services in every type of case are provided under the auspices of the Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services.28 Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services Historically, Maine’s counties were responsible for funding all indigent defense services, except the state paid for public defense in post-conviction proceedings, and individual justices and judges appointed attorneys on a case-by-case basis.29 Within two years of the Gideon decision, the manner in which Maine funded and administered its Fourteenth Amendment obligation to provide the Sixth Amendment right to counsel was questioned. In 1965, the Maine Judicial Council expressed “dissatisfaction” with the “functioning of the assigned counsel system,” noting the lack California v. Ramos, 463 U.S. 992, 1014 (1983). See, e.g., Oregon v. Hass, 420 U.S. 714, 719 (1975); Cooper v. California, 386 U.S. 58, 62 (1967); O’Connor v. Johnson, 287 N.W.2d 400, 405 (Minn. 1979) (“The states may, as the United States Supreme Court has often recognized, afford their citizens greater protection than the safeguards guaranteed in the Federal Constitution. Indeed, the states are ‘independently responsible for safeguarding the rights of their citizens.’”); South Dakota v. Opperman, 247 N.W.2d 673, 674 (S.D. 1976) (“There can be no doubt that this court has the power to provide an individual with greater protection under the state constitution than does the United States Supreme Court under the federal constitution.”). 25 Murray v. Giarratano, 492 U.S. 1, 10 (1989); Pennsylvania v. Finley, 481 U.S. 551, 555-57 (1987); Ross v. Moffitt, 417 U.S. 600, 610-12, 617-18 (1974). 26 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 2129 (2018); Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 69. 27 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 22, §§ 4005(2), 4052(3)(H) (2018) (child protection proceedings); ME. REV. STAT. ANN. tit. 34-B, § 3864(1)(D),(5)(D) (2018) (involuntary commitment/treatment hearings). There are a number of other civil proceedings in which Maine allows, but does not require, courts to appoint counsel at public expense. See, e.g., Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 2138(3) (2018) (indigent petitioners in post-judgment of conviction motions for DNA testing); Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 2183(2) (2018) (indigent victims of identity theft seeking a factual determination of innocence and to correct court records); Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 22, § 4005(1)(F) (2018) (children in child protection proceedings); Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 3506-A(3) (2018) (children in petitions for emancipation). 28 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, §§ 1801, 1804(3)(A) (2018). 29 Judicial Council of Maine, The Report of the Judicial Council to the 103rd Legislature on the Subject of Defense Systems for Indigent Persons Accused of Criminal Offenses 3-6 (1967), available at http://lldc.mainelegislature.org/Open/Rpts/kf9646_z99m22_1967.pdf. 24 9 10 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine of uniformity between counties based on disparate funding levels,30 and in 1967, the council recommended to the legislature that all indigent defense funding should come from the state.31 In 1971, the Institute of Judicial Administration reviewed limited court data and concluded that, although the data could not determine conclusively that the assigned counsel system was defective, “neither do they justify much confidence that the assigned counsel system is working well.”32 Study after study questioned the manner in which Maine administered the right to counsel.33 Despite these concerns, the State of Maine did not take over 100% responsibility for funding indigent legal services until 1976.34 Even then, the provision of attorneys to represent the indigent remained a court function, with judges maintaining lists of private attorneys willing to take cases and individually appointing lawyers to cases. Through legislation enacted in 2009, the legislature created the Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services (MCILS) and commanded that it: “provide efficient, high-quality representation to indigent criminal defendants, juvenile defendants and children and parents in child protective cases, consistent with federal and state constitutional and statutory obligations”; “ensure the delivery of indigent legal services by qualified and competent counsel in a manner that is fair and consistent throughout the State”; and “ensure adequate funding of a statewide system of indigent legal services, which must be provided and managed in a fiscally responsible manner, free from undue political interference and conflicts of interest.”35 MCILS is required to promulgate standards for: eligibility for indigent legal services; attorney qualifications, experience, and training; attorney caseloads; attorney evaluations; conflicts of interests; See Institute of Judicial Administration, The Supreme Judicial Court and the Superior Court of State of Maine 57-58 (1971). 31 Judicial Council of Maine, The Report of the Judicial Council to the 103rd Legislature on the Subject of Defense Systems for Indigent Persons Accused of Criminal Offenses 15 (1967). 32 Institute of Judicial Administration, The Supreme Judicial Court and the Superior Court of the State of Maine 57-58 (1971). 33 See, e.g., Indigent Legal Services Comm’n, Report of the Indigent Legal Services Commission 4 & n.5 (2009), available at https://www.courts.maine.gov/reports_pubs/reports/pdf/Report%20of%20 ILSC%202009%20(2-13-09).pdf. 34 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 22 (2018) (“Beginning with the fiscal year commencing July 1, 1976, the Legislature shall appropriate funds for the expenses of the Judicial Department.”); Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 810 (2018) (courts to compensate appointed defense counsel). State funding of indigent defense services has proven, across the nation, to be the most stable for two principle reasons. First, local governments have significant revenue-raising restrictions placed on them by the state while generally being statutorily prohibited from deficit spending. Second, the jurisdictions that are often most in need of indigent defense services are the ones that are least likely to be able to afford it. That is, the factors that cause property values to be low and limit a local government’s revenues – such as high unemployment, high poverty rates, limited household incomes, and limited education, etc. – are often the exact same circumstances that lead to an increased need for right to counsel services. In high poverty areas, a larger percentage of people accused of crime will be indigent and qualify for public defense services. Further, the counties with high levels of poverty have to spend more on other social services, such as uninsured medical treatment or housing assistance, leaving less money available for protecting people’s rights under the Sixth Amendment. 35 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1801 (2018). 30 the I. Introduction reimbursement of expenses; and all “[o]ther standards considered necessary and appropriate to ensure the delivery of adequate indigent legal services.”36 The current study In 2017, the Maine legislature created the Working Group to Improve the Provision of Indigent Legal Services and charged it to “develop recommendations to improve the delivery of indigent legal services to those eligible to receive such services.”37 In December 2017, the Working Group final report found, among other items, that Sample counties selected for statewide study MCILS “does not have systemic oversight and evaluation of attorneys” and is in need of stronger fiscal management.38 Among its recommendations, the Working Group advocated for “an outside, independent, nonpartisan study of Maine’s current system of providing indigent legal services” to determine if alternative methods of delivery would “increase quality and efficiency.”39 In March 2018, the Maine Legislative Council contracted the Sixth Amendment Center (6AC)40 to evaluate right to counsel services provided by MCILS and to recommend any needed changes. Limitations of time and resources prevent most indigent defense evaluations from considering every court, public defense system, and service provider in a given state, and so this study looks closely at a representative segment of services throughout Maine. On June 19, 2018, the Joint Legislative Judiciary Committee selected the following counties as a representative sample of Maine’s diversity in population size, geographic location, and methods of providing indigent legal representation: Androscoggin, Aroostook, Cumberland, Somerset, and York. The Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1804 (2018). An Act Making Unified Appropriations, 2017 Me. Acts ch. 284 at 701-03, § UUUU-17, available at https://mainelegislature.org/legis/bills/getPDF.asp?paper=HP0281&item=57&snum=128. 38 State of Maine, 128th Legislature, Working Group to Improve the Provision of Indigent Legal Services, Report 1 (2017), available at http://legislature.maine.gov/doc/2013. 39 State of Maine, 128th Legislature, Working Group to Improve the Provision of Indigent Legal Services, Report 14 (2017), available at http://legislature.maine.gov/doc/2013. 40 The 6AC is a non-partisan, non-profit organization that objectively evaluates public defense systems using Sixth Amendment case law and national standards for right to counsel services as the uniform baseline measure for providing attorneys to indigent people, along with the requirements of local and federal laws. See 6AC & Our Work, Sixth Amendment Center, http://sixthamendment.org/about-us/. 36 37 11 12 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine 6AC’s work on site in these sample counties began in August 2018 and concluded in January 2019. Methodology The 6AC’s assessment of public defense services in Maine has been carried out through three basic components. Data collection. Information about how a jurisdiction provides right to counsel services exists in a variety of forms, from statistical information to policies and procedures. 6AC obtained and analyzed relevant hard copy and electronic information at both the local and state levels. Court observations. Right to counsel services in each jurisdiction involve interactions among at least three critical processes: (1) the process individual defendants experience as their cases advance from arrest or summons through disposition; (ii) the process the defense attorney experiences while representing each individual at the various stages of a case; and (iii) the substantive laws and procedural rules that govern the justice system in which public representation is provided. Throughout the sample counties, the 6AC conducted courtroom observations in the trial courts to clarify these processes.41 Interviews. No individual component of the criminal justice system operates in a vacuum. Rather, the policy decisions of one component necessarily affect another. Because of this, the 6AC conducted interviews with a broad cross-section of stakeholder groups before, during, and after site visits to the various counties.42 In addition to speaking with public defense attorneys, the 6AC interviewed judges, prosecutors, court clerks & administrators, and law enforcement & jail administrators, among others, and also interviewed members of the MCILS and staff. Assessment criteria The criteria used to assess the effectiveness of Maine’s indigent legal services system and attorneys come principally from two U.S. Supreme Court cases, decided on the same day: United States v. Cronic43 and Strickland v. Washington.44 Strickland is used after a criminal case is final to determine retrospectively whether the lawyer provided effective assistance of counsel; it sets out the two-pronged test of whether the appointed lawyer’s actions were unreasonable and prejudiced the outcome of the case. Cronic explains that, if certain systemic factors are present (or necessary factors are absent) at the outset of the case, then a court should presume that ineffective assistance of counsel will occur. The 6AC conducted observations in ten courtrooms across the five sample counties. The 6AC interviewed 83 individuals, many on more than one occasion. Some interviews were conducted in person and others by telephone before or after the site visit. 43 466 U.S. 648 (1984). 44 466 U.S. 668 (1984). 41 42 The U.S. Supreme Court says: “While a criminal trial is not a game in which the participants are expected to enter the ring with a near match in skills, neither is it a sacrifice of unarmed prisoners to gladiators.” Unfortunately, where systems fail, it leaves the fundamental fairness of criminal and delinquency court proceedings in doubt. How can you tell if it’s a fair fight? NO Are defendants denied access to counsel entirely? Are defendants subjected to subtle or direct pressure to waive the right to counsel? NO I YES YES PREJUDICE PRESUMED YES ·► Burden of proof is on the state to show that ACTUAL or CONTRUCTIVE denial—whether by financial disincentive, inadequate time, government interference, etc.—did not impact the defendant’s right to have the government’s case subjected to the “crucible of adversarial testing.” Are appointed attorneys absent at critical stages of the indigent defendants’ case? NO Apply Cronic Standard Does the system allow the trial court to have excessive or inappropriate authority over the selection, compensation, or termination of appointed counsel? YES ◄- YES Does the system allow the appointed attorney to represent a defendant, when the attorney or his law office previously or currently represents an individual whose interests are adverse to the new defendant’s case, without both clients waiving that conflict where allowed? -- YES 7 NO Does the system allow the appointed attorney to handle a limitless number of cases at the same time OR proceed without sufficient time to adequately prepare for and zealously advocate on behalf of every client? YES NO YES _J ... NO ···► Does the system allow any branch of state or local government to have excessive or inappropriate authority over the selection, compensation, or termination of appointed counsel? Does the system allow the method of compensation to place the appointed attorney’s personal financial interests in conflict with one or more of his clients’ case-related interests? NO Apply strickland Standard appeal rejected ◄---- NO ◄---- - ---------------------------------- - ----------- Did appointed counsel's performance fall below an objective standard of reasonableness? Successful I.A.C. Claim YES NO How Can You Tell if it’s a Fair Fight? Sixth Amendment Center © 2016 Did appointed counsel's performance give rise to areasonable probability that, if counsel had performed adequately, the result would have been different? YES _J NO 14 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine Understanding Cronic through the American Bar Association’s Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System Adopted by the ABA House of Delegates in 2002, the ABA Ten Principles a are self-described as constituting “the fundamental criteria necessary to design a system that provides effective, efficient, high quality, ethical, conflict-free legal representation for criminal defendants who are unable to afford an attorney.” The Ten Principles include the markers of a Cronic analysis: independence of the defense function (Principle 1); effective representation by counsel at all critical stages (Principles 3 and 7); sufficiency of time and resources (Principles 4, 5, and 8); and qualifications, supervision, and training of attorneys (Principles 6, 9, and 10). American Bar Ass’n, ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System (2002), available at https://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/administrative/legal_aid_indigent_defendants/ ls_sclaid_def_tenprinciplesbooklet.authcheckdam.pdf. a. Hallmarks of a structurally sound indigent defense system under Cronic – as will be discussed in subsequent chapters – include the early appointment of qualified and trained attorneys with sufficient time to provide effective representation under independent supervision. The absence of any of these factors can show that a system is presumptively providing ineffective assistance of counsel. U.S. Department of Justice application of assessment criteria The United States Department of Justice (DOJ) urges this application of Cronic. On September 25, 2014, the DOJ filed a Statement of Interest45 in a class action lawsuit, Hurrell-Harring v. New York, brought by the New York Civil Liberties Union alleging a systemic denial of counsel in five upstate New York counties.46 The Statement of Interest provides DOJ’s expertise to the court on what constitutes a “constructive” denial of counsel under the Sixth Amendment. In short, the DOJ statement establishes that a court does not have to wait for a case to be disposed of and then try to unravel retrospectively whether a specific defendant’s representation met the aims of Gideon and its progeny. If it is shown at the outset of a case that state or local governments create structural impediments that make the appointment of counsel “superficial” to the point of “non-representation,” a court can step in and presume prospectively that Statement of Interest of the United States, Hurrell-Harring v. New York, No. 8866-07 (N.Y. Sup. Ct., filed Sept. 1, 2014), available at https://www.clearinghouse.net/chDocs/public/PD-NY-0002-0010. pdf. 46 In March 2015, the case settled on the eve of trial with the State of New York agreeing to pay 100% of all indigent defense costs in the counties that were named defendants. Stipulation and Order of Settlement, Hurrell-Harring v. New York, No. 8866-07 (N.Y. Sup. Ct., filed Oct. 21, 2014). The state agreed to pay $5.5 million in attorneys’ fees and costs to the NYCLU and the law firm representing the plaintiffs. The lawsuit settlement has sparked greater advocacy for the state to pick up 100% of all indigent defense costs in the remaining upstate counties. 45 I. Introduction the representation is ineffective. The types of government interference enunciated in the DOJ Statement of Interest include (but most assuredly are not limited to): “a severe lack of resources,” “unreasonably high caseloads,” “critical understaffing of public defender offices,” and/or anything else making the “traditional markers of representation” go unmet (i.e., “timely and confidential consultation with clients,” “appropriate investigations,” and adversarial representation, among others).47 In another Statement of Interest48 filed August 14, 2013, in Wilbur v. City of Mount Vernon, the DOJ comments specifically on the issue of public defense attorneys having sufficient time to provide adequate representation. At the heart of the Wilbur case was the issue of how excessive caseloads of public defense attorneys resulted in deficient representation under the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.49 At the A trial court denied a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, but an intermediate court granted the dismissal. In 2010, the New York Court of Appeals reinstated the lawsuit. (Hurrell-Harring v. New York, 930 N.E.2d 217 (N.Y. 2010). The court found that the complaint alleged claims of both outright denial of the right to counsel and constructive denial of counsel where attorneys were appointed in name only but were unavailable to assist their clients, thus “stat[ing] cognizable Sixth Amendment claims.” “These allegations state a claim, not for ineffective assistance under Strickland, but for basic denial of the right to counsel under Gideon.” Quoting Strickland, the Court went on to note that “’[i]n certain Sixth Amendment contexts, prejudice is presumed. Actual or constructive denial of the assistance of counsel altogether is legally presumed to result in prejudice.’” The Court held that the allegations contained in the class action lawsuit “state claims falling precisely within this described category. . . . Given the simplicity and autonomy of a claim for non-representation, as opposed to one truly involving the adequacy of an attorney’s performance, there is no reason . . . why such a claim cannot or should not be brought without the context of a completed prosecution.” Further, the court observed: “the right that plaintiffs would enforce – that of a poor person accused of a crime to have counsel provided for his or her defense – is the very same right that Gideon has already commanded the States to honor as a matter of fundamental constitutional necessity. There is no argument that what was justiciable in Gideon is now beyond the power of a court to decide.” Hurrell-Harring, 930 N.E.2d, at 227. After seven years of litigation, the lawsuit settled by agreement in October 2014 and was approved by the trial court on March 11, 2015 (Stipulation and Order of Settlement, Hurrell-Harring v. New York, 930 N.E.2d 217 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2010) (No 8866-07)). Under the settlement, the state was required to: (1) pay 100% of the cost in the five named counties: (2) ensure that all indigent defendants are represented by counsel at their arraignment; (3) establish and implement caseload standards for all attorneys; and (4) assure the availability of adequate support services and resources. 48 Statement of Interest of the United States, Wilbur v. City of Mount Vernon, No. C11-1100RSL (W.D. Wash., filed Aug. 14, 2013), available at http://www.justice.gov/crt/about/spl/documents/ wilbursoi8-14-13.pdf. 49 “The notes of freedom and liberty that emerged from Gideon’s trumpet a half a century ago cannot survive if that trumpet is muted and dented by harsh fiscal measures that reduce the promise to a hollow shell of a hallowed right.” Wilbur v. City of Mount Vernon, 989 F. Supp. 2d 1122 (W.D. Wash. 2013). Thus concluded U.S. District Judge Robert Lasnik in the court’s decision granting injunctive relief against the Washington cities of Mount Vernon and Burlington for “regularly and systematically” providing deficient right to counsel services to the indigent accused. Announcing that “adversarial testing of the government’s case” was so infrequent as to be a “non-factor in the functioning of the Cities’ criminal justice system,” the court found the appointment of counsel in Mount Vernon and Burlington to be “little more than a formality,” resulting in plea bargains having almost nothing to do with the individualized nature of each case. Importantly, the court found the cities culpable because this 47 15 16 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine time the original complaint was filed in 2011, the cities of Mt. Vernon and Burlington, Washington, jointly contracted with two private attorneys to represent indigent defendants in their municipal courts, as they had done “for nearly a decade.” Under the contract, the two attorneys served together as “the public defender” and were paid a flat annual fee out of which they had to provide all “investigative, paralegal, and clerical services” without any additional compensation. In other words, the more work and non-attorney support they dedicated to their clients’ cases, the less each attorney’s take-home pay. And each contracting attorney handled between 950 and 1,150 appointed cases each year, in addition to maintaining a healthy private practice on the side. With such heavy caseloads, the contract defenders were alleged to “regularly fail to return calls” or “meet with” or “interview” their clients and “rarely, if ever, investigate the charges made against” their clients. And the cities’ failure to adequately “monitor and oversee” the system they operated by way of the contract amounted to a “construct[ive] denial of the right to counsel” as guaranteed under Gideon.50 The DOJ has twice filed amicus briefs furthering their position on constructive denial of counsel. Most recently, on May 12, 2016, DOJ filed an amicus brief51 in the Supreme Court of Idaho in Tucker v. Idaho, in which the ACLU of Idaho alleges systemic denial of counsel for the indigent accused. As in Hurrell-Harring, the DOJ states in Tucker that a “constructive denial of counsel violating Gideon occurs where the traditional markers of representation are frequently absent or significantly compromised as a result of systemic, structural limitations.”52 On September 11, lack of adversarial testing of the prosecution’s cases was “natural, foreseeable, and expected,” given the deficient structure of indigent defense services. 50 Pointing to the ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System, the DOJ urged the court to consider that every jurisdiction should have caseload controls, but that: caseload limits alone cannot keep public defenders from being overworked into ineffectiveness; two additional protections are required. First, a public defender must have the authority to decline appointments over the caseload limit. Second, caseload limits are no replacement of a careful analysis of a public defender’s workload, a concept that takes into account all of the factors affecting a public defender’s ability to adequately represent clients, such as the complexity of cases on a defender’s docket, the defender’s skill and experience, the support services available to the defender, and the defender’s other duties. Statement of Interest of the United States at 9, Wilbur v. City of Mount Vernon, No. C11-1100RSL (W.D. Wash., filed Aug. 14, 2013). 51 Brief for the United States as Amicus Curiae Supporting Plaintiffs-Appellants, Tucker v. Idaho, No. 43922-2016 (Idaho, filed May 11, 2016), available at https://www.justice.gov/crt/file/851311/download. 52 On April 28, 2017, the Idaho Supreme Court found that indigent defendants “suffered ascertainable injuries by being actually and constructively denied counsel at critical stages of the prosecution, which they allege are the result of deficiencies in Idaho’s public defense system.” (Tucker v. Idaho, No. 43922 at 18.) The alleged injuries are “fairly traceable” to the state and the public defense commission, since the state “has ultimate responsibility to ensure that the public defense system passes constitutional muster.”( Tucker v. Idaho, No. 43922 at 9.) Importantly, the court explained that the two-pronged ineffective assistance of counsel test of Strickland “is inapplicable when systemic deficiencies in the provision of public defense are at issue. The issues raised in this case do not implicate Strickland.” (Tucker v. Idaho, No. 43922. at 7.) Instead, the court held the appropriate standard is that of United States v. Cronic: “[a] criminal defendant who is entitled to counsel but goes unrepresented at a critical I. Introduction 2015, the DOJ filed an amicus brief53 in Kuren v. Luzerne County at the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. The Kuren class action lawsuit alleges that the county so poorly funded right to counsel services as to constructively deny counsel to the indigent accused. The DOJ amicus brief makes clear that a civil constructive denial of counsel claim is an “effective way for litigants to seek to effectuate the promise of Gideon,” and “[p]ost-conviction claims cannot provide systemic structural relief that will help fix the problem of under-funded and under-resourced public defenders.”54 The DOJ has also made clear that its Cronic analysis applies equally to juvenile delinquency proceedings, through its Statement of Interest55 in N.P. v. Georgia, filed March 13, 2015. The Southern Center for Human Rights filed the class action lawsuit alleging that children were regularly denied their right to counsel and instead treated to “assembly-line justice” in the Cordele Judicial Circuit. According to lawsuit’s allegations, children regularly appeared in court without lawyers, and those who did receive representation were assigned lawyers who did not have time to talk with them before court. The suit claimed that the Cordele Circuit Public Defender Office was structurally unable to provide meaningful representation due to chronic underfunding and understaffing. The DOJ statement provides the trial court with a Cronic framework to evaluate the claims.56 stage of prosecution suffers an actual denial of counsel and is entitled to a presumption of prejudice.” Tucker v. Idaho, No. 43922, at 7). 53 Brief for the United States as Amicus Curiae in Support of Appellants, Kuren v. Luzerne County, Nos. 57 MAP 2015 (Pa., filed Sept. 10, 2015), available at https://www.justice.gov/opa/file/769806/ download. 54 In 2016, Pennsylvania’s high court ruled that indigent defendants have the right to prospectively challenge “systemic violations of the right to counsel due to underfunding, and to seek and obtain an injunction forcing a county to provide adequate funding to a public defender’s office,” at the outset of a case before having to suffer from denial of counsel. (Kuren v. Luzerne County, 146 A.3d 715, at 718.) The court said it was “obvious” that “the mere existence of a public defender’s office and the assignment of attorneys by that office” was not sufficient to satisfy the right to counsel, because “[i]t is the defense itself, not the lawyers as such, that animates Gideon’s mandate.” Kuren v. Luzerne County, 146 A.3d 715,. at 735.) If the appointed lawyers cannot provide a defense, “the promise of the Sixth Amendment is broken.” The court observed that “Strickland does not limit claims asserting Sixth Amendment violations to the post-conviction context,” and it found that the Strickland test of ineffective assistance of counsel should be used by courts in evaluating post-conviction claims, but that “[a]pplying the Strickland test to the category of claims at bar would be illogical.” (Kuren v. Luzerne County, 146 A.3d 715, at 746). 55 Statement of Interest of the United States, N.P. v. Georgia, No. 2014-CV-241025 (Ga. Super. Ct., filed Mar. 13, 2015), available at http://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/opa/press-releases/ attachments/2015/03/13/np_v_state_of_georgia_usa_statement_of_interest.pdf. 56 A month after the DOJ filed its statement of interest, on April 20, 2015 the defendants in the class action lawsuit – the Georgia Public Defender Standards Council, the Cordele Circuit Public Defender, and the four counties in the circuit – agreed to settle the matter. Consent Decree, N.P. v. Georgia, No. 2014-CV-241025 (Ga. Super. Ct., filed Apr. 20, 2015). The approved consent decree seeks to address a number of structural flaws. Specifically, it will: increase the size of the public defender’s office staff; require public defenders to meet with clients (a) within three days of their detainment to determine indigency, and (b) within three days of assignment to their case; and require defenders to receive training, including specific training for juvenile defenders. The consent decree requires public defenders 17 18 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine Finally, the DOJ has taken action to enforce the four main principles enumerated in Cronic. On April 26, 2012, the DOJ Civil Rights Division delivered a report, Investigation of the Shelby County Juvenile Court,57 to officials in Shelby County (Memphis), Tennessee, stating that the juvenile court of Memphis and Shelby County (JCMSC) “fails to ensure due process for all children appearing for delinquency proceedings” in direct violation of the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in In re Gault.58 An agreement was reached requiring the county and JCMSC to ensure, among other things, that “juvenile defenders have appropriate administrative support, reasonable workloads, and sufficient resources to provide independent, ethical, and zealous representation to children in delinquency matters” at “all stages of the juvenile delinquency case, including pre-adjudicatory investigation, litigation, dispositional advocacy, and post-dispositional advocacy,” for as long as a case is active.59 The agreement additionally requires “the promulgation and adoption of attorney practice standards” and the “supervision and evaluation” of defense attorneys “against such practice standards.” Maine’s criminal justice system Indigent legal services are one component of the broader justice system. The system that provides representation to the indigent has no control over the number or type of cases it is required to handle each year; those decisions are made by law enforcement officers as they make arrests and by prosecutors as they institute cases. The right to counsel is carried out most visibly in the courts. Because the indigent legal system is intertwined with these other components of the criminal justice system, this section describes Maine’s law enforcement, prosecution, and trial courts. Throughout the balance of this report, a detailed description of Aroostook County serves as an example of how criminal justice is administered locally throughout Maine. These bulleted sections are set apart from the body of the report. Aroostook County is chosen as the example because its dispersed population across a larger geographic area relative to other Maine counties and its unique court structure present some issues not present in the other sample counties.60 to advise juvenile defendants seeking to waive their right to counsel what a lawyer could do for them and also requires the public defender office to comply with the terms of the Georgia Indigent Defense Act of 2003 including by creating a specialized juvenile division. 57 United States Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division, Investigation of Shelby County Juvenile Court (Apr. 26, 2012), available at http://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/crt/ legacy/2012/04/26/shelbycountyjuv_findingsrpt_4-26-12.pdf. 58 387 U.S. 1 (1967). 59 United States Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division, Memorandum of Agreement Regarding the Juvenile Court of Memphis and Shelby County (Dec. 17, 2012), available at http:// sixthamendment.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/DOJ-ShelbyAgreement.pdf. 60 Quick Facts: Aroostook County, Maine, U.S. Census Bureau (July 1, 2017). Aroostook County is the geographically largest county east of the Mississippi, covering more square miles than Connecticut I. Introduction 19 AROOSTOOK COUNTY court and detention facility locations, and distances between Madawaska Fort Kent Madawaska Madawaska District Court Fort Kent Fort Kent District Court Caribou Aroostook County Superior Court, Caribou Caribou District Court District Attorney's Office, Caribou Presque Isle Presque Isle District Court District Attorney's Office, Presque Isle 44 46 Caribou AROOSTOOK 13 Presque Isle 41 Houlton Houlton Aroostook County Superior Court, Houlton Houlton District Court District Attorney's Office, Presque Isle Aroostook County Jail Law enforcement Various law enforcement organizations and state agencies61 may refer criminal cases to district attorneys for prosecution across the state. Generally, state police, county sheriff departments, and municipal police departments62 are the primary law enforcement and Rhode Island combined. It has 6,671 square miles with a population of 67,653; approximately 10.8 people per square mile. The county seat is Houlton, where only approximately 8.59% of the population lives (pop. 5.813). A greater percentage of the county’s population lives in two other municipalities: Caribou (pop. 7,684) and Presque Isle (pop. 9,078). There are two other less populated centers in the far north: Madawaska (pop. 4,035) and Fort Kent (pop. 4,097). Aroostook County’s population is 94.1% white and 2% Native American. Only 18.1% of the population has a college degree or higher. The median household income is $38,087, with 16.3% of the population living in poverty. 61 The following state agencies may refer criminal cases: Maine Department of Corrections, Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife, Maine Marine Patrol, Maine State Police, Maine Bureau of Capitol Police, Maine Drug Enforcement Agency, Maine Forest Services, Office of the Maine Attorney General Investigations Division, and Maine Campus Police (University of Maine – Orono; University of Southern Maine; University of Maine – Farmington). 2008 Census of State and Local Law Enforcement Agencies, U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, available at https://www.bjs.gov/index. cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=2216 (last visited Nov. 13, 2018). 62 There are 112 municipalities that fund local police departments in Maine. 2008 Census of State and Local Law Enforcement Agencies, U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, available at https://www.bjs.gov/ 20 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine agencies in Maine. Each county has a sheriff’s office that carries out both a police function and a detention function.63 The counties pay for the sheriff’s police function, and the state pays for the sheriff’s detention function. • In Aroostook County, nine towns have local police departments that may refer cases to the district attorney.64 The Aroostook County Sheriff polices everywhere outside of these municipalities,65 except the State Police oversee state highways. Arrests in Aroostook County can also be made by the Maine Warden Services (fisheries and wildlife offenses) and the Maine Forest Rangers (offenses within Maine State Parks).66 Prosecution Maine has eight elected district attorneys,67 each elected to a four-year term of office. Three are elected from single county districts (Aroostook, Cumberland, and York), and five are elected from multi-county districts (District 3: Androscoggin, Franklin, and Oxford; District 4: Kennebec and Somerset; District 5: Penobscot and Piscataquis; District 6: Know, Lincoln, Sagadahoc, and Waldo; and District 7: Hancock and Washington).68 The state funds salaries of district attorneys and assistant district attorneys,69 and the counties pay for support staff and overhead (office space, utilities, etc.).70 District attorneys and assistant district attorneys may not engage in private practice.71 • The Aroostook County District Attorney has offices in three locations (Caribou, Houlton, and Presque Isle), with the principal office in Caribou.72 There are index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=2216 (last visited Nov. 13, 2018). 63 The sheriff in each county is elected to a four-year term. Me. Const. art IX, § 10. 64 These towns are Ashland, Caribou, Fort Fairfield, Fort Kent, Houlton, Limestone, Presque Isle, Van Buren, and Washburn. 65 The law enforcement budget for the Aroostook County Sheriff in FY 2017 was $1,530,034. See County of Aroostook, 2018 County Budget at 25, available at https://www.aroostook.me.us/ images/2018_County_Budget.pdf. 66 Although the Warden Services and Forest Rangers have the authority to arrest, it is rare for them to do so and most offenses are dealt with through a summons. 67 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 30-A, § 254 (2018). 68 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 30-A, § 254 (2018). 69 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 30-A, § 256 (2018). 70 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 30-A, § 281 (2018). 71 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 30-A, § 256(2) (2018). 72 The Caribou office also oversees prosecutions in Fort Kent and Madawaska. The county’s costs for the Aroostook County district attorney in FY 2017 were $470,796. County of Aroostook 2018 County Budget at 7 (2018), available at https://www.aroostook.me.us/images/2018_County_Budget.pdf. State costs for the Aroostook County district attorney office in FY 2017 were $776,917.50. Email from Mark A. Toulouse, Division Chief – Finance & Administrative Services Office of the Attorney General State of Maine, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 12, 2019). Therefore, in FY 2017 the combined state and local budget for the I. Introduction 21 two assistant district attorneys in each office, and the assistant district attorneys reportedly have “significant discretion” in the handling of their cases. Trial courts Maine has two types of trial courts with criminal jurisdiction: superior court and district court.73 The Maine Rules of Unified Criminal Procedure implement a “unified criminal docket,”74 allowing all criminal proceedings to be heard by any superior court justice or district court judge at a courthouse located in the county where the criminal conduct occurred,75 maximizing access to courts to speed the resolution of cases. Justices and judges of each court can sit on the other court as assigned by the chief justice.76 The unified court docket for criminal proceedings was implemented in all counties as of July 1, 2015.77 Jurisdiction over and responsibility for civil proceedings continues to be divided between the superior court and the district court.78 Maine has a single superior court made up of 17 justices (plus seven active retired justices) who each have exactly the same authority and can sit anywhere in the state.79 There is one superior court courthouse in each county, except for in Aroostook County which has two (in Houlton and in Caribou), for a total of 17 superior court courthouses.80 The chief justice of the superior court determines when the grand jury is convened.81 Aroostook County District Attorney office was $1,247,713.50. 73 Probate courts are not addressed in this report because they do not have criminal jurisdiction. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 251 (2018); Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 18-C, §§ 1-201(8), 1-302 (eff. July 1, 2019; Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 18-A, §§ 1-2-1(5), 1-302 in effect until July 1, 2019). 74 Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 57(i). 75 Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 57(d); Establishment of Judicial Regions, Me. Admin. Order JB-08-1 (eff. July 1, 2008). This unified procedure eliminated what had been a two-tiered system for criminal cases, with the superior court having in the past handled all felonies & jury trials and the district court having been limited to misdemeanors & non-jury trials. The two trial courts also had separate docketing systems, which had caused some cases to be separately docketed with different numbers in different courts, creating duplication of effort for court clerks. 76 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, §§ 121, 157-C (2018); Authority of Judges/Justices to Sit in Either District or Superior Court, Me. Admin. Order JB-07-3 (eff. Nov. 1, 2007). 77 Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 1(e). 78 Me. R. Civ. Proc. 1; Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 1(b). 79 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, §§ 101, 148 (2018). An active retired superior court justice may also be assigned to sit in the superior court. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, §§ 101, 104 (2018). See Superior Court Justices, State of Me. Jud. Branch, https://www.courts.maine.gov/maine_courts/superior/justices. shtml. 80 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 115 (2018). See Superior Courthouse Directory, State of Me. Jud. Branch, https://www.courts.maine.gov/maine_courts/superior/directory.shtml. 81 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 110 (2018). 22 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine Maine has a single district court made up of 39 judges (plus 11 active retired judges)82 located in 29 courthouses across the state.83 District court judges must be lawyers and are appointed by the governor with consent of the joint standing committee of the judiciary.84 The district court hears juvenile cases, including juvenile crimes.85 The district court includes a specialized family division, with eight family law magistrates (plus one active retired magistrate),86 that hears all family law cases including child protection proceedings and termination of parental rights.87 • The courts in Aroostook are greater in number and farther apart geographically than in the other sample counties.88 There are seven courthouses in Aroostook County.89 One active retired superior court justice and one active retired district Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 151 (2018). See District Court Judges, State of Me. Jud. Branch, https://www.courts.maine.gov/maine_courts/district/judges.shtml. 83 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, §§ 115, 153, 154, 162 (2018). See District Courthouse Directory, State of Me. Jud. Branch, https://www.courts.maine.gov/maine_courts/district/directory.shtml. 84 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 157 (2018). Any judge who has retired from a district court may be appointed by the governor, with consent of the joint standing committee of the judiciary, to serve as an active retired judge to hear cases as appointed by the chief judge of the district court. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 157(b) (2018). 85 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 165(2) (2018); Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 3101 (2018). A juvenile is any person less than 18 years of age. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 3003(14) (2018). A juvenile crime is committed by a person less than 18 years of age, including: conduct that would be a crime if committed by an adult – what other states often call juvenile delinquency; and certain conduct that is generally legal but illegal for persons under a certain age – what other states often call juvenile status offenses. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, §§ 3003(16), 3103, 3103-A (2018); Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 17-A, § 4-A(2-A),(3) (2018). 86 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4 ,§ 183(1) (2018). See Family Law Magistrates, State of Me. Jud. Branch, https://www.courts.maine.gov/maine_courts/family/magistrates.html. 87 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, §§ 152, 183 (2018). 88 Androscoggin County has one superior court located in Auburn and one district court located in Lewiston. The courts are approximately a three-minute drive apart. Cumberland County has one superior court located in Portland and two district courts located one each in Portland and Bridgton. The courts in Portland are in the same building, and the court in Bridgton is a 70-minute drive away. The only criminal matters processed in the Bridgton District Court are initial appearances; any case that is not resolved at initial appearance is transferred to the Portland unified criminal docket and all further proceedings take place in the Portland courts. Somerset County has one superior court and one district court, both located in Skowhegan and within walking distance of each other. York County has one superior court located in Alfred and three district courts located one each in Biddeford, Springvale, and York. Of the district courts, Biddeford is the busiest and is located about 24 minutes east of Alfred. The Springvale courthouse is about 10 minutes west of Alfred. The York courthouse is a 35 to 40 drive south of Alfred. 89 Starting from the southernmost courts to those located the furthest north, the seven courts in Aroostook County are: two in Houlton (south): Aroostook County Superior Court – Houlton, and Houlton District Court; one in Presque Isle (central): Presque Isle District Court; two in Caribou (north): Aroostook County Superior Court – Caribou, and Caribou District Court; and two in Fort Kent and Madawaska (far north): Fort Kent District Court, and Madawaska District 82 I. Introduction 23 court judge preside as needed to cover vacations and/or active court dockets. Despite the unified criminal docket, the majority of criminal jury trials continue to be held in what traditionally were superior courts because those courthouses and courtrooms were built to accommodate juries and jury pools, while many of the district court buildings do not have the physical capacity. Effective January 15, 2016, the Supreme Judicial Court authorized the chiefs of the trial courts “to establish and, when approved, operate specialty dockets.”90 The use of specialty courts is limited in Maine, but there are two types of specialty courts in which indigent legal services are provided: drug courts,91 and veterans’ courts.92 • There are no specialty courts in Aroostook County. Court. Establishment and Administration of Specialty Dockets, Me. Admin. Order JB-16-1 (eff. Jan. 15, 2016). 91 The Portland District Court in Cumberland County runs the largest drug court in Maine, and there are smaller drug courts in Androscoggin County Superior Court, Hancock County Superior Court, Washington County’s Calais District Court and Machias District Court, and York County Superior Court. The Family Treatment Drug Court is a specialty docket that works with families whose children have been at risk of abuse or neglect due to parental substance use disorders. These court sessions are operated at the Maine District Courts in Augusta, Lewiston, and Bangor. 92 The Maine Co-Occurring Disorders and Veterans Court accepts adults with substance abuse disorders, mental illness, and serious criminal charges since 2005. Although located at the capital judicial center in Augusta, the court accepts referrals from throughout the state. 90 Chapter II ATTORNEY QUALIFICATIONS, TRAINING & SUPERVISION Every state in the nation must have a system for providing an attorney to represent an indigent defendant who is charged with a crime and facing the possible loss of their liberty, and attorneys provide representation to indigent people within the structures of the systems states create. In United States v. Cronic,93 the U.S. Supreme Court explains that deficiencies in these systems can make any lawyer – even the best attorney – perform in a non-adversarial way that results in a “constructive”94 denial of the right to counsel. The Cronic Court explains further that, when a lawyer provides representation within an indigent defense system that constructively denies the right to counsel, the lawyer is presumptively ineffective.95 The government bears the burden of overcoming that presumption. The government may argue that the defense lawyer in a specific case will not be ineffective despite the structural impediments in the system, but it is the government’s burden to prove this. As the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals noted over 30 years ago in Wahlberg v. Israel,96 “if the state is not a passive spectator of an inept defense, but a cause of the inept defense, the burden of showing prejudice [under Strickland] is lifted. It is not right that the state should be able to say, ‘sure we impeded your defense – now prove it made a difference.’”97 In Cronic,98 the U.S. Supreme Court pointed to the deficient representation received by the defendants known as the “Scottsboro Boys,” in Powell v. Alabama,99 as representative of the constructive denial of the right to counsel.100 The trial judge 466 U.S. 648 (1984). Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 683 (1984) (“The Court has considered Sixth Amendment claims based on actual or constructive denial of the assistance of counsel altogether, as well as claims based on state interference with the ability of counsel to render effective assistance to the accused.”) (citing United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648 (1984)). 95 United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 657-62 (1984). 96 766 F.2d 1071 (7th Cir. 1985). 97 Wahlberg v. Israel, 766 F.2d 1071, 1076 (7th Cir. 1985). 98 466 U.S. 648 (1984). 99 287 U.S. 45 (1932). 100 United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 659-60 (1984) (“[I]f counsel entirely fails to subject the prosecution’s case to meaningful adversarial testing, then there has been a denial of Sixth Amendment rights that makes the adversary process itself presumptively unreliable. . . . Circumstances of that magnitude may be present on some occasions when, although counsel is available to assist the accused during trial, the likelihood that any lawyer, even a fully competent one, could provide effective assistance is so small that a presumption of prejudice is appropriate without inquiry into the actual conduct of the trial. Powell v. Alabama, 287 U.S. 45 (1932), was such a case.”). 93 94 II. ATTORNEY QUALIFICATIONS, TRAINING & SUPERVISION overseeing the Scottsboro Boys’ Alabama trial appointed a real estate lawyer from Chattanooga, Tennessee, who was not licensed in Alabama and was admittedly unfamiliar with the state’s rules of criminal procedure.101 The Powell Court concluded that defendants require the “guiding hand” of counsel;102 that is, the attorneys a state provides to represent indigent defendants must be qualified and trained to help those defendants advocate for their stated legal interests. This report is concerned principally with the right to counsel that is mandated by the Sixth Amendment, as it is provided to adults at the trial level in Maine; that is, representation provided to indigent adults who face the possible loss of their liberty as punishment for a crime. Throughout Maine under the indigent legal system administered by the MCILS, many of the same attorneys provide all indigent legal representation – both that required under the federal constitution and that required or allowed under Maine law though not mandated by the Sixth Amendment. This means that attorneys are appointed to represent adults and children in a variety of case types, at both trial and appeal, and must be competent not only in criminal and delinquency law but also in a broad range of civil law areas. Finding 1: MCILS attorney qualification standards are too lenient, resulting in an excessive number of attorneys on panels, and there are no attorney recertification requirements. MCILS has only limited new attorney training and lacks requirements that ongoing attorney training relate to defense-specific subject areas. MCILS lacks appropriate supervision of attorneys. The first thing that must occur in a system to provide effective assistance of counsel is to select the attorneys who are available to provide that representation. National standards, as compiled in the ABA Ten Principles, require that, “[w]here the caseload is sufficiently high, the public defense delivery system consists of both a defender office and the active participation of the private bar.”103 A retired local attorney who had not practiced in years was also appointed to assist in the representation of all nine co-defendants. 102 Powell v. Alabama, 287 U.S. 45, 68-69 (1932). (“The right to be heard would be, in many cases, of little avail if it did not comprehend the right to be heard by counsel. Even the intelligent and educated layman has small and sometimes no skill in the science of law. If charged with crime, he is incapable, generally, of determining for himself whether the indictment is good or bad. He is unfamiliar with the rules of evidence. Left without the aid of counsel he may be put on trial without a proper charge, and convicted upon incompetent evidence, or evidence irrelevant to the issue or otherwise inadmissible. He lacks both the skill and knowledge adequately to prepare his defense, even though he may have a perfect one. He requires the guiding hand of counsel at every step in the proceedings against him. Without it, though he be not guilty, he faces the danger of conviction because he does not know how to establish his innocence.”). 103 American Bar Ass’n, ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System, Principle 2 (Feb. 2002). 101 25 26 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine Since its inception, MCILS has never used governmentally employed attorneys to provide representation to the indigent accused, leaving Maine as the only state in the country that provides all indigent defense services through private attorneys.104 There are two principal reasons that other states have moved away from using only private attorneys to provide all indigent defense services, and Maine has struggled with both since the creation of MCILS. First, it is difficult to predict and contain costs in a private attorney system. (See Chapter V.). A system can estimate future caseloads based on prior year trends and apply average estimated costs per case, by case type, to calculate what funding will be required to deliver its mandated services, but there is no guarantee that past averages will continue to apply to future years. Second, it is difficult to supervise private attorneys to ensure they can and do provide effective representation. For example, continual changes in technology make digital evidence such as video surveillance, social media posts, and smart phone searches crucial for defense discovery and investigation in many criminal cases. Likewise, the opioid crisis has added layers of complexity to the resolution of many criminal, delinquency, child protection, and mental health cases. MCILS struggles to oversee the services provided by private lawyers. Indigent legal services in Maine are provided at trial and appeal by nearly 600 private attorneys,105 handling cases in 47 courthouses presided over by approximately 90 justices, judges, and magistrates.106 Despite the statutory command for MCILS to provide “highFor comparison, 25 states in addition to Maine fund all appellate and trial indigent defense services: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas (except counties responsible for office facilities, equipment, and supplies), Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. In each of these states, some portion of services are delivered through state government employees. For example, even though Massachusetts primarily uses private counsel, serious felonies and primary juvenile delinquency services are provided by governmentally employed public defenders. Similarly, even though trial services in Oregon are provided by private attorneys under contract, a significant portion of appellate services are provided by state government employed lawyers. In the other 24 states that require counties to fund some portion of indigent defense services, there is at least one public defender office employing government attorneys (either state- or county-funded) in every state. 105 Five hundred ninety-three individual attorneys were appointed to one or more cases during fiscal years 2014 to 2018. Attorney billing reflects an extremely wide range in the number of hours each attorney devotes to providing indigent legal services. For example, one attorney billed the state a total of $1,189,361 over those five years (and average of $237,872.27 per year); while one attorney billed the state for just $144.00 in one year (2018). 106 Maine has one Supreme Judicial Court, 24 superior court justices (including active retired) in 17 different courthouses, 50 district court judges (including active retired) in 29 different courthouses, and nine family law magistrates (including active retired), each of whom can potentially preside over a case in which counsel is appointed to provide indigent legal services. See Supreme Court, State of Me. Jud. Branch, https://www.courts.maine.gov/maine_courts/supreme/index.shtml; Superior Court Justices, State of Me. Jud. Branch, https://www.courts.maine.gov/maine_courts/superior/justices. shtml; Superior Courthouse Directory, State of Me. Jud. Branch, https://www.courts.maine.gov/ maine_courts/superior/directory.shtml; District Court Judges, State of Me. Jud. Branch, https://www. 104 II. ATTORNEY QUALIFICATIONS, TRAINING & SUPERVISION quality” and “conflict-free” representation, the State of Maine expects MCILS to maintain oversight of these approximately 600 attorneys with a staff of just three people.107 Attorney qualifications Although attorneys graduate from law school with a strong understanding of the principles of law, legal theory, and generally how to think like a lawyer, no graduate enters the legal profession automatically knowing how to be an intellectual property lawyer, a consumer protection lawyer, or an attorney specializing in estates and trusts, mergers and acquisitions, or bankruptcy.108 Specialties must be developed. Just as you would not go to a dermatologist for heart surgery, a real estate or divorce lawyer cannot be expected to handle a complex criminal case competently. As the American Bar Association explained more than 20 years ago, “[c]riminal law is a complex and difficult legal area, and the skills necessary for provision of a full range of services must be carefully developed. Moreover, the consequences of mistakes in defense representation may be substantial, including wrongful conviction and death or the loss of liberty.”109 courts.maine.gov/maine_courts/district/judges.shtml; District Courthouse Directory, State of Me. Jud. Branch, https://www.courts.maine.gov/maine_courts/district/directory.shtml; Family Law Magistrates, State of Me. Jud. Branch, https://www.courts.maine.gov/maine_courts/family/magistrates.html. 107 MCILS employs an executive director, a deputy executive director, and an accounting technician, who collectively provide the entirety of the oversight of the indigent legal services in Maine. Staff Directory, Maine Comm’n on Indigent Legal Servs., https://www.maine.gov/mcils/about/staff.html (last visited Mar. 19, 2019). MCILS also employs eight financial screeners, whose role is limited to interviewing defendants to determine indigency in the courts. For comparison, there are approximately 600 private attorneys who provide conflict representation in Colorado through the Office of Alternate Defense Counsel, which has a central staff of 14 employees. See Staff, Office of the Alternate Defense Counsel, https://www.coloradoadc.org/oadccontacts/oadcstaff (last visited Mar. 19, 2019). This is in addition to the 13 staff in the central administrative office of the Colorado State Public Defender, who administer the public defender offices serving Colorado’s 17 counties. See Central Administrative Office, Office of the Colorado State Public Defender, http:// www.coloradodefenders.us/offices/central-administration/ (last visited Mar. 19, 2019). 108 Christopher Sabis and Daniel Webert, Understanding the Knowledge Requirement of Attorney Competence: A Roadmap for Novice Attorneys, 15 Geo. J. Legal Ethics 915, 915 (2001-2002) (“The American Bar Association (ABA) Model Rules of Professional Conduct (Model Rules) provide that an attorney must possess and demonstrate a certain requisite level of legal knowledge in order to be considered competent to handle a given matter. The standards are intended to protect the public as well as the image of the profession. Failure to adhere to them can result in sanctions and even disbarment. However, because legal education has long been criticized as being out of touch with the realities of legal practice and because novice attorneys often lack substantive experience, meeting the knowledge requirements of attorney competence may be particularly difficult for a lawyer who recently graduated from law school or who enters practice as a solo practitioner.”). 109 American Bar Ass’n, Standards for Criminal Justice: Providing Defense Services, Standard 5-1.5 and commentary (3d ed. 1992). 27 28 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine For these reasons, national standards require that each attorney must have the qualifications, training, and experience necessary for each specific case to which they are appointed.110 Attorneys must know what legal tasks need to be considered in each and every case they handle, and then how to do them. As national standards explain, an attorney’s ability to provide effective representation depends on his familiarity with the “substantive criminal law and the law of criminal procedure and its application in the particular jurisdiction.”111 Rule 1.1 of the Maine Rules of Professional Conduct requires all lawyers to be “competent” in carrying out their duties to clients.112 Failure to adhere to the state’s Rules of Professional Conduct may result in disciplinary action against the attorney, up to and including the loss of the attorney’s license to practice law.113 MCILS is statutorily required to develop standards “prescribing minimum experience, training and other qualifications” for the attorneys who provide indigent legal representation.114 MCILS also must “establish minimum qualifications to ensure that attorneys are qualified and capable of providing quality representation in the case types to which they are assigned, recognizing that quality representation in each of these types of cases requires counsel with experience and specialized training in that field.”115 Attorneys desiring to be appointed to represent indigent people in Maine must apply to MCILS.116 The minimum requirements for every attorney are that they: must have an office or use of confidential space, a telephone number where messages can be left, and a working email account;117 and must either demonstrate to MCILS proficiency over the preceding three years in the area of law in which the attorney wants to be appointed or complete an MCILS approved training course for that area of the law (law areas as designated by MCILS are criminal defense, juvenile defense, civil commitment, child protective, or emancipation).118 See, e.g., American Bar Ass’n, ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System, Principle 6 (Feb. 2002) (“Defense counsel’s ability, training, and experience match the complexity of the case.”). The ABA explains further in commentary that: “Counsel should never be assigned a case that counsel lacks the experience or training to handle competently, and counsel is obligated to refuse appointment if unable to provide ethical, high quality representation.” American Bar Ass’n, ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System, commentary to Principle 6 (Feb. 2002). 111 National Legal Aid & Defender Association, Performance Guidelines for Criminal Defense Representation, Guideline 1.2(a) (1995). 112 Me. R. Prof’l Conduct 1.1 (“A lawyer shall provide competent representation to a client. Competent representation requires the legal knowledge, skill, thoroughness and preparation reasonably necessary for the representation.”). 113 Me. R. Prof’l Conduct 8.4(a), 8.5(a). 114 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1804(2)(B) (2018). 115 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1804(3)(E) (2018). 116 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 2, § 2 (Sept. 17, 2015). 117 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 2, § 3 (Sept. 17, 2015). 118 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 2, § 4 (Sept. 17, 2015). 110 II. ATTORNEY QUALIFICATIONS, TRAINING & SUPERVISION 29 MCILS has promulgated slightly greater qualification requirements for certain types of cases that MCILS considers to be “complex in nature due to the allegations against the person as well as the severity of the consequences if a conviction occurs.”119 The cases requiring greater qualifications are homicide, sex offenses,120 serious violent felonies,121 operating under the influence, domestic violence,122 juvenile defense, protective custody matters, Law Court appeals, and post-conviction review.123 The additional qualifications MCILS requires an attorney to have to be placed on the roster for appointment at the trial level for the designated criminal cases are:124 Homicide Practice experience 5 yrs crim law Trial experience Sex offenses 3 yrs crim law First chair 3 fel trials (at least 2 jury) in past 10 yrs Serious violent felonies 2 yrs crim law First chair 4 trials (at least 2 jury; at least 2 crim) in past 10 yrs Operating under the influence 1 yr crim law First chair 2 crim trials and 2 contested hrgs in past 10 yrs 4 hrs OUI defense CLE in past 3 yrs Domestic violence 1 yr crim law First chair 2 crim trials and 2 contested hrgs in past 10 yrs 4 hrs dom viol CLE in past 3 yrs Case-Type First chair 5 fel trials (at least 2 jury; at least 2 homicide, ser viol fel, or sex off) in past 10 yrs; AND First chair homicide trial in past 15 yrs OR second chair homicide trial in past 5 yrs CLE or Knowledge Knowledge of evidentiary issues in homicide cases, including DNA, fingerprint analysis, mental health, eyewitness ID References 3 letters In any of these specialized case types, an attorney can request from the MCILS executive director a waiver of either the practice experience or trial experience requirements (but not both).125 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 3, § 1(5) (June 10, 2016). Sex offenses are defined by MCILS as being the commission of, conspiracy to commit, attempt to commit, or solicitation of sexual assaults, sexual exploitation of minors, incest, violation of privacy, aggravated sex trafficking, and patronizing prostitution of minor or person with mental disability. 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 3, § 1(4) (June 10, 2016). 121 Serious violent felonies are defined by MCILS as being the commission of, conspiracy to commit, attempt to commit, or solicitation of aggravated attempted murder, aggravated assault, elevated aggravated assault, elevated aggravated assault on a pregnant person, kidnapping, burglary with a firearm, burglary with intent to inflict bodily harm, burglary with a dangerous weapon, robbery, arson, causing a catastrophe, aggravated trafficking of scheduled drugs, aggravated trafficking of counterfeit drugs, and aggravated furnishing of scheduled drugs. 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 3, § 1(3) (June 10, 2016). 122 Domestic violence cases are defined by MCILS as being the commission of, conspiracy to commit, attempt to commit, or solicitation of domestic violence, any class D or E offense against a family or household member or dating partner, class D stalking, and violation of a protection order. 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 3, § 1(2) (June 10, 2016). 123 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 3, § 3 (June 10, 2016). 124 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 3, § 3(1)-(5) (June 10, 2016). 125 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 3, § 4 (June 10, 2016). 119 120 30 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine In short, under MCILS’ qualification requirements, an attorney who graduated from law school two years ago and hung out their shingle in a private practice, with no supervision or training, can have two jury trials and two judge trials and then be appointed to represent indigent defendants in every type of criminal case other than a homicide or sex offense. More worrisome perhaps is that indigent defendants charged with Class E crimes, carrying up to six months in jail, can be represented by an attorney who just received their bar card and completed a single training course in criminal law, as long as the lawyer has an email address, telephone number, and a confidential space to meet with clients. Attorney training & supervision The Maine Rules of Professional Conduct recognize that ongoing training is necessary for attorneys to maintain their familiarity with criminal law and procedure, as well as their competence to provide effective representation.126 Similarly, all national standards, including those of the National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals,127 require that the indigent defense system provide attorneys with access to a “systematic and comprehensive” training program,128 at which attorney attendance is compulsory, in order to maintain competence from year to year.129 Training must be tailored to the types and levels of cases for which the attorney seeks public appointment. If, for example, the lawyer has not received training on the latest forensic sciences and case law related to drugs, then the government should ensure that lawyer is not assigned to drug-related cases. If a public defense provider does not have the “knowledge and experience to offer quality representation to a defendant in a particular matter,” then the attorney is obligated to move to withdraw from the case, Me. R. Prof’l Conduct 1.1, cmt. [6] (“To maintain the requisite knowledge and skill, a lawyer should keep abreast of changes in the law and its practice, engage in continuing study and education and comply with all continuing legal education requirements to which the lawyer is subject.”). 127 Building upon the work and findings of the 1967 President’s Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice, the Administrator of the U.S. Department of Justice Law Enforcement Assistance Administration appointed the National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals in 1971, with DOJ/LEAA grant funding to develop standards for crime reduction and prevention at the state and local levels. The NAC crafted standards for all criminal justice functions, including law enforcement, corrections, the courts, and the prosecution. Chapter 13 of the NAC’s report sets the standards for the defense function. National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals, Report of the Task Force on the Courts, ch.13 (The Defense) (1973). 128 National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals, Report of the Task Force on the Courts, ch. 13 (The Defense), Standard 13.16 (1973) (“The training of public defenders and assigned counsel panel members should be systematic and comprehensive.”). 129 See American Bar Ass’n, ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System, Principle 9 (Feb. 2002) (“Defense counsel is provided with and required to attend continuing legal education”). The commentary explains: “Counsel and staff providing defense services should have systematic and comprehensive training appropriate to their areas of practice and at least equal to that received by prosecutors.” American Bar Ass’n, ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System, commentary to Principle 9 (Feb. 2002). 126 II. ATTORNEY QUALIFICATIONS, TRAINING & SUPERVISION or better yet to refuse the appointment at the outset.130 Ongoing training, therefore, is an active part of the job of being a public defense provider. Finally, public defense attorneys must be supervised and regularly evaluated.131 All Maine attorneys are required to complete 12 hours of continuing legal education each year, at least one hour of which must be in professional responsibility,132 while MCILS only requires that attorneys representing the indigent complete eight hours of continuing legal education each year.133 Most assigned counsel report meeting their CLE requirements by attending a court-run two-day conference each year. MCILS does not require attorneys appointed to represent the indigent to obtain any CLE or training in any specific area of practice and, in particular, there is no requirement for CLE or training in the fields in which they provide indigent legal representation (beyond that required to first be placed on the roster for appointments in operating under the influence or domestic violence cases). MCILS has not established any requirements for supervision of attorneys appointed to provide indigent legal representation. In June 2018, MCILS began a “Resource Counsel Program” to assist MCILS staff by having experienced assigned counsel eventually provide “mentoring, supervision, and evaluation of private assigned counsel.”134 In the fall of 2018, MCILS identified 25 attorneys statewide to serve as resource counsel and provide mentoring to less experienced attorneys. That said, the 25 resource counsel attorneys are each capped at providing 10 hours of mentoring per month, and the program is not available in the mental health practice area. The National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals, Report of the Task Force on the Courts, ch. 13 (The Defense), Standard 13.16 (1973); see also National Legal Aid & Defender Association, Performance Guidelines for Criminal Defense Representation, Guidelines 1.2(b), 1.3(a) (1995) (“Prior to handling a criminal matter, counsel should have sufficient experience or training to provide quality representation,” and “[b]efore agreeing to act as counsel or accepting appointment by a court, counsel has an obligation to make sure that counsel has available sufficient time, resources, knowledge and experience to offer quality representation to a defendant in a particular matter. If it later appears that counsel is unable to offer quality representation in the case, counsel should move to withdraw.”). 131 See American Bar Ass’n, ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System, Principle 10 (Feb. 2002) (“Defense counsel is supervised and systematically reviewed for quality and efficiency according to nationally and locally adopted standards”). The commentary adds, “Counsel and staff providing defense services should have systematic and comprehensive training appropriate to their areas of practice and at least equal to that received by prosecutors.” 132 Me. State Bar R. 5 (“Except as otherwise provided in this subdivision, every attorney required to register in accordance with these rules of this state shall complete 12 credit hours of approved continuing legal education in each calendar year. At least one credit hour in each calendar year shall be primarily concerned with professionalism. . . . Qualifying professionalism education topics include professional responsibility, legal ethics, substance abuse and mental health issues, diversity awareness in the legal profession, and malpractice and bar complaint avoidance topics including law office and file management, client relations, and client trust account administration.”). 133 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 2, § 5 (Sept. 17, 2015). 134 MCILS, June 12, 2018 Commissioner’s Meeting Packet, Agenda item 3, available at https://www. maine.gov/mcils/meetings/minutes/Commission%20Packet%20June%202018.pdf. 130 31 32 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine resource counsel attorneys do not have authority to require any mentee to cooperate, and MCILS has no plan to assist the resource counsel attorneys with identifying performance problems or training needs. A criminal justice representative in Androscoggin County stated that: a handful of attorneys are so obviously disorganized, unreliable, and incompetent that they should not be on the roster at all; another handful are competent only for simple low level cases; another handful are excellent; and the rest are uneven. The deficiencies of the least competent attorneys are obvious to all, so it is troubling that they remain eligible for assignments without accountability. Massachusetts Committee for Public Counsel Services example To best understand the lack of MCILS oversight of attorneys, it is useful to look at another jurisdiction that relies in large part on private attorneys to provide indigent legal services: Massachusetts. The Massachusetts Committee for Public Counsel Services (CPCS) is a judicial branch agency overseeing the delivery of indigent defense services in all courts across the state of Massachusetts. Attorney qualifications. Private attorneys in Massachusetts who desire to be appointed to represent indigent people must apply and be certified. Attorneys are never automatically certified based on attendance at a training program or meeting a certain set of criteria; there is always a role for discretion to serve the client population who cannot choose their lawyers. Attorneys can only be certified to receive appointments in a maximum of two counties, and they must apply separately in each county. For misdemeanor and lesser felonies, attorneys submit their application to the county assignment program. The leadership of the county assignment program interviews the applicant, checks their references, and determines whether they meet the CPCS criteria demonstrating competence and commitment to the needs of the client population. Attorneys selected by the county assignment program must attend the Zealous Advocacy training program (or obtain a waiver;135 a waiver is not ordinarily granted to an attorney seeking misdemeanor and lesser felony appointments unless they have tried 5 criminal defense jury trials to verdict within the preceding 5 years.) Zealous Advocacy training is a 7-day program including both lectures and small group skills exercises daily, with substantial reading and presentation preparation every night. An attorney either passes or fails the training program. Once an attorney is selected by the county assignment program and successfully completes the training program, A request for a waiver of the Zealous Advocacy training program will be considered only if the applicant has exceptional experience in the practice area in which they seek certification. The applicant requesting a waiver must submit a letter to the director of the appropriate certification panel explaining in detail why the training requirement should be waived. The letter must include descriptions of cases, including docket numbers and issues presented, relied upon by the applicant to demonstrate the requisite experience. 135 II. ATTORNEY QUALIFICATIONS, TRAINING & SUPERVISION the attorney is provisionally certified to represent indigent adults in misdemeanors and lesser felonies in that county. The attorney can only be fully certified after a performance evaluation conducted within 12 to 24 months of provisional certification. For major felonies or murder cases, attorneys must apply to CPCS deputy chief counsel. The application must include a list of complex cases the attorney has tried to a jury verdict as lead counsel within the preceding five years; at least six for major felonies certification and at least 10 for murder certification. Additional materials like original memoranda of law may also be required. The applications are circulated to a blue-ribbon panel of leading senior private defense lawyers for confidential input before CPCS makes a certification decision. CPCS’s electronic billing system enforces the certification requirements. The billing system automatically rejects any assignments for which an attorney is not certified and generates a contemporaneous notice to the attorney, the county assignment program, and the court that the case must be reassigned. Attorney recertification. Because attorneys in private practice are free to change the areas of law in which they concentrate based on their own interests or market conditions, their qualifications to handle criminal cases may change over time. To assure that public funds are used efficiently to retain qualified attorneys, all attorneys must apply for recertification every five years. The criteria for recertification are evidence of substantial recent criminal defense litigation experience, including appropriately vigorous motion and trial practice. Data to support the decision-making process comes from the attorney’s recertification application, records maintained by CPCS of performance assessments, complaints, and electronic billing records that show what actions the attorney has taken in assigned cases. The amount of data available from detailed electronic billing records to which the attorney has attested assures that these decisions have a solid basis in facts that the attorney can understand. CPCS will not recertify attorneys who have not vigorously defended their assigned cases (evidenced by filing original pleadings, using investigators, summoning witnesses, litigating evidentiary motions, and conducting trials) or who have been the subject of substantial true complaints of substandard representation. If an attorney’s performance in assigned cases needs improvement, CPCS may conditionally recertify the attorney for one or two years, with conditions, as an opportunity for the attorney to correct identified problems but with appropriate supervision or caseload limitations to protect clients. The Massachusetts experience is that about 20% of applicants for recertification for adult criminal case assignments do not qualify for full recertification, but in almost all instances these attorneys are given a one-year conditional 33 34 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine recertification to correct deficiencies. Of that group, about 80% have corrected the deficiencies when they reapply at the end of the one-year period, while the other 20% tend not to reapply. Attorney training. All CPCS attorneys must annually complete eight hours of continuing legal education approved by CPCS as relevant to the panel on which the attorney receives assignments. An attorney who receives assignments in more than one practice area must satisfy the CLE requirement for each panel. All attorneys who lack the recent experience required for the certification level they seek may be required to attend the Zealous Advocacy training program, described above. Attorney supervision. The funders of public programs should assure that attorneys paid with public funds are doing a good job. Oversight of private attorneys appointed to represent indigent people in criminal cases presents particular challenges, because the attorney-client privilege requires the attorney to keep confidential many aspects of the representation. Also, private attorneys may resist the implementation of oversight where none previously has been in place. In Massachusetts, the private attorneys who handle criminal case assignments are organized in every county into groups. These groups contract with CPCS to perform various functions, including calendaring attorneys to cover courts where they receive case assignments. CPCS selects from the most experienced members of these group the attorneys who are paid by CPCS to be mentors. CPCS assigns a mentor to all attorneys until such time as they obtain certification for major felonies. Attorneys who are certified for major felonies or murder are eligible to apply to CPCS for a one-year contract position as a county supervising attorney. CPCS vigorously recruits potential supervising attorneys and publicly honors those who serve in the role. Supervising attorneys are selected jointly by CPCS and the county assignment program leadership, and both state and local leaders must support the candidate for a contract to be awarded. Supervising attorney contracts are for relatively few hours per week, so that highly respected successful lawyers can be recruited to take on the role while maintaining their private practices. Supervising attorneys participate in the selection of attorneys who have applied for certification, lead local training events, conduct in-depth performance evaluations of every assigned counsel in their county every two years (or in neighboring counties in case of conflicts due to local relationships), and II. ATTORNEY QUALIFICATIONS, TRAINING & SUPERVISION investigate complaints by clients or court personnel about the performance of assigned counsel. The supervising attorneys also provide a trusted point of contact for judges and consistent advice to CPCS about the myriad local issues that arise in the courts. The number of supervising attorneys needed for a county depends on the number of courts and attorneys receiving assignments in the county, as well as the geography of the county. Currently there are about 30 supervising attorneys across Massachusetts, each serving 10 hours per week. 35 Chapter III EARLY APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL As the U.S. Supreme Court states in Cronic, there are circumstances “that are so likely to prejudice the accused that the cost of litigating their effect in a particular case is unjustified. Most obvious, of course, is the complete denial of counsel.”136 All crimes in Maine are classified as either murder, Class A, Class B, Class C, Class D, or Class E crimes.137 Conduct that is punishable by a fine only, without the possibility of incarceration, is a civil violation and “expressly declared not to be [a] criminal offense.”138 All crimes in Maine carry the possible loss of liberty,139 so every adult and juvenile140 charged with any crime, and who cannot afford to hire their own attorney, is entitled under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to have counsel provided at public expense at trial and on direct appeal.141 U.S. v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 658-59 (1984). Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 17-A, §§ 4, 4-A (2018). Murder, and Class A, B, and C crimes are akin to what other states usually call a felony; Class D and E crimes are akin to what other states usually call a misdemeanor. Where a statute outside of the Maine Criminal Code defines a crime but does not designate its class, then the penalty provided in the particular statute determines the classification of the crime: greater than 10 years is Class A; greater than 5 years and up to 10 years is Class B; greater than 3 years and up to 5 years is Class C; greater than 1 year and up to 3 years is Class D; and up to 1 year is Class E. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 17-A, § 4-A(3) (2018). 138 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 17-A, § 4-B (2018). 139 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 17-A, §§ 4-A(3), 1251, 1252 (2018). The crimes carry the following possible sentences: murder – 25 years to life; Class A – up to 30 years; Class B – up to 10 years; Class C – up to 5 years; Class D – up to 1 year; in county jail and Class E – up to 6 months in county jail. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 17-A, §§ 4-A(2-A), 1251, 1252(2) (2018). All Class D and Class E sentences are to be served in county jail. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 17-A, § 1252(1)(A) (2018). All Class A, B, and C sentences of 9 months or less are to be served in county jail, while sentences of more than 9 months are served in the department of corrections. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 17-A, § 1252(1)(B) (2018). 140 A juvenile is any person less than 18 years of age. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 3003(14) (2018). A juvenile crime is committed by a person less than 18 years of age, including: conduct that would be a crime if committed by an adult – what other states often call juvenile delinquency; and certain conduct that is generally legal but illegal for persons under a certain age – what other states often call juvenile status offenses. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, §§ 3003(16), 3103, 3103-A (2018); Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 17-A, § 4-A(2-A),(3) (2018). A juvenile convicted of a juvenile crime may be committed to a Department of Corrections juvenile correctional facility. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, §§ 3103(2), 3314(1)(F) (2018). A juvenile who is charged with murder or a class A, B, or C offense may be tried as an adult. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 3101(4) (2018). 141 Halbert v. Michigan, 545 U.S. 605 (2005); Alabama v. Shelton, 505 U.S. 654 (2002); Argersinger v. Hamlin, 407 U.S. 25 (1972); In re Gault, 387 U.S. 1 (1967); Douglas v. California, 372 U.S. 353 (1963); Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335 (1963). 136 137 III. EARLY APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL In 2008, the Court reaffirmed in Rothgery v. Gillespie County that the right to counsel attaches when “formal judicial proceedings have begun.”142 For a person who is arrested, the beginning of formal judicial proceedings is at “a criminal defendant’s initial appearance before a judicial officer, where he learns the charge against him and his liberty is subject to restriction,”143 without regard to whether a prosecutor is aware of the arrest.144 For all defendants, the commencement of prosecution, “whether by way of formal charge, preliminary hearing, indictment, information, or arraignment,” signals the beginning of formal judicial proceedings.145 The Rothgery Court carefully explained, however, that the question of whether the right to counsel has attached is distinct from the question of whether a particular proceeding is a “critical stage” at which counsel must be present as a participant.146 “Once attachment occurs, the accused at least is entitled to the presence of appointed counsel during any ‘critical stage’ of the postattachment proceedings . . ..”147 In other words, according to the Court, the Constitution does not necessarily require that defense counsel be present at the moment the right to counsel attaches, but from that moment forward, no critical stage in a criminal or juvenile delinquency case can occur unless the defendant is represented by counsel or has made an informed and intelligent waiver of counsel. The Court states that “a trial is unfair if the accused is denied counsel at a critical stage of his trial.”148 Over the decades, the Supreme Court has inch-by-inch delineated many case events as being critical stages, although it has never purported to have capped the list of events that may fall into this category.149 Events that are definitely critical stages are: custodial interrogations both before and after commencement of prosecution;150 preliminary hearings prior to commencement of prosecution where “potential 142 Rothgery v. Gillespie County, 554 U.S. 191, 211 (2008). See also Michigan v. Jackson, 475 U.S. 625, 629 n.3 (1986); Brewer v. Williams, 430 U.S. 387, 388-89 (1977). 143 Rothgery v. Gillespie County, 554 U.S. 191, 213 (2008). 144 Rothgery v. Gillespie County, 554 U.S. 191, 194 (2008). 145 Brewer v. Williams, 430 U.S. 387, 398 (1977) (quoting Kirby v. Illinois, 406 U.S. 682, 689 (1972)). See also Michigan v. Jackson, 475 U.S. 625, 629 n.3 (1986). 146 Rothgery v. Gillespie County, 554 U.S. 191, 211 (2008). 147 Rothgery v. Gillespie County, 554 U.S. 191, 212 (2008). 148 U.S. v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 659 (1984). 149 The critical stages in a case are the moments when the defendant has to make choices – when “counsel would help the accused ‘in coping with legal problems or . . . meeting his adversary.’” Rothgery v. Gillespie County, 554 U.S. 191, 212 n.16 (2008) (quoting United States v. Ash, 413 U.S. 300, 312-13 (1973)). None of these proceedings can occur unless counsel is present or has been waived because, as the Supreme Court has noted, “the right to be represented by counsel is by far the most pervasive for it affects [an accused person’s] ability to assert any other rights he may have.” United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 654 (1984) (citing Shaefer, Federalism and State Criminal Procedure, 70 Harv. L. Rev. 1, 8 (1956)). 150 Brewer v. Williams, 430 U.S. 387, 399 (1977); Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 444-45 (1966); Massiah v. United States, 377 U.S. 201, 205-06 (1964). 37 38 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine substantial prejudice to defendant[s’] rights inheres in the . . . confrontation”;151 lineups and show-ups at or after commencement of prosecution;152 during plea negotiations and at the entry of a guilty plea;153 arraignments;154 during the pre-trial period between arraignment and the beginning of trial;155 trials;156 during sentencing;157 direct appeals as of right;158 probation revocation proceedings to some extent;159 and parole revocation proceedings to some extent.160 This chapter explains the criminal justice process in Maine, including the events that trigger attachment of the right to counsel and those that are critical stages at which counsel must be present on behalf of an indigent defendant. Throughout this chapter, as elsewhere in this report, a detailed description of Aroostook County serves as an example of how criminal justice is administered locally throughout Maine. These bulleted sections are set apart from the body of the report. Summons or arrest When a person is suspected of having committed a crime, they may either be issued a summons161 or (for most crimes) arrested with or without a warrant.162 When issuing a summons, the law enforcement officer provides a court date and location to the defendant directing them to appear in court to answer the allegation.163 For a defendant who receives a summons, their first appearance before a judge will be at the initial appearance (explained below) held on the date they are told to appear in court. Coleman v. Alabama, 399 U.S. 1, 9-10 (1970). Moore v. Illinois, 434 U.S. 220, 231 (1977); Kirby v. Illinois, 406 U.S. 682, 689-90 (1972); United States v. Wade, 388 U.S. 218, 236-38 (1967). 153 Lafler v. Cooper, 566 U.S. 156, 132 S. Ct. 1376, 1386 (2012); Padilla v. Kentucky, 559 U.S. 356, 373 (2010); McMann v. Richardson, 397 U.S. 759, 771, 771 n.14 (1970). 154 Hamilton v. Alabama, 368 U.S. 52, 53-55 (1961). 155 Brewer v. Williams, 430 U.S. 387, 398-99 (1977); Powell v. Alabama, 387 U.S. 45, 57 (1932). 156 Alabama v. Shelton, 535 U.S. 654, 662 (2002); Argersinger v. Hamlin, 407 U.S. 25, 37, 40 (1972); In re Gault, 387 U.S. 1, 36-37 (1967); Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335, 344-45 (1963). 157 Lafler v. Cooper, 566 U.S. 156, 132 S. Ct. 1376, 1386 (2012); Wiggins v. Smith, 539 U.S. 510, 538 (2003); Glover v. United States, 531 U.S. 198, 203-04 (2001); Mempa v. Rhay, 389 U.S. 128, 134, 137 (1967). 158 Halbert v. Michigan, 545 U.S. 605, 621 (2005); Douglas v. California, 372 U.S. 353, 357 (1963). 159 Gagnon v. Scarpelli, 411 U.S. 778, 790 (1973). 160 Gagnon v. Scarpelli, 411 U.S. 778, 790 (1973); cf. Morrissey v. Brewer, 408 U.S. 471, 489 (1972) (leaving open the question “whether the parolee is entitled to the assistance of retained counsel or to appointed counsel if he is indigent”). 161 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 17-A, § 15-A (2018). 162 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 704 (2018); Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 17-A, § 15 (2018). 163 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 17-A, § 15-A(1) (2018). 151 152 III. EARLY APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL • When law enforcement issues a summons in Aroostook County, the officer provides a court date to the defendant to appear in the district court assigned to the geographic area where the crime is alleged to have occurred. That is, if the Fort Kent police department issues someone a summons, that person is summoned to the Fort Kent District Court on the next criminal arraignment/ initial hearing docket date. Police departments and the county sheriff are provided a calendar of court dates by the court clerks.164 If arrested, the defendant is taken to the local police station or the county jail to be processed. The amount of bail and conditions under which a defendant can be released from jail (if pretrial release is available) are set initially by either a court or a bail commissioner. A defendant who was arrested without a warrant is entitled to have a judge consider and determine whether there was probable cause for the arrest. Both the initial bail setting and the probable cause determination can occur outside the presence of the defendant and without the involvement of either a prosecutor or defense attorneys. For a defendant who is arrested, their first appearance before a judge will be at the “48-hour hearing” (explained below). • Persons who are arrested anywhere in Aroostook County are first taken before a bail commissioner and then, if not released, taken to the Aroostook County jail, located in Houlton and attached to the courthouse. On average, 90% of the jail population is defendants detained pre-trial, while only 10% have been convicted and sentenced.165 Bail setting (following arrest) For a person who is arrested, the process of attempting to be released begins with a police department or county sheriff calling a local bail commissioner.166 Generally, the bail commissioner comes to the police department, although they could be called to the roadside for vehicular crimes. Court schedules are publicly available on the Maine Courts website. See Regional Schedules, State Me. Jud. Branch, https://www.courts.maine.gov/maine_courts/schedules/quarterly_schedules.shtml. 165 The jail has a capacity to house 117 people. The average number of persons in jail is 102, with a low of 95 and a high of 124 during the six months prior to this report’s publication. The annual budget for the jail in FY 2019 is approximately $3.285 million. County of Aroostook 2019 Jail Budget, available at https://www.aroostook.me.us/images/2019_Jail_Budget.pdf. At the time of the site visit, the jail administrator did not know the average daily bed cost for his jail. Using a rough calculation of multiplying the average jail population (102) by the number of days in a year (365) and then dividing that product by the annual jail budget ($3.285 million) results in an average daily bed cost of $88.24. 166 The chief judge of the district court appoints bail commissioners. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 1023 (2018). Although the number fluctuates, as of November 2018 there were 83 bail commissioners across the state. Though all bail commissioners have statewide jurisdiction, most work in the county in which they reside. The only qualifications required for bail commissioners are Maine residency, completion of a bail training program within one year following appointment, and a term of not more than 5 years. Id. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 1023 (7) (2018). 164 of 39 40 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine If a person was arrested on a warrant, the court that issued the warrant may have set the type and amount of bail and any bail conditions to be imposed.167 If a person was arrested without a warrant or a court did not set bail terms when issuing an arrest warrant, then the bail commissioner is responsible for setting bail terms for most arrests, although there are a significant number of crimes and circumstances for which a defendant must appear before a judge to have bail set.168 A bail commissioner may release an arrestee on personal recognizance, an unsecured bail, or a secured bail, and may impose conditions on the defendant while on pretrial release.169 If a defendant is unable to meet the bail set by the bail commissioner, or if a bail commissioner is prohibited from setting bail in the defendant’s circumstances, bail may be reviewed or set at the 48-hour hearing.170 Defendants who are released pursuant to this bail setting procedure are given a court date and location directing them to appear in court to answer the allegation; if the defendant is released before the “48-hour hearing,” then their first appearance before a judge will be at the initial appearance (explained below) held on the date they are told to appear in court. • Eleven of the 83 bail commissioners in Maine operate out of Aroostook County (and are generally assigned based on the five populations centers in the county). Statewide, bail commissioners tend to be people at the end of their careers who want to stay active, and, in overly general terms, they tend to be people who had a career in criminal justice (e.g., ex-law enforcement, retired judges, and retired court clerks). However, the bail commissioners in Aroostook County do not fit this general background and are generally people looking to supplement their income and/or who want to contribute to the community. For example, three of the bail commissioners in the county are an auto salesman, a pizza shop owner, and a jail booking officer. Probable cause determination (following warrantless arrest) In County of Riverside v. McLaughlin,171 the United States Supreme Court held that a judge must make a probable cause determination – probable cause that a crime has been committed and that the defendant committed it – within 48 clock hours of a warrantless arrest or the government risks being held responsible for an illegal detention. 167 168 169 170 171 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, §§ 1021, 1022 (2018). Me. Const. art. I, § 10; Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, §§ 1023(4), 1027 (2018). Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 1026 (2018). Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, §§ 1026(1),(6), 1027, 1028 (2018); Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 46. 500 U.S. 44 (1991). III. EARLY APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL A judge can make this determination without ever seeing the defendant and based solely on paperwork filed by the officer or prosecutor.172 If the judge finds that there was not probable cause for the arrest, the person is released from jail; if the judge finds that there was probable cause for the arrest, the person remains in jail.173 Because a defendant who has been arrested in Maine is brought before a judge for a 48-hour hearing, the probable cause determination is almost never made in Maine prior to the 48-hour hearing, and it is typically waived as part of the 48-hour hearing. • Almost universally in Aroostook County, the probable cause determination is waived as part of the 48-hour hearing. Local criminal justice system participants could only remember a single instance in which a defendant refused to waive the probable cause determination at the 48-hour hearing. In that instance, the judge made the probable cause determination from the bench based on the police report. 48-hour hearing (in custody) or initial appearance (out of custody) A defendant’s first appearance before a judge is the 48-hour hearing for in custody defendants174 and the initial appearance for out of custody defendants. This is the proceeding at which the right to counsel attaches under Rothgery and is when an indigent defendant will have the opportunity to request appointed counsel. (A 48-hour hearing is actually held not later than 48 hours after the arrest, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, legal holidays, and court holidays,175 so in many instances it may be as much as five days after a defendant’s arrest.) Throughout Maine, prosecutors and defense attorneys are always in attendance for these proceedings. 48-hour hearings for in custody defendants are conducted by video conference, with the defendant and the MCILS “lawyer of the day” located at the jail, and the judge and prosecutor located at the courthouse. Out of custody defendants appear in the courtroom for initial appearances, along with the MCILS “lawyer of the day,” the prosecutor, and the judge. At 48-hour hearings and initial appearances, the court informs the defendant of the charges against him and his rights,176 indigency is determined for any defendant requesting appointed counsel,177 counsel is appointed for any defendant determined to be indigent,178 and for in custody defendants bail may be 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 4A. Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 4A. Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 5. Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 5(a). Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 5(b)-(c). Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 5(e), 44. Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 5(e), 44. 41 42 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine reviewed. A defendant charged with a Class D or E crime is also called on to enter a plea.179 • Aroostook County defendants not released by a bail commissioner at a local police station are transferred and held in the county jail in Houlton and are to be brought before a judge within 48 hours of arrest. Although any judge in any court in Aroostook County can conduct the 48-hour hearings (for example, depending on trials schedules, vacation, etc.), it is generally true that 48-hour hearings are conducted from the jail to the court via video conference at 11:30 a.m. every Monday in Houlton District Court, Wednesday in Superior Court – Caribou, and Friday in Caribou District Court. This means that in custody defendants who are arrested on a Friday after 11:30 a.m. will not go before a judge until the following Monday. Initial appearances for out of custody defendants are scheduled only once or twice per month per court. Therefore, it may be up to a month after arrest that the initial appearance occurs. Finding 2: Although the courts’ advice of rights video has many admirable qualities, few courts follow up with a colloquy to ensure that indigent defendants saw the video and comprehend their rights before waiving counsel. Some prosecutors in some jurisdictions engage in plea discussions with uncounseled defendants, and some courts actively encourage such negotiations. These practices result in actual denial of counsel. Maine courts are required to advise every defendant (in person or through a video recording) of: (1) the substance of the charges against the defendant; (2) the defendant’s right to retain counsel, and to request the assignment of counsel and to be allowed a reasonable time and opportunity to consult counsel before entering a plea; (3) the right to remain silent and that the defendant is not required to make a statement and that any statement made by the defendant may be used against the defendant; (4) the maximum possible sentence, and any applicable mandatory minimum sentence; and (5) the defendant’s right to trial by jury.180 179 180 Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 5(d). Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 5(b). III. EARLY APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL Advice of rights video At the beginning of 48-hour hearings and initial appearances, all courts play a 20-minute video explaining due process rights.181 The video is produced by the Maine Administrative Office of the Courts and is played uniformly in all counties. The video advises defendants that they should consult a lawyer, warns immigrants to get legal advice, and shows people through the use of mock case examples what occurs at an arraignment and the dangers of pleading guilty without a lawyer. • As is true throughout the state, the advice of rights in Aroostook County is conducted via the Administrative Office of the Courts video. There are many admirable qualities about the Administrative Office of the Courts’ video, including a demonstration of what proceeding without a lawyer may look like. However, the video is definitely not a substitute for a judge speaking directly to a defendant to advise them of their rights personally. In every courtroom observed in all of the sample counties, the video is played before the judge is on bench. No one ensures that defendants have watched the video, understand the language spoken in the video, or have the mental capacity to understand the video, and it is often the case that tardy defendants enter without ever seeing the video at all. Denial of counsel to defendants receiving suspended sentences Despite defendants being advised of the right to request assignment of counsel, throughout the sample counties many courts take the position that a defendant is not entitled to appointed counsel for a crime if prosecutors do not seek jail time. In fact, the Rules of Unified Criminal Procedure expressly state that, if a defendant is charged with a Class D or Class E crime and is indigent, “the court shall make an initial assignment of counsel, unless the court concludes that in the event of conviction a sentence of imprisonment will not be imposed.”182 The U.S. Supreme Court in Alabama v. Shelton made clear that the right to counsel attaches to any case involving the potential for jail time, no matter how remote the possibility.183 The Court held that courts are prohibited from ever sending an indigent defendant to jail following a suspended sentence unless the defendant originally received or waived their right to an attorney, because a “suspended sentence is a The video is available publicly. See Criminal Cases, State of Me. Jud. Branch, http://www.courts. maine.gov/citizen_help/criminal.html (last visited Mar. 9, 2019). 182 Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 44(a)(1) (emphasis added). 183 535 U.S. 654 (2002). The potential for time in jail includes misdemeanors with suspended sentences in which the defendant remains at liberty unless the defendant fails the probationary terms. 181 43 44 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine prison term imposed for the offense of conviction. Once the prison term is triggered, the defendant is incarcerated not for the probation violation, but for the underlying offense.”184 Of greater concern, though, is that indigent defendants who are told by the court that they are not entitled to appointed counsel frequently give up and plead guilty because they cannot afford to hire an attorney. In York County, many indigent defendants submitted to guilty pleas after being told they have no right to counsel unless the prosecutor asks for a jail sentence, and they were then convicted and sentenced to fines they cannot afford to pay. When the imposition of a fine is made a condition of probation, revocation of that probation and imposition of the suspended sentence violates the defendant’s Sixth Amendment rights under these circumstances. Throughout the state, the 6AC observed courts imposing fines and fees as a condition of probation on uncounseled indigent defendants. Prosecutors negotiating pleas with unrepresented defendants Systems that encourage or otherwise direct unrepresented defendants to meet with prosecuting attorneys to discuss plea deals, before making appointed counsel available to them, violate a defendant’s right to counsel. The United States Supreme Court confirmed in Lafler v. Cooper185 and in Missouri v. Frye186 that a defendant has the right to “effective assistance of competent counsel” during plea negotiations. The plea negotiation is a critical stage of the case, meaning the negotiation cannot happen unless counsel is present or the defendant’s right to counsel has been knowingly, voluntarily, and intelligently waived.187 Despite this, throughout the sample counties, prosecutors talk to uncounseled defendants to negotiate guilty pleas. This was most prevalent in the south where larger court populations, and not enough lawyers of the day, exacerbate the problems. For example, at the Biddeford District Court in York County, an assistant district attorney addressed the defendants en masse, stating that the defendants will receive a police report and an offer sheet so they can decide if they want to resolve their case that day. The district attorney tells all people with court business (including lawyers, represented defendants, and unrepresented defendants) to sign their names on a sheet taped to the door of a conference room in order to be allowed to talk with an assistant district attorney. Although the prosecutor encouraged all defendants to meet with the lawyer of the day, defendants were also told that to resolve the case that day they could not meet with the lawyer of the day until they first saw the judge. 184 185 186 187 Alabama v. Shelton, 535 U.S. 654, 662 (2002). 132 S. Ct. 1376 (2012). 132 S. Ct. 1399 (2012). Iowa v. Tovar, 541 U.S. 77, 88 (2004). III. EARLY APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL Chilling of the right to counsel In York County’s Biddeford District Court, the judges address to the crowd overtly discourages requesting appointment of counsel and encourages guilty pleas at initial appearance. The judge says, “I must advise you of your right to trial. Your first option is to accept the state’s offer and I won’t make you pay today but will give you time into the new year in order to pay. We are willing to give you time. All fines include a 20% surcharge to raise revenue for the legislature and another 15% surcharge to pay for the court’s new computer system. The financial screener is not here this week. Typically, people talk to the lawyer for the day and can later today resolve their case.” In Somerset County, a judge routinely encouraged defendants to talk with the district attorney, and the judge used the possibility of indigent defendant’s being required to pay fees for appointed counsel to discourage defendants from requesting appointment of counsel. For example, in the Skowhegan District Court, a defendant was told he would have to pay $500 for appointed counsel because he makes $16 per hour working full time, although he has two children. Believing himself unable to pay the $500 fee for appointed counsel, the defendant waived his right to counsel, pled guilty, and was sentenced to 30 days in jail. Finding 3: Oversight of financial screeners by MCILS creates the appearance of a conflict of interest with its duty to provide zealous representation to indigent defendants. If a defendant requests that counsel be appointed to represent him in a case carrying the possible loss of liberty, the Maine courts are required to appoint counsel “when it appears to the court that the accused has not sufficient means to employ counsel.”188 The first step, then, for any defendant requesting appointed counsel is for the court to determine whether the defendant is indigent.189 In 2008, the Brennan Center for Justice published a set of guidelines for how to determine whether defendants are financially eligible for appointment of counsel.190 The guidelines say jurisdictions must ensure that “screening is performed by someone who does not have a conflict of interest”191 and then announce unequivocally: “Do not allow individual defenders and public defender programs to screen their own clients.”192 The Brennan Center quotes the American Bar Association Model Rules Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 810 (2018); see also Me. R. Uniform Crim. Proc. 44(a)(1) (“If the defendant is without sufficient means to employ counsel”); 189 See Me. R. Uniform Crim. Proc. 5(e) (“the determination of indigency . . . shall be governed by” Rule 44), 44(a)(1) (“If the defendant is without sufficient means to employ counsel”). 190 Brennan Center for Justice, Eligible for Justice: Guidelines for Appointing Defense Counsel (2008). 191 Brennan Center for Justice, Eligible for Justice: Guidelines for Appointing Defense Counsel 8 (2008). 192 Brennan Center for Justice, Eligible for Justice: Guidelines for Appointing Defense Counsel 10 188 45 46 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine of Professional Conduct in stating that “the lawyer’s own interests should not be permitted to have an adverse effect on representation of a client.”193 Because an indigent defense system may have conflicting interests – between the rights of the defendants, and the system’s desire to limit the number of cases they must defend and “reject cases that are time-intensive, controversial, or undesirable in some other way” – the screening function should be independent from the defense function.194 Indigency determination MCILS employs eight people (one position is currently vacant) to conduct financial screening of defendants who request appointment of counsel. MCILS screeners go to the county jails to conduct screening for in custody defendants at 48-hour hearings and to the courthouses to conduct screening for out of custody defendants at initial appearances. MCILS is statutorily required to develop standards “governing eligibility for indigent legal services.”195 MCILS has promulgated a form, entitled “Motion and Affidavit for Assignment of Counsel,” that defendants must complete in writing and swear to under penalty of perjury, providing financial information to MCILS and the court. The MCILS-employed financial screeners use the standards MCILS has adopted to gather information from defendants and make a recommendation as to whether they are financially eligible to receive appointed counsel196 – counsel selected and paid by MCILS. In FY 2018, MCILS financial screeners interviewed 11,031 defendants statewide: 7,704 were found indigent (70%); 2,322 were found partially indigent (21%); and 1,005 were denied (9%). Automatic MCILS denial If the cash assets of the defendant and their family are more than a specified amount based on the most serious crime with which the defendant is charged, MCILS automatically recommends the defendant be denied an appointed attorney,197 without any consideration of the defendant’s expenses, liabilities, or dependents. Cash assets are defined by MCILS as cash on hand, money in deposit accounts, stocks and bonds that can be sold, and cash bail unless posted by someone other than the defendant or (2008). Brennan Center for Justice, Eligible for Justice: Guidelines for Appointing Defense Counsel 10 (2008) (quoting American Bar Ass’n, Model Rules of Prof’l Conduct 1.7, cmt. 10 (2018)). 194 Brennan Center for Justice, Eligible for Justice: Guidelines for Appointing Defense Counsel 10-11 (2008). 195 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1804(2)(A) (2018). 196 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 401, summary (June 23, 2012) (“These guidelines govern the work of financial screeners employed by the commission and are intended to provide guidance to the courts in their determination of financial eligibility”). 197 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 401, § 1(2)(B) (June 23, 2012). 193 III. EARLY APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL 47 their family.198 The amount of cash assets that triggers denial of counsel is: $1,000 for Class D or E; $2,000 for Class C; $3,000 for Class B; and $4,000 for Class A.199 Next, the financial screener considers other assets of the defendant and their family to determine whether they can be converted into cash. If the cash assets and convertible other assets together are more than the specified amount for the most serious crime with which the defendant is charged, MCILS automatically recommends the defendant be denied an appointed attorney,200 again without any consideration of the defendant’s expenses, liabilities, or dependents. Other assets are defined by MCILS as: equity in real estate sufficient to obtain a home equity loan; cash value of insurance policies, pension, retirement, or profit sharing; equity value of property not needed for work or family transportation; and any personal property, such a jewelry or antiques, that could be sold, exchanged, or used to get a loan.201 Automatic MCILS approval Next, the financial screener considers the income of the defendant and their family. If the income of the defendant and their family is less than 110% of the federal poverty guidelines, based on family size, MCILS automatically recommends the defendant be appointed an attorney.202 Income as defined by MCILS is total before-tax annual receipts of all family members from: wages, self-employment, rents & royalties, child support & alimony, SSI & SSDI & social security & VA and TANF benefits, unemployment & workers comp, insurance & pension & strike benefits, interest & dividends, and military family allotments; and “potential wages from seasonal employment when the applicant has a history of seasonal employment.”203 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 401, § 1(1)(B) (June 23, 2012). 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 401, § 1(2)(B) (June 23, 2012). 200 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 401, § 1(2)(C) (June 23, 2012). 201 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 401, § 1(1)(C) (June 23, 2012). 202 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 401, § 1(2)(C) (June 23, 2012). Income calculated at 110% of the 2018 federal poverty guidelines results in the following amounts based on family size: 198 199 Gross Income @ 110% of Poverty Gdln Family Size 203 Poverty Gdln Annual Monthly Weekly 1 $12,140 $13,266 $1,105.05 $255.11 2 $16,460 $17,864 $1,488.66 $343.53 3 $20,780 $22,462 $1,871.83 $431.96 4 $25,100 $27,060 $2,255.00 $520.38 5 $29,420 $31,658 $2,638.16 $608.80 6 $33,740 $36,256 $3,021.33 $697.23 7 $38,060 $40,854 $3,404.50 $785.65 8 $42,380 $45,452 $3,787.66 $874.07 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 401, § 1(1)(A) (June 23, 2012). 48 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine Possible MCILS approval It is only when the defendant has not been automatically denied or automatically approved that the financial screener considers the necessary expenses of the defendant and their family: a defendant “may be eligible for assigned counsel if they have extraordinary necessary monthly expenses that render them unable to retain counsel.”204 MCILS defines necessary monthly expenses exclusively as food, shelter (mortgage, rent, utilities), medical care (including insurance premiums and medical debts payments), employment (including payments on vehicle to get to work and required uniforms), and debts (including credit card minimum payments, student loan payments, and long-term personal loan payments).205 • The MCILS financial screener for Aroostook County works, on average, a 20-hour week and is paid $12.75/hour (approximately $14,000/year). Upon completing the financial review, the MCILS financial screener in Aroostook County goes back to the office to verify social security information and to fill out an affidavit with recommendations to be faxed to the court.206 The MCILS financial screener never travels to the two most northern courts (Fort Kent and Madawaska). Only out of custody defendants appear in these courts, and the court clerks do the financial eligibility screening and recommendations. The MCILS financial screener does travel to and perform all eligibility screening in the Houlton, Presque Isle, and Caribou courts. A situation in Cumberland County transformed the appearance of a conflict of interest by MCILS attorneys into an actual conflict of interest. A statewide hiring freeze left vacant the MCILS financial screener position that covered Cumberland County. At the time of our site visit, the MCILS lawyers for the day were signing as notaries the financial affidavits of the defendants they advise and represent, which are then submitted to the court.207 This process places the lawyer in the position of a potential witness against the client, in the event the affidavit is challenged. Moreover, the lawyer ethically should not participate in the financial screening that will produce for him a fee generating assignment. Finally, conflict of interest concerns aside, having lawyers perform at $60/hour a service that is normally performed by a financial screener paid $12.75/hour is simply not cost efficient governance. 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 401, § 1(2)(F) (June 23, 2012). 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 401, § 1(1)(D) (June 23, 2012). 206 In Aroostook County, the MCILS financial screener’s office is located in a secured area of the Houlton County Superior Court clerk’s office. 207 Some appointed attorneys reportedly refuse to notarize the affidavit. 204 205 III. EARLY APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL Court determination of eligibility By statute, MCILS is required to “provide the court . . . information used to determine indigency for guidance to the court in determining a defendant’s . . . ability to obtain private counsel.”208 Upon completing the financial review, the MCILS financial screener goes back to their office to verify social security information and to fill out an affidavit with recommendations to be faxed to the court. The judge ultimately determines the defendant’s eligibility to receive court appointed counsel. • In FY 2017 and FY 2018, there were no instances in Aroostook County in which a judge did not follow the MCILS financial screener recommendation. In FY 2017 (the last year for which full information is available for Aroostook County), MCILS screened 808 individuals in Aroostook County (approximately 15 people per week). Of those, the screener determined 682 to be indigent (84%), denied counsel to 96 people (12%), and determined that 30 were partially indigent (4%). Reimbursements assessed against indigent defendants MCILS’s eligibility standards are required by statute to “take into account the possibility of a defendant’s . . . ability to make periodic installments payments toward counsel fees.”209 MCILS must “administer and improvement reimbursement” by indigent defendants, and MCILS is required to petition a court to reassess indigency of any defendant if MCILS “determines that indigency should be reassessed.”210 In addition to gathering financial information and making a recommendation to the court about a defendant’s eligibility for appointed counsel, the MCILS financial screeners make recommendations about whether and to what extent an indigent defendant should be required to make reimbursements for the cost of their indigent legal representation. For every defendant who received automatic MCILS approval for appointment of counsel based on income less than 110% of the federal poverty guidelines, the financial screener must compare the monthly income of the defendant and their family to their necessary monthly expenses.211 To whatever extent that income exceeds those expenses, MCILS standards decree that the defendant “should be required to make periodic payments . . . to reimburse the State for the cost of assigned counsel . . . up to an amount equal to the maximum fee” set by MCILS for the type of case to which counsel is assigned to represent that defendant.”212 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1805-A(2) (2018). Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1804(2)(A) (2018). 210 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1805-A(1) (2018). 211 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 401, § 1(2)(E) (June 23, 2012). 212 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 401, § 1(2)(E) (June 23, 2012). As of 2018, the maximum fees set by MCILS that indigent defendants may be required to reimburse the State of Maine for the cost of their appointed counsel are: 208 209 49 50 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine For every defendant whose combined family income exceeds 110% of the federal poverty guidelines but who received appointed counsel because of “extraordinary necessary monthly expenses,” MCILS requires that “an order for reimbursement should be entered unless the interests of justice demand otherwise.” The MCILS financial screener makes these reimbursement recommendations to the court. If the court finds that a defendant is “able to contribute,” the court is required to order a defendant represented by appointed counsel to “make installment payments up to the full cost of representation or to pay a fixed contribution.”213 The remainder of the MCILS financial screeners’ time is spent on collections.214 That entails mailing an initial letter to any defendant ordered to make a reimbursement, letting them know of their financial obligation and where to make payments. The screeners track (via a spreadsheet or index file system) whether a defendant is current on making payments. If a defendant is delinquent, the screener will send out a “dunning” letter informing them they are behind in making payments and what the consequences will be (a show cause hearing). Courts schedule a small number of these show cause hearings each month for defendants who are not making payments. The final piece of collections is a yearly submission by each screener of a spreadsheet Type Amount Class A $3,000 Class B & C (against person) $2,250 Class B & C (against property) $1,500 Class D & E (Superior or UCD) $750 Class D & E (District Court) Post-Conviction Review $540 $1,200 Probation Revocation $540 Miscellaneous $540 Juvenile $540 Child Protective Termination of Parental Rights (with hearing) $900 $1,260 Application for Involuntary Commitment $420 Petition for Emancipation $420 Petition for Modified Release Treatment $420 Petition for Release or Discharge $420 Criminal Direct Appeals & Appellate work $1,200 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1805-A(3)(A) (2018); Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 44(b). 214 A few miscellaneous tasks performed by the MCILS financial screeners include reporting the number of screenings done each month with a breakdown of how many were found indigent, partially indigent, or denied (and whether the court followed the screener’s recommendation); doing screening for waiver of fee cases (civil matters); and submitting three financial affidavits each week to the Investigator Financial Screener, for closer scrutiny. The screener gathers data from the Maine Department of Labor and from several other internet resources (Westlaw’s CLEAR service, Facebook, Google, etc.) to determine whether the indigency affidavit was completed accurately. 213 III. EARLY APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL listing all the defendants who either have never paid or have not made any recent payments. This spreadsheet is called the “tax offset spreadsheet” (lists defendant name, social security number, docket number, and amount owed), and it is submitted to the judicial branch to go along with the courts’ submission to the Maine Revenue Service of defendants who owe fines. The Maine Revenue Service will intercept state tax returns of anyone on this list and will apply the money toward counsel fees owed. In FY 2017, MCILS collected $677,735 in partial indigency payments from indigent defendants statewide represented by appointed attorneys. • In FY 2017, MCILS collected $1,787 in partial reimbursements by indigent defendants in Aroostook County. Indigent defense systems must require their participating attorneys to adhere to their ethical duty to zealously defend in the stated interests of the client, including advocating against the imposition of fines, fees, and other assessments. MCILS cannot assure that appointed attorneys fight against the imposition on indigent defendants of fees related to the cost of the defense, while MCILS is simultaneously trying to collect those fees. Finding 4: MCILS’ “lawyer of the day” system primarily serves the need to move court dockets, while resulting in a lack of continuous representation to the detriment of defendants. There is often a critical gap in representation while a substantive lawyer is identified and appointed. Additionally, the lawyer of the day practices under the Somerset contract result in a direct conflict of interest. If the court appoints a defense lawyer early enough in the process, that lawyer can effectively represent the client if afforded the time, training, and resources to do so. Yet, early appointment of counsel will not result in effective representation if that process is truncated by actual case preparation being delayed for days or weeks. Until the defendant has counsel who is responsible to interview the defendant in depth, investigate defenses, and preserve evidence, the defendant cannot be said to have the effective assistance of counsel. MCILS provides for a “lawyer of the day.” The lawyer of the day attorneys appear at 48-hour hearings for in custody defendants and at initial appearance for out of custody defendants, and the attorneys are present throughout the court’s docket. Some counties have attorneys who regularly fill the lawyer of the day role, while others do it on a semi-rotational basis. • In Aroostook County, MCILS has an “in-custody lawyer of the day” available for in-custody defendants at the 48-hour videoconference hearing and the lawyer is with the defendant at the jail while the district attorney is with the 51 52 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine judge in the court. Although any rostered lawyer could sign up for this duty, in Aroostook County two local lawyers predominantly handle this function.215 “Lawyer of the day” duties for out of custody defendants are more evenly dispersed among attorneys than the practice of one or two attorneys handling most of the lawyer of the day duties for in custody defendants. This is because it is more likely that an attorney will be appointed to cases for which they appear as the lawyer of the day.216 The Cumberland County system relies on group announcements to apprise defendants of legal rights, including an invocation that they may have to wait hours to consult with the lawyer for the day. As elsewhere in the state, the number of lawyers serving as lawyer for the day is generally insufficient to even meet with, much less actually provide representation to, the number of defendants scheduled on each day’s docket. On an average day in Cumberland County’s Portland District Court, there are two lawyers for the day to handle 80 defendants; about 12 of the cases are serious crimes and only about half of those defendants have retained counsel. When the judge takes the bench in Cumberland District Court, the lawyers for the day exit the courtroom carrying stacks of financial affidavit forms. They set up a makeshift office in a conference room where out of custody defendants line up to meet with them. The lawyer for the day tries to describe constitutional rights in the lockup to a whole group of in custody defendants. There is a lack of confidentiality for both of these interviews. One defense lawyer hates to be assigned as lawyer for the day because he believes a group waiver of rights is unconstitutional. Another defense attorney reports being expected to represent up to 30 people on a single docket as lawyer of the day. The lawyer of the day is required to advise all defendants at court, whether indigent or not. the lawyer is supposed to receive discovery with a written plea offer from the district attorney’s office on the day before court, and is expected to meet the client the next day and advise them. Some attorneys advise defendants without having received discovery. This lawyer believes there should be MCILS standards on follow-through by the lawyer for the day to provide information to successor counsel, because many attorneys do not do so. MCILS did not offer or provide any training for the role as lawyer of the day. In Androscoggin County, two lawyers of the day are typically expected to represent 200 defendants. One lawyer, who will no longer accept assignment as lawyer for the Over the past four years, one attorney handled 617 in-custody lawyer of the day cases (32.25%) and a second attorney handled 11.55%. Twenty-eight other lawyers handled at least one day of in-custody lawyer of the day duties in Aroostook County over the past five years, but each handled less than 5% of the possible in-custody days. 216 Nineteen lawyers were paid for out of custody lawyer of the day duties in Aroostook County from FY2014 to FY2018. The lawyer serving most frequently staffed 45 dockets (12.20%). 215 III. EARLY APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL day, estimated having about five minutes to spend with each defendant. Making the lawyer for the day available to non-indigent litigants exacerbates the denial of counsel to indigent defendants, conflicts with Maine state law on the scope of the right to counsel, and creates an unreasonable risk of solicitation in violation of ethical rules. Appointment of counsel Once a court determines that a defendant is eligible for appointment of counsel, then the court must appoint an MCILS attorney to represent that defendant. Continuous representation from appointment through disposition ABA Principle 7 requires that the same attorney initially appointed to a case continuously represent the defendant through disposition of the case.217 Commonly referred to as “vertical representation,” the continuous representation by the same attorney is contrasted with “horizontal representation” – a representational scheme whereby one attorney represents the client during one court proceeding before handing off the client’s case to another attorney to cover the next stage. As the American Bar Association explains, “horizontal representation” is uniformly implemented as a cost-saving measure in the face of excessive workloads and to the detriment of clients. In fact, the ABA rejects the use of horizontal representation in any form, stating specifically that: “[c]ounsel initially provided should continue to represent the defendant throughout the trial court proceedings and should preserve the defendant’s right to appeal, if necessary.”218 In explaining why horizontal representation is so harmful to clients, the ABA states: Defendants are forced to rely on a series of lawyers and, instead of believing they have received fair treatment, may simply feel that they have been “processed by the system.” This form of representation may be inefficient as well, because each new attorney must begin by familiarizing himself or herself with the case and the client must be reinterviewed. Moreover, when a single attorney is not responsible for American Bar Ass’n, ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System, Principle 7 (2002). 218 American Bar Ass’n, ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System, Principle 7 cmt. (2002). 217 53 54 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine the case, the risk of substandard representation is probably increased. Appellate courts confronted with claims of ineffective assistance of counsel have commented critically on stage representation practices.219 The nexus between the requirement that trial counsel be appointed as early as possible and the requirement that the attorney who is appointed initially to represent the client remains with that client’s case through to completion is to ensure that the minimum level of advocacy necessary to mount a meaningful defense commences as soon as possible. In defender systems relying on horizontal representation schemes, the delay in appointing the actual trial lawyer has negative consequences for the client, as exculpatory evidence like video tapes are routinely destroyed within days, physical evidence like bruises fade away quickly, and witnesses can become harder and harder to track down.220 Early assignment of the lawyer for the day provides limited if any representation because it is only “for the day” not for the case. In most instances the “lawyer of the day” does not continue with the case. Instead, courts make a formal appointment off of a roster of MCILS approved lawyers. Some judges like to select the individual attorney to appoint in a given case,221 some leave it to their clerks to do after the hearing, and American Bar Ass’n, Standards for Criminal Justice – Providing Defense Services, Standards 5-6.2 cmt. (3d ed. 1992). 220 One defense lawyer pointed out the risk of ineffective assistance posed not only to clients but also to lawyers. The Maine Supreme Judicial Court has said that the lawyer for the day has an attorney client relationship for the purpose of whatever she advises the client about, but has not addressed the issue of the responsibility of the lawyer for the day for guilty pleas entered by defendants they have counseled, which often occur when the lawyer is not present in court. 221 Judicial control of indigent defense representation has been criticized in a number of U.S. Supreme Court cases. In the “Scottsboro Boys” case of Powell v. Alabama, the Court observed that the right to counsel rejects the notion that a judge should direct the defense: [H]ow can a judge, whose functions are purely judicial, effectively discharge the obligations of counsel for the accused? He can and should see to it that, in the proceedings before the court, the accused shall be dealt with justly and fairly. He cannot investigate the facts, advise and direct the defense, or participate in those necessary conferences between counsel and accused which sometimes partake of the inviolable character of the confessional. Powell v. Alabama, 287 U.S. 45, 61 (1932). Future U.S. Supreme Court cases would make clear the constitutional requirement for independence of the defense function. In the 1979 case of Ferri v. Ackerman, the Court states that independence of appointed counsel to act as an adversary is an “indispensable element” of “effective representation.” Ferri v. Ackerman, 444 U.S. 193, 204 (1979). Two years later, the Court determined in Polk County v. Dodson that each state has a “constitutional obligation to respect the professional independence of the public defenders whom it engages.” Polk County v. Dodson, 454 U.S. 312, 321-22 (1981). Observing that “a defense lawyer best serves the public not by acting on the State’s behalf or in concert with it, but rather by advancing ‘the undivided interests of the client,’” the Court also noted that “a public defender is not amenable to administrative direction in the same sense as other state employees” because he “works under canons of professional responsibility that mandate his exercise of independent judgment on behalf of the client.” Polk County v. Dodson, 454 U.S. 312, 318-19 (quoting Ferri v. Ackerman, 444 U.S. 193, 204 (1979)). This is confirmed in Strickland v. Washington, where the Court states that “independence of counsel” is “constitutionally 219 III. EARLY APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL 55 some use a rotational system where the next attorney on the list is appointed. One judge told us, as did almost all defense attorneys, that the reason the lawyer for the day is not assigned the case from that day’s docket is that the judiciary in Cumberland County feared lawyers would encourage client’s to reject prosecution plea offers if the lawyers could keep the cases. • Appointments in Aroostook County are not rotational. Aroostook County does not generally have a large number of indigent cases,222 so judges generally know which lawyer is taking cases and what strengths the attorney possesses as far as specialties. Defendants remaining in custody are prioritized for appointments and are told who their lawyer is as soon as possible (generally within 24 hours). The problem of non-continuous representation also arises with policies that allow for attorneys to “stand in” for one another. MCILS’ fee schedule policy currently directs attorneys to stand in for each other: When doing so will not adversely affect the attorney-client relationship, Commission-assigned counsel are urged to limit travel and waiting time by cooperating with each other to stand in at routine, non-dispositive matters by having one attorney appear at such things as arraignments and routine non-testimonial motions, instead of having all Commissionassigned counsel in an area appear.223 In child protection cases in Androscoggin County, one attorney reports that lawyers stand in for each other, but only on court dates of uncontested matters like scheduling. protected” and that “[g]overnment violates the right to effective assistance when it interferes in certain ways with the ability of counsel to make independent decisions about how to conduct the defense.” Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 686 (1984). 222 For example, the following table shows the total numbers of new criminal and family cases over the past five years: CRIMINAL New Filings Probation Violation Total FAMILY 2015 2016 2017 2018 2934 2585 2483 2299 2695 210 162 176 188 230 3144 2014 2747 2015 2659 2016 2487 2017 2925 2018 Parental Rights 148 133 154 113 99 Guardianships 0 0 0 5 2 Child Protective 89 69 30 70 61 Protection from Abuse 332 336 367 323 353 92 134 92 2107 92 661 672 643 2618 607 Juvenile Total 223 2014 96-649 Code Me. R. ch. 301, §4(1)(D) (June 10, 2016). 56 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine However, a different attorney reports that standing in is very common among child protection attorneys, including for proceedings called judicial review, which are status reports to the court on the client’s progress. “Standing in” is also a problem when larger firms have one attorney covering all of that firm’s cases. Larger firms receive additional assignments because the courts assign cases to attorneys or firms who have previously represented the client. In this way, larger firms increase their market share and defeat the concept of rotation. Delayed appointment of counsel In a number courts, defendants sometimes are not told at their first appearance the name of the attorney who will be assigned to represent them. Even if defendants are given the name of an attorney at court, attorneys report that the notice to the attorney of the assignment often takes several days. It can take up to ten days for appointed counsel to contact defendants after first appearance. For example, in Aroostook County, judges or their clerks must call around to assigned counsel attorneys to see who is available to take cases. This takes effort and considerable time. Similarly in York County, the assignment of counsel takes weeks, almost always, and lawyers for the day do not communicate with successor counsel. Some juvenile defendants do not have an attorney even after weeks in detention, because their parents did not request one. The family’s wealth is counted against the eligibility of juveniles for assigned counsel unless the juvenile is charged with a family-based offense. Thus, many juveniles may go without counsel altogether. Juvenile cases may require reassignment after initial appearance due to the lack of a sufficient number of juvenile-qualified attorneys in rural parts of the state. Reportedly, many juveniles are diverted from the court system. When a juvenile is arrested, the police call the juvenile community correction officer who has the authority to divert the case from court. If the case is not diverted, the child may be detained in a local jail or taken to Long Creek detention facility in Portland or Mountain View Youth Development Center which is part of a prison in Bangor. Outside of Cumberland and York counties, where there are fewer specific juvenile court days, a juvenile could be represented by a lawyer for the day who is not on the juvenile roster. Conflict of interest in Somerset County The lawyer of the day program in Somerset County produces a direct conflict of interest. The Project’s contract attorneys can be hired by non-indigent defendant who appear in court while the Project attorneys are serving as lawyer for the day. One III. EARLY APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL Project attorney gives a speech to all the people at the court, explaining his role and inviting them to talk with him whether they are indigent or not. The Project attorney is then free to be hired by people who meet him as lawyer for the day, or he can refer clients he meets at court to other attorneys of his choosing. The Project attorneys also have input on the defendants’ eligibility for assigned counsel, creating a direct conflict of financial interest because the Project could reject a defendant for appointed counsel and then accept the case as a private retainer. This central role of the Project attorneys in meeting as lawyer for the day every person who is hailed into court creates a monopoly of sorts, as attorneys outside of Somerset County said they are effectively prevented from establishing a practice in Somerset County. That is, the contract attorneys keep not only all the assigned work but also most of the private work, since the contract has provided them a personal introduction to all defendants. In this way, the contract model exacerbates rather than resolves the problem of lack of capacity of legal service providers in this rural county. No valid purpose is served by the policy that the lawyer for the day is free to accept retainer by non-indigent defendants he meets through this system. Institution of prosecution & arraignment For a Class D or E crime, the 48-hour in custody hearing or the out of custody initial appearance also serves as the arraignment. Class D and E crimes are next set for a dispositional conference usually about four to six weeks later. For crimes of Class C and higher, the next court setting is the arraignment, usually about four to six weeks after the 48-hour in custody hearing or the out of custody initial appearance. After arraignment, the next event in these cases is a pre-trial dispositional conference. Finding 5: Despite there being many excellent assigned lawyers providing representation to the indigent accused throughout Maine, there are also too many attorneys throughout the state who do not perform adequately. Contact with in custody defendants During the past year a group of judges and attorneys interviewed juvenile detainees at Long Creek and sent a letter of complaint to MCILS, informing MCILS that detained children had told them their assigned lawyers had not communicated with them enough for them to understand their own cases. MCILS acknowledged receiving similar complaints in the past. In one of the studied counties, the Sheriff estimated, due to the volume of prisoner complaints, that about 25% of assigned attorneys do not visit their clients in jail to 57 58 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine prepare their cases. He was also concerned about attorneys not accepting calls from the jail. He said prisoners stop calling when their calls are not accepted. Consistent with that report, one judge estimated that 25% of assigned counsel have not met with their clients before the first dispositional conference date. She reported that up to 10% of attorneys withdraw or become a second chair if the case goes to trial. In another studied county, the Sheriff says pretrial detainees there complain about lack of attention from their attorneys. We were informed that that Sheriff called a couple of attorneys over the Christmas holiday to say that their clients felt neglected. In a third studied county, the Sheriff’s staff also acknowledged complaints by prisoners most often involving inability to connect with their attorney. Assigned attorneys visit detainees less frequently than retained counsel, and complaints are relatively common with somewhat over 50% of prisoners stating that there is a lack of pretrial preparation and that they are not able to connect with their attorneys before court hearings. Most attorneys provide telephone numbers but the prisoner usually has to leave a message, which the attorney does not respond to. When the lack of contact is a repeated problem the jail staff allows the prisoners to use a regular phone so they can make a call without it being a collect call. Occasionally prisoners do not know who their attorney is, but this is not common. The jail has private rooms and allows contact visits. Attorneys can bring in a laptop. The jail also has equipment for viewing digital evidence by prisoners alone (without the attorney present) but this facility is not private. Often the assigned attorneys do not have time to view digital evidence with their clients and ask the jail staff to arrange to show the evidence to the client at the jail facility even though it is not private. MCILS data tends to confirm these observations of the sheriffs. The 6AC requested three years of data on jail visits on cases billed out of Cumberland County. The data reveal a number of attorneys that often visit clients, but a concerning number of folks that do not. For example, in 2017, one attorney billed MCILS $111,771 for cases arising in Cumberland County, including $3,024 for 96 jail visits. By contrast, another attorney billed MCILS $171,880, but did not bill any time for even a single jail visit. Certainly it is possible, though unlikely, that the attorney simply decided it was not worth the time to bill jail visits, but the point is that MCILS and the State of Maine do not know because of a lack of oversight. Motions practice Not every MCILS case requires that a motion be filed. Indeed, there may be specific reasons why an attorney may decide not to file a motion. As such, it is difficult to review data on motions practice at a general level. That said, when few motions are ever filed statewide, it points to issues of concern. III. EARLY APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL 59 In FY 2018, private attorneys billed MCILS for the following types of motion practice:224 MOTION TYPE Bill of Particulars NUMBER 21 COST $948.00 Continuance 2,457 $55,935.00 Discovery 1,029 $29,226.00 112 $8,337.00 Expedited Review 42 $1,245.00 Forensic evidence 108 $3,516.00 Dismiss New Trial Review Bail Suppress Total 11 $936.00 1,476 $41,764.20 984 $41,766.00 6,240 $183,673.20 Interpretation of this data is difficult at best, because district attorney practices can affect the need to file certain types of motions. For example, even though MCILS’ numbers look very low for motions for discovery, such motions might be minimal due to the fact that prosecutors routinely provide “open file” discovery. Perhaps the most telling category to is suppression motions in criminal and delinquency cases. In any criminal/delinquency case in which arguably illegallyobtained evidence is part of the government’s case against the defendant, there should be a billing voucher item for the preparation and filing of a suppression (even if the motion produced a plea bargain and thus was not litigated). Defense counsel should prepare and put forward any non-frivolous suppression argument, which often have the effect of causing the government to make a fairer plea offer. Suppressible evidence could be any statement by the defendant, any tangible evidence found by police and attributed to the defendant, any arguably unfair identification of the defendant, or any evidence obtained through an arguably improper arrest. Motions to suppress should almost always be researched, even if not always filed, in drug cases and DWI cases. Defendants, especially juveniles, make statements in many cases that warrant suppression motions because the prosecution must prove a voluntary waiver of Fifth Amendment rights. Regardless of how progressive prosecutors are, the variability of police actions in the process of arresting, searching, and interrogating people should make suppression motions commonplace by vigorous defenders anywhere. And since suppression motions are litigated pretrial, the practice does not preclude plea bargaining. Usually, the threat of litigating the motion is a plea bargaining tool. Email from John Pelletier, Director, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 6, 2019). 224 60 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine So, the 5.5% figure here looks unreasonably low (984 bills in 17,701 adult and juvenile criminal cases). Even if this billing category is used by some participating attorneys only when a suppression motion is litigated (as opposed to researched, prepared, and filed), it would still appear too low, since prosecutors can agree to suppression motions that are clearly correct, but they cannot agree to the many suppression motions that rely on the credibility of witnesses challenging police versions of events. Because MCILS has no systems or capacity to provide oversight, the State of Maine cannot know either way if the low number of motions filed statewide indicates poor performance. Use of investigators The MCILS expenditure on litigation expenses, at $1M per year, is very low for the annual caseload of approximately 15,000 new adult criminal cases, 2,000 probation surrenders, 1,000 juvenile cases, 2,500 child protection cases, and 1,000 mental health cases. While good practice would indicate use of investigators in most criminal cases, social work or mental health experts in most child protection cases, and independent psychiatric experts in many mental health cases, these litigation supports are used very infrequently throughout Maine. The U.S. Supreme Court has determined that the failure to conduct adequate investigation can be grounds for a finding of ineffective assistance of counsel.225 Moreover, it is crucial that an investigator be available to assist the attorney with interviewing witnesses, else “the attorney may be placed in the untenable position of either taking the stand to challenge the witnesses’ credibility if their testimony conflicts with statements previously given or withdrawing from the case.”226 The U.S. Supreme Court has also held, for example, that an indigent accused is entitled to the assistance of a psychiatrist at public expense to assert an insanity defense.227 Case preparation and zealous advocacy Assigned counsel representation is quite variable in quality. In observations of Androscoggin County’s Lewiston District Court, lawyers often sought time for their clients to pay the fines and fees being assessed, but never argued that payment would be impossible due to the defendant’s inability to amass funds. A respected defense attorney in Androscoggin County for juvenile delinquency cases reports that most Kimmelman v. Morrison, 477 U.S. 365, 385 (1986) (“[C]ounsel has a duty to make reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable decision that makes particular investigations unnecessary.”). 226 American Bar Ass’n, Standards for Criminal Justice – Providing Defense Services, commentary to Standard 5-1.4 (3d ed. 1992). 227 Ake v. Oklahoma, 470 U.S. 68 (1985). 225 III. EARLY APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL attorneys on the Androscoggin roster have not had a jury trial in over 10 years. He says that typically independent psychiatric experts are not used for necessary evaluations; rather the parties agree upon a state employed expert. Another defense attorney in Androscoggin County who handles mental health cases explained it is very common for hospital staff to persuade a client to accept a voluntary commitment even after counsel has been assigned, causing many commitment cases to be dismissed. He explained that this may account for the very low average cost per case; a three-hour bill should mean the case was dismissed before hearing. A contested hearing should involve eight to ten hours of legal work, with about one to three hours of that being the actual hearing. This attorney reports that he has never seen an assigned attorney use a psychiatric expert in a mental health case other than the “independent evaluators” chosen and provided by the court. Although most of these independent experts are competent and fair, he notes that some are “terrible.” He had never considered seeking an independent expert through funding from MCILS. In observations in Somerset County, some defendants did not know the last name of the attorney who had been appointed to represent them and had to ask court officers to identify their attorney. Project attorneys were observed asking people in the courthouse for their names and calling out names of their clients whom they did not recognize. One Project attorney stood in the courthouse lobby calling out, “Does anyone have a case with me?” This occurred on a date when cases were scheduled for disposition conferences, so competent defense counsel should have already met with all clients for in-depth interviews and prepared their cases before that date. Court in Somerset County is often delayed due to lack of pretrial preparation. The court officers say they delay the calling of the list so that the attorneys can prepare by talking with their clients. A Project attorney interviewed by the 6AC could not recall the last time he conducted a jury trial or an appeal for an assigned client, despite his caseload of over 700 assigned cases per year and his 20 years with the Project. He said he did a jury trial for a retained client the previous year. A judge reports that “the clerks think the attorneys do not meet with the clients until the disposition conferences.” The judge notes there is less use of private investigators and experts by defense attorneys in Somerset County than in Franklin County. He states it is okay to have more than 60 dispositional conferences with only one judge in Somerset County, but it is not okay in Augusta, because in Somerset there are more agreements between defense and prosecution. He says, “I wouldn’t be surprised if a retained attorney saw the client more than an assigned attorney… If I had a magic wand, I would go to a public defender system in all counties or a contract system in all counties because the courts would run more efficiently, and representation would be better because the attorneys would be focusing on criminal law.” 61 62 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine Another judge estimates that in 90% of Somerset County cases the defense attorney has had no contact with the client before the dispositional conference. He too notes there are fewer trials in Somerset than in Augusta. He believes there were less than seven or eight trials in Somerset last year, compared to seven or eight per month in Augusta. Somerset County’s population of 50,000 is less than half of Augusta’s population of 130,000. Yet, the judge says that 50% to 60% of defendants plead guilty at arraignment in Somerset, whereas in Kennebec County almost no one does. Chapter IV SUFFICIENT TIME The U.S. Supreme Court in Powell v. Alabama notes that the lack of “sufficient time”228 to consult with counsel and to prepare an adequate defense was one of the primary reasons for finding that the Scottsboro Boys were constructively denied counsel. Impeding counsel’s time “is not to proceed promptly in the calm spirit of regulated justice, but to go forward with the haste of the mob.”229 One state supreme court observed over twenty years ago, “as the practice of criminal law has become more specialized and technical, and as the standards for what constitutes reasonably effective assistance of counsel have changed, the time an appointed attorney must devote to an indigent’s defense has increased considerably.”230 Insufficient time is, therefore, a marker of constructive denial of counsel. The inadequate time may itself be caused by any number of things, including but not limited to excessive workload or contractual arrangements that create fiscal incentives for lawyers to dispose of cases quickly rather than in the best interests of their clients. No matter how complex or basic a case may seem at the outset, no matter how little or how much time an attorney wants to spend on a case, and no matter how financial matters weigh on an attorney, there are certain fundamental tasks each attorney must do on behalf of every client in every criminal case. Even in the simplest case, the attorney must, among other things: • • • • • • • 228 229 230 meet with and interview the client; attempt to secure pretrial release if the client remains in state custody (but, before doing so, learn from the client what conditions of release are most favorable to the client); keep the client informed throughout the duration of proceedings; request and review discovery from the prosecution; independently investigate the facts of the case, which may include learning about the defendant’s background and life, interviewing both lay and expert witness, viewing the crime scene, examining items of physical evidence, and locating and reviewing documentary or video evidence; assess each element of the charged crime to determine whether the prosecution can prove facts sufficient to establish guilt and whether there are justification or excuse defenses that should be asserted; prepare appropriate pretrial motions and read and respond to the prosecution’s Powell v. Alabama, 287 U.S. 45, 59 (1932). Powell v. Alabama, 287 U.S. 45, 59 (1932). State v. Wigley, 624 So.2d 425, 428 (La. 1993). 64 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine • • • • • motions; prepare for and appear at necessary pretrial hearings, wherein he must preserve his client’s rights; develop and continually reassess the theory of the case; assess all possible sentencing outcomes that could occur if the client is convicted of the charged crime or a lesser offense; negotiate plea options with the prosecution, including sentencing outcomes; and all the while prepare for the case to go to trial (because the decision about whether to plead or go to trial belongs to the client, not to the attorney).231 The lawyer owes all of these duties to every client in every case, and so Maine’s Rules of Professional Conduct232 and national standards, as summarized by the American Bar Association, agree that “[d]efense counsel’s workload [must be] controlled to permit the rendering of quality representation.”233 Workload includes the cases an attorney is appointed to handle within a given system (i.e., caseload), but it also includes the cases an attorney takes on privately, public defense cases to which the attorney is appointed in other jurisdictions, and other professional obligations such as obtaining and providing training and supervision.234 In addition to considering the raw number of cases of each type that an attorney handles, all national standards agree that the lawyer’s workload must take into consideration “all of the factors affecting a public defender’s ability to adequately represent clients, such as the complexity of cases on a defender’s docket, the defender’s skill and experience, the support services available to the defender, and the defender’s other duties.”235 The National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals (NAC) created the first national defender caseload standards as part of an initiative funded by the U.S. Department of Justice.236 It is these NAC caseload maximums to which See generally National Legal Aid & defender Ass’n, Performance Guidelines for Criminal Defense Representation (1995). 232 Me. R. Prof’l Conduct 1.3 cmt (“[a] lawyer’s workload must be controlled so that each matter can be handled competently”). 233 American Bar Ass’n, ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System, Principle 5 (Feb. 2002). 234 American Bar Ass’n, ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System, commentary to Principle 5 (Feb. 2002). 235 Statement of Interest of the United States at 9, Wilbur v. City of Mount Vernon, No. C111100RSL (W.D. Wash., filed Aug 14, 2013), available at http://www.justice.gov/crt/about/spl/ documents/wilbursoi8-14-13.pdf. See, e.g., Mary Sue Backus and Paul Marcus, The Right to Counsel in Criminal Cases, A National Crisis, 57 Hastings L. J. 1031, 1125 (2006) (“Although national caseload standards are available, states should consider their own circumstances in defining a reasonable defender workload. Factors such as availability of investigators, level of support staff, complexity of cases, and level of attorney experience all might affect a workable definition. Data collection and a consistent method of weighing cases are essential to determining current caseloads and setting reasonable workload standards.”). 236 Building upon the work and findings of the 1967 President’s Commission on Law Enforcement 231 IV. SUFFICIENT TIME national standards refer when they say that “in no event” should national caseload standards be exceeded. NAC Standard 13.12 prescribes absolute maximum numerical caseload limits of: • • • • • 150 felonies per attorney per year; 400 misdemeanors per attorney per year; 200 juvenile delinquencies per attorney per year; 200 mental health per attorney per year; or 25 appeals per attorney per year.237 This means a lawyer handling felony cases should not be responsible for more than a total of 150 felony cases in a given year, counting both cases the lawyer had when the year began and cases assigned to the lawyer during that year, and including all of the lawyer’s cases (public, private, and pro bono). The NAC standards can be prorated for mixed caseloads. For example, an attorney could have a mixed caseload over the course of a given year of 75 felonies (50% of a maximum caseload) and 200 misdemeanors (50% of a maximum caseload) and be in compliance with national caseload standards. The caseload limits assume that the lawyer does not have any other duties, such as management or supervisory responsibilities. The NAC caseload limits were established and remain as absolute maximums. Yet, policymakers in many states have since recognized the need to set localized workload standards. Localized standards are able to consider unique demands made on defense attorneys in each case, such as the travel distance between the court and the local jail, or the prosecution’s charging practices, or increased complexity of forensic sciences and criminal justice technology. Demands of these types increase the amount of time, beyond that contemplated by the NAC standards, that is necessary for the lawyer to provide effective representation. For these reasons, many criminal justice professionals argue that the caseloads permitted by the NAC Standards are far too high and that the maximum caseloads allowed should be much lower.238 and Administration of Justice, the Administrator of the U.S. Department of Justice Law Enforcement Assistance Administration appointed the National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals in 1971, with DOJ/LEAA grant funding to develop standards for crime reduction and prevention at the state and local levels. The NAC crafted standards for all criminal justice functions, including law enforcement, corrections, the courts, and the prosecution. Chapter 13 of the NAC’s report sets the standards for the defense function. National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals, Report of the Task Force on the Courts, ch.13 (The Defense) (1973). 237 National Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals, Report of the Task Force on the Courts, ch.13 (The Defense), Standard 13.12 (1973). 238 See, e.g., American Council of Chief Defenders, Statement on Caseloads and Workloads (Aug. 24, 2007), available at https://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/administrative/ legal_ aid_indigent_defendants/ls_sclaid_def_train_caseloads_standards_ethics_opinions_combined. authcheckdam.pdf (“In many jurisdictions, caseload limits should be lower than the NAC standards.”). 65 66 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine Massachusetts’ Committee for Public Counsel services implements caseload controls To see how the NAC standards can be implemented, we again look to Massachusetts’ Committee for Public Counsel Services (CPCS). CPCS uses a weighted system of caseload limits, with a particular weight for each type of case and an absolute limit of 250 weighted cases assigned per year. Misdemeanors and lesser felonies within district court jurisdiction are weighted as “1,” while superior court felonies are weighted as “2” for calculating the limit for a mixed caseload. So, if an attorney accepted 100 district court cases in a year, he could also accept no more than 75 superior court cases that year. Attorneys handling only superior court felonies are limited to 100 per year. Murder cases are assigned in the discretion of the Chief Counsel or designee, but no attorney may have more than four open murder cases. CPCS’s electronic billing system enforces the caseload limits by rejecting assignments exceeding the limits. Attorneys are expected to keep track of their own caseloads, and they may seek a waiver of the limit in an unusual situation where a waiver is needed to benefit a client. To assist the county administrators in assigning duty days, CPCS provides them with quarterly reports showing the numbers of cases assigned and the numbers of hours billed so far in the fiscal year by each attorney. The county administrators and supervising attorneys use this data to promote reasonable workloads and to check on the work of any attorney who seems to be taking on too much. Attorneys’ workloads are also restrained by fiscal controls, including a presumptive though waivable daily cap and an annual cap on hours billed. Attorneys are deterred from taking on more work than can be performed within these fiscal limits, because they will likely not be paid for it. Finding 6: Despite the lack of MCILS workload limits, excessive caseloads may not be an issue in most counties in Maine. However, insufficient time is an issue in Somerset County, where the combination of high caseloads and the fixed fee contract system produce financial incentives to dispose of cases without adequate preparation. Maine does not have any statewide limits on the number of cases that an attorney representing indigent clients may handle in a year. Even factoring in “lawyer of the day” duties in most jurisdictions, the attorneys with the most cases handled in Aroostook, Androscoggin, Cumberland, and York Counties do not appear to have excessive appointed caseloads. That said, MCILS has no way of knowing how many cases each attorney handles in their private practice. IV. SUFFICIENT TIME 67 Aroostook239 County Name Androscoggin 2016 2017 2018 Total 159 135 137 195 800 Hunter 143 128 128 157 123 679 97 143 125 106 156 627 115 115 136 112 144 622 - - 127 158 268 553 Ward Kenney McIntosh Swanson Wells-Puckett Smith Cumberland 2105 174 Tebbetts 70 117 118 62 50 417 137 173 102 - - 412 - - 13 133 264 410 55 131 114 27 49 376 Charest 357 330 253 251 296 1,487 Dolley 179 170 218 189 205 961 Howaniec 177 121 156 122 173 749 McMorran 141 151 148 110 146 696 Lobozzo 216 175 158 92 46 687 Ranger 124 135 108 113 151 631 Fairbanks 65 126 116 118 191 616 Pushard 96 134 104 127 130 591 Hornblower 129 125 117 115 84 570 Hess 134 113 89 86 66 488 LeBrasseur 146 183 181 157 238 905 Moynihan 165 169 150 160 180 824 Chmelecki 145 103 78 77 70 473 Yamartino 88 80 104 66 116 454 Peltier 74 108 97 79 92 450 Hewes 76 105 70 74 104 429 - 73 111 92 145 421 Ruffner 67 130 79 100 42 418 Hanly 51 72 126 93 75 417 Gonzales McKenna York 2014 Hanson 20 71 87 113 107 398 Winling 179 213 210 172 188 962 Ashe 184 207 126 176 129 822 Fairfield 177 217 226 99 91 810 Locke 158 178 173 120 148 777 Champagne 118 169 167 117 176 747 Houde 154 161 154 103 109 681 Mekonis 127 111 117 113 130 598 Strike 132 131 113 58 116 550 - 55 118 145 164 482 39 75 120 106 121 461 Gordon Capponi 6AC removed one Aroostook County lawyer from this table because he primarily handles all of the in custody lawyer of the day assignments, making his caseload appear excessive when it is not. In the other counties, where lawyer of the day duties are more rotational, the 6AC left those “cases” in the case counts. 239 68 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine The one place where there are definitely time sufficiency issues is in Somerset County. Over the past six years, the average number of hours spent per indigent defense case has declined.240 For example, in FY 2013, on average the lawyers spent 10.11 hours on each adult criminal case. The data indicates that there was one adult criminal case that year in which two Project attorneys worked a combined 1,444.24 hours. Eliminating this one case from the mix results in an average of 6.78 hours spent per adult case in FY 2013. By FY 2018, the number dropped to 2.99 hours on average per adult criminal case (a decrease of approximately 56%). FY 2013 Attorney Attorney A ADULT Closed Attorney B 104 1,040.72 10.01 Attorney C 96 976.73 10.17 Attorney D 55 503.70 9.16 46 565.65 12.30 431 4,358.45 10.11 Total FY 2014 Attorney 9.78 ADULT Closed Hours Hrs/Case Attorney C 96 331.65 3.45 Attorney A 78 529.40 6.79 Attorney B 61 187.20 3.07 Attorney E 37 211.00 5.70 Attorney D 1 1.00 1.00 273 1,260.25 4.62 Total FY 2015 Attorney ADULT Closed Hours Hrs/Case Attorney A 102 664.75 6.52 Attorney C 89 515.35 5.79 Attorney E 84 205.16 2.44 Attorney F 1 1.00 1.00 Attorney B Hrs/Case 1,271.65 Attorney E Hours 130 Total 0 - N/A 276 1,386.26 5.02 Email from John Pelletier, Director, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 7, 2019). 240 IV. SUFFICIENT TIME 69 FY 2016 Attorney ADULT Closed Hours 136 275.46 2.03 Attorney A 119 584.30 4.91 98 521.70 5.32 353 1,381.46 3.91 Attorney C Total FY 2017 Attorney ADULT Closed Hours Hrs/Case Attorney E 110 225.34 2.05 Attorney A 84 387.10 4.61 70 330.20 4.72 264 942.64 3.57 Attorney C Hrs/Case Attorney E Total FY 2018 Attorney ADULT Closed Hours Hrs/Case Attorney E 133 295.25 2.22 Attorney A 99 361.90 3.66 Attorney C 98 342.40 3.49 7 8.50 1.21 337 1,008.05 2.99 Attorney G Total Importantly, MCILS does not require from the Somerset County Project reporting of adult criminal cases to be distinguished by severity (e.g. felony or misdemeanor), which would allow MCILS to more accurately track attorney workloads. That said, 2.99 hours per adult criminal case is extremely and unreasonably low, even if every case was a class D or E charge. Using the NAC misdemeanor standard of 400 cases per year, divided into a 2,040hour year, indicates that attorneys should be spending 5.1 hours per misdemeanor case. As mentioned above, the NAC standards created in the 1970s have been challenged by indigent defense advocates for not providing sufficient time per case. One organization looking to determine more realistic caseload standards is the American Bar Association, which has carried out a series of studies to determine the appropriate amount of time attorneys should spend on the average case, by case type, to effectively bring the case to disposition. Caseload studies in four jurisdictions show that the average number of hours needed to complete a standard misdemeanor case is 70 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine significantly higher: Colorado (11.4),241 Louisiana (12.06),242 Missouri (11.7),243 and Rhode Island (12.7).244 The issues with time sufficiency in Somerset County carry over to the juvenile delinquency realm. Although the amount of time spent on juvenile delinquency cases has remained more consistent than adult cases – with a high of 5.2 hours spent per delinquency case in FY 2015 and a low of 2.97 hours per delinquency case in FY 2016 – juvenile delinquency matters should require more hours per average case than misdemeanors. Again, using the NAC standard of no more than 200 delinquency cases per attorney per year, when applies against a 2,040-hour work year, means that 10.2 hours should be spent on the average delinquency case. And, since the NAC standards were created in the 1970’s, juvenile delinquency representation has become a very specialized practice requiring significant time per case as practitioners have recognized the importance of addressing the factors in the child’s life which have contributed to court involvement. For example, looking to a state in the same geographical region, the ABA has determined that in Rhode Island, the average juvenile delinquency case should take 46.1 hours to defend.245 These issues extend to the representation of juveniles charged as delinquents at initial appearance. Each year in Somerset County, there are 12 court days requiring lawyer of the day for juvenile delinquency cases. In FY 2014, Project attorneys spent 6.83 hours per lawyer-of-the-day appearance. That number has decreased to 2.29 hours per appearance. American Bar Ass’n, Standing Comm. on Legal Aid and Indigent Defendants & RubinBrown, The Colorado Project: A Study of the Colorado Public Defender System and Attorney Workload Standards 20 (2017), available at https://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/administrative/legal_ aid_indigent_defendants/ls_sclaid_def_co_project.pdf. 242 American Bar Ass’n, Standing Comm. on Legal Aid and Indigent Defendants & Postlethwaite & Netterville, The Louisiana Project: A Study of the Louisiana Public Defender System and Attorney Workload Standards 2 (2017), available at https://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/ administrative/legal_aid_indigent_defendants/ls_sclaid_louisiana_project_report.pdf. 243 American Bar Ass’n, Standing Comm. on Legal Aid and Indigent Defendants & RubinBrown, The Missouri Project: A Study of the Missouri Public Defender System and Attorney Workload Standards 6 (2014), available at https://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/events/legal_aid_ indigent_defendants/2014/ls_sclaid_5c_the_missouri_project_report.pdf. 244 American Bar Ass’n, Standing Comm. on Legal Aid and Indigent Defendants, Nat’l Ass’n of Criminal Defense Lawyers & BlumShapiro, The Rhode Island Project: A Study of the Rhode Island Public Defender System and Attorney Workload Standards 6 (2017), available at https://www. americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/administrative/legal_aid_indigent_defendants/ls_sclaid_def_ri_ project.pdf. 245 American Bar Ass’n, Standing Comm. on Legal Aid and Indigent Defendants, Nat’l Ass’n of Criminal Defense Lawyers & BlumShapiro, The Rhode Island Project: A Study of the Rhode Island Public Defender System and Attorney Workload Standards 6 (2017), available at https://www. americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/administrative/legal_aid_indigent_defendants/ls_sclaid_def_ri_ project.pdf. 241 Chapter V ATTORNEY COMPENSATION & FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT The U.S. Supreme Court explained in Cronic that “[t]he right to the effective assistance of counsel” means that the defense must put the prosecution’s case through the “crucible of meaningful adversarial testing.”246 For this to occur, states must ensure that both the prosecution and the defense have the resources they need at the level their respective roles demand. “While a criminal trial is not a game in which the participants are expected to enter the ring with a near match in skills, neither is it a sacrifice of unarmed prisoners to gladiators.”247 If a defense attorney is either incapable of or barred from challenging the state’s case because of a structural impediment – “if the process loses its character as a confrontation between adversaries”248 – a constructive denial of counsel occurs. The annual legislative appropriation to MCILS has not kept pace with actual costs. In the eight years since its inception, the MCILS total annual funding has slightly more than doubled (from $11,085,696 in 2011 to $22,695,219).249 The greatest portion of the MCILS budget is dedicated to attorney fees. For example, in FY 2018, 83.62% of the MCILS budget went to attorney fees ($18,978,078). But in each year, MCILS runs out of funding at some point during the budget cycle and requires supplemental funding to meet that year’s caseload requirements. (See table below). During such times, attorneys may go without pay while MCILS secures supplemental appropriations.250 United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 656-57 (1984) (“The right to the effective assistance of counsel is thus the right of the accused to require the prosecution’s case to survive the crucible of meaningful adversarial testing. When a true adversarial criminal trial has been conducted – even if defense counsel may have made demonstrable errors – the kind of testing envisioned by the Sixth Amendment has occurred. But if the process loses its character as a confrontation between adversaries, the constitutional guarantee is violated.”). 247 United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 657 (1984) (citing United States ex rel. Williams v. Twomey, 510 F.2d 634, 640 (7th Cir. 1975)). 248 United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 656-57 (1984). 249 The financial data reflects information obtained from the Maine State Law and Legislative Reference Library. Email from Ryan Jones, Reference Librarian, Maine State Law and Legislative Reference Library, forwarded to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center, by Margaret J. Reinsch, Esq., Legislative Analyst, Joint Standing Committee on Judiciary, Maine State Legislature Office of Policy and Legal Analysis (Feb. 15, 2019). Part of the increased funding requirements beginning in 2015 results from MCILS increasing the hourly rate paid to private attorneys from $50 to $60, effective July 1, 2015. 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 301, § 2 (eff. July 1, 2015). 250 See, e.g., David Carroll, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services to Run Out of Money in April 2013, Sixth Amendment Center (Feb. 20, 2013) (recounting then-current newspaper and media accounts of the MCILS funding crisis in that year), available at http://sixthamendment.org/mainecommission-on-indigent-legal-services-to-run-out-of-money-in-april-2013/. 246 72 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine MCILS 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 Appropriation $10,579,199 $11,140,632 $11,458,721 $13,350,710 $16,325,689 $19,097,259 $16,325,676 $21,901,722 Supplemental $506,497 $596,497 $596,497 $628,497 $628,497 $777,497 $793,497 $793,497 $11,085,696 $11,737,129 $12,055,218 $13,979,207 $16,954,186 $19,874,756 $17,119,173 $22,695,219 Total Finding 7: MCILS’ fixed fee contract causes a financial conflict of interest. MCILS’ hourly rate is inadequate to both cover overhead and provide lawyers an adequate fee. The Cronic Court clearly advises that governmental interference that infringes on a lawyer’s independence to act in the stated interests of defendants or places the lawyer in a conflict of interest causes a constructive denial of counsel.251 Maine’s Rules of Professional Conduct require that “a lawyer shall not represent a client if . . . there is a significant risk that the representation . . . will be materially limited by . . . a personal interest of the lawyer.”252 When the needs of a client’s case require the lawyer to spend money out of his own compensation, there is a conflict between the lawyer’s personal interests and that of the client. In short, any structure of services that places the attorney’s personal financial wellbeing in direct competition with the stated interest of a defendant is a constructive denial of counsel. The State of Maine, therefore, has a constitutional obligation to ensure the system it has established for providing Sixth Amendment services is free from financial conflicts that interfere with counsel’s ability to render effective representation to each defendant.253 There are three categories of financial resources that are needed for the defense of every case: law office overhead; case-related expenses; and fair lawyer compensation.254 • Law office overhead. For an attorney to simply show up and be available to represent clients each day, there are certain expenses that must be paid. These include office rent, furniture and equipment, computers and cellphones, telephone and internet and other utilities, office supplies including stationery, United States v. Cronic, 466 U.S. 648, 658-61 (1984). Me. R. Prof’l Conduct 1.7(a)(2). 253 See, e.g., Wood v. Georgia, 450 U.S. 261, 271 (1981) (“Where a constitutional right to counsel exists, our Sixth Amendment cases hold that there is a correlative right to representation that is free from conflicts of interest.”); Cuyler v. Sullivan, 446 US 335, 346 (1980) (“Defense counsel have an ethical obligation to avoid conflicting representations and to advise the court promptly when a conflict of interest arises during the course of trial.”); Glasser v. United States, 315 U.S. 60, 70 (1942) (“‘[A] ssistance of counsel’ guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment contemplates that such assistance be untrammeled and unimpaired by a court order requiring that one lawyer shall simultaneously represent conflicting interests.”). 254 See, e.g., American Bar Ass’n, ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System, commentary to Principle 8 (Feb. 2002) (“Assigned counsel should be paid a reasonable fee in addition to actual overhead and expenses. Contracts with private attorneys for public defense services should never be let primarily on the basis of cost; they should . . . separately fund expert, investigative, and other litigation support services.”). 251 252 V. ATTORNEY COMPENSATION & FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT malpractice insurance, state licensing and bar dues, and legal research materials, plus the cost of staff such as a secretary or legal assistant. All of these expenses, commonly referred to as “overhead,” must be incurred before a lawyer represents a single client.255 • Case-related expenses. Once an attorney is designated to represent a specific client in a specific case, there are additional expenses that must be paid. These are the expenses that the attorney would not incur but for representing that client, and they include, for example: postage to communicate with the client and witnesses and the court system, long-distance and collect telephone charges, mileage and other travel costs to and from court and to conduct investigations, preparation of copies and exhibits, costs incurred in obtaining discovery, along with the costs of hiring necessary investigators and experts in the case. These costs vary from case to case – some cases requiring very little in the way of expense; other cases costing quite a lot. The individual expenses that are necessary, though, must be paid for in every client’s case. • Fair lawyer compensation. Compensation is the attorney’s take home pay. All national standards require that: “Assigned counsel should be paid a reasonable fee in addition to actual overhead and expenses. Contracts with private attorneys for public defense services should never be let primarily on the basis of cost; they should specify performance requirements and the anticipated workload, provide an overflow or funding mechanism for excess, unusual or complex cases, and separately fund expert, investigative, and other litigation support services.”256 The American Bar Association’s Standards for Criminal Justice explain that attorneys must have adequate resources and support staff in order to render quality legal representation. Among these are secretarial, investigative, and expert services, which includes assistance at pre-trial release hearings and sentencing. In addition to personal services, this standard contemplates adequate facilities and equipment, such as computers, telephones, facsimile machines, photocopying, and specialized equipment required to perform necessary investigations.257 “The 2012 Survey of Law Firm Economics by ALM Legal Intelligence estimates that over 50 percent of revenue generated by attorneys goes to pay overhead expenses,” National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, Rationing Justice: The Underfunding of Assigned Counsel Systems 8 (Mar. 2013), and overhead tends to be a higher percentage of gross receipts as a law office gets smaller. See ALM Legal Intelligence, 2012 Survey of Law Firm Economics, Executive Summary at 4 (showing overhead ranging from 38.9 percent of receipts in the largest law firms to 47.2 percent in smaller law offices). 256 American Bar Ass’n, ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System, commentary to Principle 8 (Feb. 2002). 257 American Bar Ass’n, Standards for Criminal Justice – Providing Defense Services, commentary to Standard 5-1.4 (3d ed. 1992). 255 73 74 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine The government is responsible for providing the resources needed in each defendant’s case. It can do so by providing a government paid-for building stocked with all the necessary supplies and equipment and a budget for investigation, experts, and support staff. Or it can do so by paying or repaying the public attorneys for these expenses. What government cannot do, as has been held by state supreme courts all across the country, is place the burden of paying for the indigent defense system onto the public attorneys.258 MCILS provides all indigent legal representation by paying private lawyers in one of two ways: a fixed fee annual contract amount, or an hourly rate. See, e.g., Wright v. Childree, 972 So. 2d 771, 780-81 (Ala. 2006) (determining assigned counsel are entitled to a reasonable fee in addition to overhead expenses, in case where state’s Attorney General had issued an opinion against paying the overhead rate and the state comptroller subsequently stopped paying); May v. State, 672 So. 2d 1307, 1308 (Ala. Crim. App. 1993) (determining indigent defense attorneys were entitled to overhead expenses, presumptively set at $30 per hour, in addition to a reasonable fee); DeLisio v. Alaska Superior Court, 740 P.2d 437, 443 (Alaska 1987) (determining that appointed cases did not simply merit a reasonable fee and overhead, but rather the fair market rate of an average private case. “[R]equiring an attorney to represent an indigent criminal defendant for only nominal compensation unfairly burdens the attorney by disproportionately placing the cost of a program intended to benefit the public upon the attorney rather than upon the citizenry as a whole.” Alaska’s constitution “does not permit the state to deny reasonable compensation to an attorney who is appointed to assist the state in discharging its constitutional burden,” because doing so would be taking “private property for a public purpose without just compensation.”); State ex rel Stephan v. Smith, 747 P.2d 816, 242 Kan. 336, 383 (Kan. 1987) (the state “has an obligation to pay appointed counsel such sums as will fairly compensate the attorney, not at the top rate an attorney might charge, but at a rate which is not confiscatory, considering overhead and expenses;” testimony showed the average overhead rate of attorneys in Kansas in 1987 was $30 per hour); State v. Wigley, 624 So.2d 425, 429 (La. 1993) (finding that “in order to be reasonable and not oppressive, any assignment of counsel to defend an indigent defendant must provide for reimbursement to the assigned attorney of properly incurred and reasonable out-of-pocket expenses and overhead costs.”); Wilson v. State, 574 So.2d 1338, 1340 (Miss. 1990) (determining that indigent defense attorneys are entitled to “reimbursement of actual expenses” in addition to a reasonable sum; defining “actual expenses” to include “all actual costs to the lawyer for the purpose of keeping his or her door open to handle this case,” and allowing defense attorneys to receive a “pro rata share of actual overhead”); State v. Lynch, 796 P.2d 1150, 1161 (Okla. 1990) (finding that state government “has an obligation to pay appointed lawyers sums which will fairly compensate the lawyer, not at the top rate which a lawyer might charge, but at a rate which is not confiscatory, after considering overhead and expenses;” “provision must be made for compensation of defense counsel’s reasonable overhead and out of pocket expenses” in order “to place the counsel for the defense on an equal footing with counsel for the prosecution”); Jewell v. Maynard, 383 S.E.2d 536, 540 (W. Va. 1989) (raising the hourly rate paid to court appointed attorneys on a finding that they were forced to “involuntarily subsidize the State with out-of-pocket cash,” because the then-current rates did not cover attorney overhead shown to be $35 per hour in West Virginia in 1989. “Perhaps the most serious defect of the present system is that the low hourly fee may prompt an appointed lawyer to advise a client to plead guilty, although the same lawyer would advise a paying client in a similar case to demand a jury trial.”). 258 V. ATTORNEY COMPENSATION & FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT Fixed fee contract In only Somerset County, MCILS has a single contract with three private attorneys259 to collectively provide all trial level indigent defense services absent a conflict of interest, to carry out any appeals from those cases, and to handle post-conviction review proceedings where they did not represent the petitioner at trial.260 In exchange for that representation, MCILS pays the three attorneys collectively a fixed monthly compensation of $22,687.50 (an annual equivalent of $544,500, then divided among the three attorneys).261 Additionally, the contract attorneys are reimbursed by MCILS for case related expenses including expert witnesses, investigation, and discovery, but the contract attorneys “shall pay for all costs, fees and expenses incurred in providing the contract services” other than the specific expense types itemized in the contract.262 The contract currently in force was originally let for the 22-month period of September 1, 2014 to June 30, 2016,263 and it has been extended three times for one year in each extension,264 with the current extension expiring on June 30, 2019. The Somerset contract attorneys are referred to colloquially as “The Project.”265 When a Project attorney has a conflict of interest, the case is reassigned to one of the other Project attorneys. If all Project attorneys have a conflict, the court appoints a private attorney to be paid by MCILS at the hourly rate described below.266 State of Maine, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, Agreement to Purchase Services, AdvantageME CT No. 95F 20140826-723 (Aug. 25, 2014). 260 State of Maine, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, Agreement to Purchase Services, AdvantageME CT No. 95F 20140826-723, Rider A ¶¶ 1, 2, 7 (Aug. 25, 2014). 261 State of Maine, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, Agreement to Purchase Services, AdvantageME CT No. 95F 20140826-723, Rider A ¶ 9 (Aug. 25, 2014); State of Maine, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, Contract for Special Services - Amendment, AdvantageME CT No. 95F 20140826-723 (Apr. 30, 2018). 262 State of Maine, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, Agreement to Purchase Services, AdvantageME CT No. 95F 20140826-723, Rider A ¶ 10 (Aug. 25, 2014). 263 State of Maine, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, Agreement to Purchase Services, AdvantageME CT No. 95F 20140826-723 (Aug. 25, 2014). 264 State of Maine, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, Contract for Special Services - Amendment, AdvantageME CT No. 95F 20140826-723 (June 17, 2016); State of Maine, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, Contract for Special Services - Amendment, AdvantageME CT No. 95F 20140826-723 (July 11, 2017); State of Maine, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, Contract for Special Services - Amendment, AdvantageME CT No. 95F 20140826-723 (Apr. 30, 2018). The final extension from (July 1, 2018 to June 30, 2019) explicitly notes that no RFP process is being conducted due to the expectation that the 6AC study will make recommendations regarding the provision of indigent legal representation in Somerset County. 265 This contract system predates the creation of MCILS and was originally a contract between the Maine Judicial Branch and the Somerset County Private Defender Program. At one time, the contract included seven attorneys from five separate law firms. MCILS issued a Request for Proposal for the Somerset contract in 2011 and 2014, and “The Project” was the only respondent each time. 266 The contract could be read to require the Project to pay for conflict counsel, however, MCILS confirms that MCILS (rather than the Project) pays for attorneys appointed when all Project attorneys have a conflict of interest. Email from John Pelletier, Director, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 8, 2019). 259 75 76 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine Fixed fee contracts, in which a lawyer earns the same pay no matter how many cases he is required to handle, create financial incentives for a lawyer to dispose of cases as quickly as possible, rather than as effectively as possible for the client. Even where the defendant has a winnable case, the lawyer’s incentive nevertheless is to resolve it by plea. The attorney is not rewarded with additional pay for the additional work involved in zealous advocacy. Instead, the attorney is hurt financially the more he does for his clients. Moreover, the average fee per case under the Somerset contract for FY 2017 was $573.16, slightly higher than the average billed by the assigned counsel elsewhere (statewide $554.80). The average hours per case spent in Somerset, at 3.27, was much lower than the statewide average of 9.25 (assuming the 2017 rate was $60/hour), resulting in the Somerset hourly rate paid for counsel being $174.97. So, in Somerset County, the State of Maine is paying attorneys three times the rate it pays everyone else and getting approximately one third less work. Hourly rate Other than the three attorneys under contract in Somerset County as described above, throughout Maine MCILS pays attorneys a set rate of $60 per hour for all types of work in all types of cases.267 The maximum compensation an attorney can be paid for each case is capped, based on the type of case, and the maximum can be waived by the MCILS executive director).268 When an attorney serves as “Lawyer of the Day” (see 267 268 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 301, § 2 (eff. July 1, 2015). 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 301, § 4 (eff. July 1, 2015). The presumptive fee caps set by MCILS are: trial level – criminal and delinquency: murder (set by MCILS executive director on case by case basis); class A ($3,000;) class B and C, against person ($2,250); class B and C, against property ($1,500); class D and E, in Superior or Unified Criminal Court ($750); class D and E, in District Court ($540); post-conviction review ($1,200); probation revocation ($540); miscellaneous, i.e. witness representation on Fifth Amendment grounds ($540); juvenile ($540). trial level – child protection: child protective cases ($900 each stage); termination of parental rights with a hearing ($1,260). trial level – other civil: application for involuntary commitment ($420); petition for modified release treatment ($420); petition for release or discharge ($420); petition for emancipation ($420); appeal, following grant of petition for certificate of probable cause ($1,200). Id. V. ATTORNEY COMPENSATION & FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT discussion at pages 51 to 57), they are allowed to bill a minimum fee of $150 even if their time spent is less than 2 ½ hours.269 Additionally, attorneys are reimbursed by MCILS for case related expenses like collect calls, copying more than 100 pages, and travel other than to and from the attorney’s “home district and superior court.”270 Attorneys are not reimbursed for their overhead expenses (e.g., rent, office utilities, professional insurance, legal research tools & resources, etc.).271 In 2013, the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers published a comprehensive study of the rates of compensation paid to private attorneys to provide representation to indigent people, whether under contract or appointed on a case by case basis, in all fifty states272 and found generally that the low compensation rates provided to lawyers across America are a “serious threat to our criminal justice system.”273 The requirement that attorneys who represent the poor be adequately compensated does not arise out of concern for the welfare of the attorneys. Rather, adequate compensation for the attorney is required to ensure that the attorney provides effective representation to each client. Inadequate compensation “leads to a decrease in the overall number of attorneys willing to accept court appointments”274 and can “encourage some attorneys to accept more clients than they can effectively represent in order to make ends meet.”275 To underscore just how a $60 per hour rate does not afford both a reasonable fee and coverage of actual overhead expenses, one need only to look at a few other states whose assigned counsel compensation rates were challenged through litigation: • West Virginia: The West Virginia Supreme Court determined in 1989 that court appointed attorneys in that state were forced to “involuntarily subsidize the State with out-of-pocket cash,”276 because the then-current rates did not cover attorney overhead. “Perhaps the most serious defect of the present system,” the court found, “is that the low hourly fee may prompt an appointed lawyer to advise a client to plead guilty, although the same lawyer would advise a paying client in a similar case to demand a jury trial.”277 A now 30-year-old survey of more than 250 West Virginia lawyers who were taking appointed cases (i.e., 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 301, § 5 (eff. July 1, 2015). 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 301, § 3.2. (eff. July 1, 2015). 271 94-649 Code Me. R. ch. 301, § 3.1. (eff. July 1, 2015). 272 National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, Rationing Justice: The Underfunding of Assigned Counsel Systems (Mar. 2013). 273 National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, Rationing Justice: The Underfunding of Assigned Counsel Systems 12 (Mar. 2013). 274 National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, Rationing Justice: The Underfunding of Assigned Counsel Systems 15 (Mar. 2013). 275 National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, Rationing Justice: The Underfunding of Assigned Counsel Systems 16 (Mar. 2013). 276 Jewell v. Maynard, 383 S.E.2d 536 (W. Va. 1989). 277 Jewell v. Maynard, 383 S.E.2d 536, 540 (W. Va. 1989). 269 270 77 78 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine not a survey of all private attorneys, but of only those accepting public cases) determined that in 1989 the average hourly overhead was $35 per hour. The cumulative rate of inflation since 1989 is 103%,278 making the 1989 overhead rate today in West Virginia likely to be $71.05. And, Maine has 13% a higher cost of living than in West Virginia, suggesting that overhead rates in Maine may be $80.29.279 • Mississippi: In 1990, the Mississippi Supreme Court determined that indigent defense attorneys are entitled to “reimbursement of actual expenses” in addition to a reasonable sum, and defined “actual expenses” to include “all actual costs to the lawyer for the purpose of keeping his or her door open to handle this case.”280 This allows defense attorneys in Mississippi to receive a “pro rata share of actual overhead.”281 The Mississippi State Bar determined that overhead costs almost 30 years ago in that state were $34.86, although the court eventually settled on an overhead rate of $25 per hour.282 Even using this lower rate, the cumulative rate of inflation since 1990 is 92.6% making the overhead rate in Mississippi likely to be $48.15.283 Maine has a cost of living that is 28% greater than Mississippi,284 meaning the comparative cost of overhead in Maine may be $61.63. • Oklahoma: In the same year as the Mississippi decision, the Oklahoma Supreme Court found that state government “has an obligation to pay appointed See U.S. Inflation Calculator, https://www.usinflationcalculator.com (last visited Mar. 4, 2019). Cost of Living Portland, Maine vs. Charles Town, West Virginia, PayScale, https://www.payscale. com/cost-of-living-calculator/Maine-Portland/West-Virginia-Charles-Town (last visited Mar. 4, 2019). 280 Wilson v. State, 574 So.2d 1338 (Miss. 1990). 281 Wilson v. State, 574 So.2d 1338, 1340 (Miss. 1990). 282 Wilson v. State, 574 So.2d 1338, 1340-41 (Miss. 1990). (“Following our rule of statutory construction, we are able to save this statute from unconstitutionality by interpreting this language to include reimbursement for all actual costs to the lawyer for the purpose of keeping his or her door open to handle this case, i.e., the lawyer will receive a pro rata share of actual overhead. The appellant urges us to adopt a figure of $ 34.86 per hour for overhead. This figure is derived from a survey conducted by the Mississippi State Bar in 1988. See, 35 Mississippi Lawyer, No. 5, at 45 (March-April 1989). However, we choose rather to adopt a $25.00 per hour figure, which is also based on the survey. For ease of administration and to avoid a lot of satellite litigation, we create a rebuttable presumption that a court appointed attorney’s actual overhead within the statute is $25.00 per hour. However, the trial court is bound by this only in the absence of actual proof to the contrary -- proof offered by the lawyer that it is more or by the State that it is less.”) (emphasis original). It is important to note that Mississippi sets a statutory cap on the total payments possible to appointed attorneys, for example, $1000 for a felony case, plus “actual expenses.” Miss. Code Ann. § 99-15-17 (2017). The Legislature has directed the State Office of the Public Defender to “coordinate the collection and dissemination of statistical data and make such reports as are required of the divisions, develop plans and proposals for further development of a statewide public defender system in coordination with the Mississippi Public Defenders Task Force.” Miss. Code Ann. § 99-18-1 (2017). 283 See US Inflation Calculator, https://www.usinflationcalculator.com (last visited Mar. 4, 2019). 284 Cost of Living Portland, Maine vs. Jackson, Mississippi, PayScale, https://www.payscale.com/costof-living-calculator/Maine-Portland/Mississippi-Jackson (last visited Mar. 4, 2019). 278 279 V. ATTORNEY COMPENSATION & FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT lawyers sums which will fairly compensate the lawyer, not at the top rate which a lawyer might charge, but at a rate which is not confiscatory, after considering overhead and expenses.”285 Based on the existing salary structure for Oklahoma district attorneys, the court determined a reasonable appointed counsel fee to be between $14.63 and $29.26 (based on experience) and “[a]s a matter of course, when the district attorneys’ … salaries are raised by the Legislature so, too, would the hourly rate of compensation for defense counsel.”286 In addition to this reasonable fee, and “to place the counsel for the defense on an equal footing with counsel for the prosecution,” the court also determined that a “provision must be made for compensation of defense counsel’s reasonable overhead and out of pocket expenses.”287 The court found that the two lawyers involved in the case at dispute should be paid their actual overhead costs. The overhead costs for the Oklahoma attorneys in 1989 were respectively $50.88 per hour and $48.00 per hour.288 Again, taking the lower rate and accounting for inflation, the Oklahoma overhead compensation rate is likely $92.45.289 Finding 8: A significant number of attorneys bill in excess of eight hours per day, five days per week, for 52 weeks per year. MCILS does not exert adequate financial oversight of private attorneys. Attorney billing “Over-billing” was a topic raised frequently throughout the state. A Cumberland County attorney complained that there is currently no limit on the number of cases an attorney can accept, creating the ability to bill for an unlimited number of hours overall, and that a few outlying attorneys bill well over $200,000 per year at $60 per hour. One Androscoggin County attorney expressed annoyance that some attorneys bill much more than he does for similar cases, especially cases that he takes over when the case must go to trial. He notes that in one case alleging a gross sexual assault, another attorney had already charged $14,000 before he took over before trial. In Maine, attorneys do not submit vouchers under penalty of perjury. No statutes or MCILS rules limit attorney hours by day or by year. MCILS conducts no audits. Not surprisingly, a review of MCILS vouchers over the past five years generated serious concerns in some instances about whether limited taxpayer resources are being used State v. Lynch, 796 P.2d 1150 (Okla. 1990). State v. Lynch, 796 P.2d 1150, 1161 (Okla. 1990). 287 State v. Lynch, 796 P.2d 1150, 1161 (Okla. 1990). 288 In 1991, the high attorney compensation rate hastened the creation of the Oklahoma Indigent Defense System – a state-funded agency in the executive branch that provides trial-level, appellate and post-conviction criminal defense representation to the indigent accused in 75 of the state’s 77 counties. Both Tulsa County (Tulsa) and Oklahoma County (Oklahoma City) established public defender offices prior to statewide reform and were allowed to continue to provide services outside of the OIDS system. 289 See US Inflation Calculator, https://www.usinflationcalculator.com (last visited Mar. 4, 2019). 285 286 79 80 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine effectively. Although the demands of complex cases may require an attorney to work well over eight hours per day for certain periods ,such as during trials, average billing that greatly exceeds full time hours over long periods should trigger inquiry. If an attorney works eight hours per day, five days per week, for 52 weeks a year, that attorney should make no more than $124,800 at the current $60 per hour MCILS rate. This assumes that the attorney never takes a day off (neither personal, holiday, medical, nor vacation day) and never has a case capped by the MCILS director for fewer hours than billed. For fiscal years 2014 and 2015, when MCILS paid a rate of $50 per hour, the total compensation an attorney could make under the above scenario would be $104,000. Yet, in all five years of data reviewed, a small but significant number of attorneys surpassed those thresholds – with some surpassing the thresholds by a large margin. For example, 11 attorneys billed and were paid more than $104,000 in FY 2014,. This reflects a total of $336,105.00 more than if each attorney averaged a 40-hour work week. FY2014 ANNUAL PAY HOURS/WEEK ATTORNEY 1 $ 194,488 74.80 ATTORNEY 2 $ 180,766 69.53 ATTORNEY 3 $ 165,313 63.58 ATTORNEY 4 $ 133,921 51.51 ATTORNEY 5 $ 129,055 49.64 ATTORNEY 6 $ 122,736 47.21 ATTORNEY 7 $ 116,315 44.74 ATTORNEY 8 $ 111,533 42.90 ATTORNEY 9 $ 110,515 42.51 ATTORNEY 10 $ 108,023 41.55 ATTORNEY 11 $ 107,440 41.32 Fourteen attorneys billed, on average, in excess of 40 hours per week for all 52 weeks in FY 2015. This includes ten of the 11 attorneys that billed in excess of 40 hours per week in FY 2014. This reflects a total of $321,790.00 more than if each attorney averaged a 40-hour work week. The top biller in FY 2015 billed an average of 91.5 hours per week. FY2015 ATTORNEY 2 ANNUAL PAY HOURS/WEEK $ 285,491 ATTORNEY 1 $ 160,086 91.50 51.31 ATTORNEY 4 $ 159,167 51.02 ATTORNEY 5 $ 149,361 47.87 ATTORNEY 3 $ 145,739 46.71 ATTORNEY 15 $ 141,694 45.41 V. ATTORNEY COMPENSATION & FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT 81 ATTORNEY 13 $ 138,656 44.44 ATTORNEY 11 $ 135,624 43.47 ATTORNEY 16 $ 131,701 42.21 ATTORNEY 14 $ 131,145 42.03 ATTORNEY 7 $ 127,939 41.01 ATTORNEY 8 $ 125,033 40.07 ATTORNEY 10 $ 119,786 38.39 ATTORNEY 9 $ 117,568 37.68 Thirteen attorneys billed in excess of 40 hours per week in FY 2016. This reflects a total of $421,487.00 more than if each attorney averaged a 40-hour work week. The top biller in FY 2016 billed over 98.5 hours per week. FY2016 ATTORNEY 2 ANNUAL PAY HOURS/WEEK $ 307,381 ATTORNEY 16 $ 191,122 98.52 61.26 ATTORNEY 13 $ 183,227 58.73 ATTORNEY 8 $ 174,319 55.87 ATTORNEY 9 $ 141,961 45.50 ATTORNEY 11 $ 133,812 42.89 ATTORNEY 7 $ 132,961 42.62 ATTORNEY 18 $ 132,719 42.54 ATTORNEY 10 $ 130,741 41.90 ATTORNEY 4 $ 130,085 41.69 ATTORNEY 17 $ 126,163 40.44 ATTORNEY 14 $ 125,854 40.34 ATTORNEY 19 $ 124,542 39.92 In FY 2017, eleven attorneys billed in excess of 40 hours per week. This reflects a total of $307,172.00 more than if each attorney averaged a 40-hour work week. The top biller in FY 2017 billed over 70 hours per week. FY2017 ANNUAL PAY HOURS/WEEK ATTORNEY 13 $ 218,804 70.13 ATTORNEY 17 $ 185,185 59.35 ATTORNEY 8 $ 166,374 53.33 ATTORNEY 15 $ 155,099 49.71 ATTORNEY 21 $ 143,790 46.09 ATTORNEY 11 $ 142,676 45.73 ATTORNEY 23 $ 141,202 45.26 ATTORNEY 2 $ 140,111 44.91 ATTORNEY 7 $ 131,050 42.00 ATTORNEY 22 $ 130,074 41.69 ATTORNEY 20 $ 125,606 40.26 82 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine Finally, 25 attorneys billed in excess of 40 hours per week in FY 2018. This reflects a total of $813,531 more than if each attorney averaged a 40-hour work week. The top biller in FY2018 billed more than 88 hours per week. On top of this, these attorneys may also work on private cases. As part of this review, the 6AC reached out to the Federal Defender Services Division of the Administrative Office of the United States Courts. Although they are not allowed to confirm the number of cases appointed, the Federal Defender Services, Legal and Policy Division, confirmed that eight of these 25 lawyers received federal court appointments during this same time period.290 FY2018 ATTORNEY 2 ANNUAL PAY HOURS/WEEK $ 275,612 88.34 ATTORNEY 21 $ 263,804 84.55 ATTORNEY 17 $ 220,804 70.77 ATTORNEY 8 $ 216,707 69.46 ATTORNEY 22 $ 200,761 64.35 ATTORNEY 9 $ 174,890 56.05 ATTORNEY 7 $ 150,221 48.15 ATTORNEY 14 $ 148,546 47.61 ATTORNEY 5 $ 148,298 47.53 ATTORNEY 11 $ 143,202 45.90 ATTORNEY 23 $ 140,956 45.18 ATTORNEY 24 $ 139,287 44.64 ATTORNEY 25 $ 137,366 44.03 ATTORNEY 10 $ 136,072 43.61 ATTORNEY 26 $ 135,321 43.37 ATTORNEY 27 $ 135,196 43.33 ATTORNEY 20 $ 134,915 43.24 ATTORNEY 28 $ 132,025 42.32 ATTORNEY 29 $ 131,715 42.22 ATTORNEY 30 $ 131,357 42.10 ATTORNEY 31 $ 129,725 41.58 ATTORNEY 13 $ 129,673 41.56 ATTORNEY 32 $ 126,391 40.51 ATTORNEY 33 $ 125,643 40.27 ATTORNEY 34 $ 125,044 40.08 The table below shows the top earners over the five-year period. These top ten earners collectively billed more than 40 hours per week in 78% of the combined 50 billing years (5 years for each of the 10 attorneys). And, three of these top ten earners work at the same law firm (Attorney 2, Attorney 8, and Attorney 11). Email from Adriane Cleveland, Administrative Assistant to the Chief of Defender Services, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 6, 2019). 290 V. ATTORNEY COMPENSATION & FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT ATTORNEY 2 FY2014 $180,766 FY2015 $285,491 83 FY2016 $307,381 FY2017 $140,111 FY2018 $275,612 5-YEAR TOTAL $1,189,361 ATTORNEY 8 $111,533 $125,033 $174,319 $166,374 $216,707 $793,967 ATTORNEY 13 $74,952 $138,656 $183,227 $218,804 $129,673 $745,312 ATTORNEY 5 $129,055 $149,361 $115,545 $122,801 $148,298 $665,059 ATTORNEY 11 $107,440 $135,624 $133,812 $142,676 $143,202 $662,753 ATTORNEY 7 $116,315 $127,939 $132,961 $131,050 $150,221 $658,487 ATTORNEY 9 $110,515 $117,568 $141,961 $112,963 $174,890 $657,896 ATTORNEY 3 $165,313 $145,739 $112,464 $88,598 $109,560 $621,673 ATTORNEY 4 $133,921 $159,167 $130,085 $99,884 $95,029 $618,087 ATTORNEY 10 $108,023 $119,786 $130,741 $115,471 $136,072 $610,093 To be clear, the 6AC staff members are not financial auditors, and we do not take a position on why there are so many billings in excess of 40 hours per week. We simply note that until this study was initiated, MCILS – and therefore the State of Maine – were unaware of the issue because of a lack of financial oversight.291 Financial oversight As previously stated in Chapter II, to pay and oversee nearly 600 private attorneys handling cases in 47 courthouses before approximately 90 justices, judges, and magistrates, MCILS has a staff of three: an executive director, a deputy executive director, and an accounting technician. The three staff essentially spend the majority of their time approving payments & trial-related expenses and providing a minimal amount of training to appointed attorneys. To best describe the absence of financial oversight at MCILS, it is again useful to look toward Massachusetts. All attorneys accepting CPCS case assignments During the drafting of this report, State Senator Lisa Keim sent a letter to the Maine Government Oversight Committee requesting that the committee “take action to direct the Office of Program Evaluation and Government Accountability to conduct a rapid review of the Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services (MCILS) and the Indigent Legal Services in the State,” because of an alleged lack of accountability on the part of the agency. Letter from Senator Lisa Keim to Maine Government Oversight Committee (Feb. 21, 2019). Although MCILS states in its own letter to the Government Oversight Committee that internal reviews show, at least in one instance, an attorney “identified the extent of overbilling and has agreed to make substantial reimbursement to the Commission,” MCILS determined that other apparent overbilling was the result of attorneys in larger firms submitting the work of other lawyers in the lawfirms under the name of the lead attorney. Letter from John Pelletier, Director, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, to Maine Government Oversight Committee (Mar. 7, 2019). The 6AC notes that these MCILS efforts at financial oversight do not address the five-years of data reported above and that a comprehensive audit is appropriate. 291 84 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine in Massachusetts do so subject to certain overall fiscal controls as well as audit procedures in particular cases. In all cases assigned by CPCS, private attorneys must maintain contemporaneous time records by tenths of an hour, with sufficient detail to show the need for the task.292 Private assigned counsel must use the CPCS electronic billing system (known as “EBill 2.0”) in order to be paid for their work. To be registered by CPCS as a vendor able to access that system, every attorney must sign and submit to CPCS an EBill Access Agreement which includes the following provision: “I certify under pains and penalties of perjury that for all my bills filed with CPCS through the ‘EBill2.0’ system, I have been assigned to each case indicated on my EBill; I have provided the services described on the dates and for the times listed; I have provided representation consistent with CPCS Performance Guidelines and Standards; and all charges for legal services reflected on the EBill are based on my contemporaneous time records maintained in accordance with CPCS Assigned Counsel Manual’s policies and procedures.”293 Although Massachusetts does not set caps on the number of hours attorneys may bill for particular case types, CPCS does set a waivable cap on hours which may be billed per day. This presumptive cap is ten hours per day, except on days when actual trial time is billed the cap rises to 12 hours. The electronic billing system enforces the cap, unless a waiver is allowed. CPCS conducts random prepayment audits requiring attorneys to provide sanitized versions of their contemporaneous time records to support their billing. CPCS also conducts prepayment billing inquiries when interim billing in individual cases reaches certain unpublished thresholds that are unusually high for that type of case. Finally, when indicated, CPCS conducts full audits of the billing practices of individual attorneys, with procedural safeguards including a hearing before a CPCS Committee member. CPCS is required by statute to enforce other billing controls. CPCS cannot pay a private attorney for more than 1,650 hours in a fiscal year,294 nor may a private attorney accept any new case assignments (except murder cases) after billing CPCS 1,350 hours in a fiscal year.295 For example, “legal research” would not be sufficiently descriptive, but “legal research on voluntariness of statement for memorandum on suppression motion” would be adequate. 293 Private Attorney Ebill 2.0 Access Agreement, The Committee for Public Counsel Services, available at https://www.publiccounsel.net/cfo/wp-content/uploads/sites/8/2016/11/Ebill-2.0-AccessAgreement_Final.pdf (last visited Mar. 9, 2019). 294 MASS. GEN. LAWS c. 211D § 11(b) (2018). 295 MASS. GEN. LAWS c. 211D § 11(c) (2018). 292 V. ATTORNEY COMPENSATION & FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT CPCS is required to reduce payment for late bills. Pursuant to statute,296 bills must be submitted within 60 days of the conclusion of the case or 30 days of the end of the fiscal year. Late bills must be reduced by 10%, and the statute provides that bills more than 30 days late shall not be paid unless the chief counsel finds that the delay is due to extraordinary circumstances beyond the attorney’s control. 296 Mass. Gen. Laws c. 211D § 12 (2018). 85 Chapter VI RECOMENDATIONS The recommendations set out below will be greatly aided by important changes to the MCILS made by the Maine legislature and taking effect in 2018. MCILS is expanded to a nine-person commission, with all members appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the legislature.297 There are seven voting members – one with administration & finance experience; one with child protection proceeding experience; and five chosen from lists recommended variously by the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the Chief Justice of the Supreme Judicial Court.298 The two non-voting members are attorneys who provide indigent legal services as a majority of their law practices and are chosen, one each, from lists recommended by the president of the Maine State Bar Association and by the president of another statewide organization representing criminal defense attorneys.299 All recommendations and appointments must “consider input from individuals and organizations with an interest in the delivery of indigent legal services.”300 Sitting judges, prosecutors, and law enforcement officials, and employees of people in those positions, cannot serve on the commission.301 Any person who is paid by the commission (whether as an employee or otherwise) cannot be a voting member, nor can their immediate household family members.302 Two of the nine members must be non-attorneys or non-practicing attorneys.303 Finally, all members of the commission “must have demonstrated a commitment to quality representation for persons who are indigent and have the knowledge required to ensure that quality of representation is provided in each area of law.”304 In short, once the new board members are appointed, Maine will have a more professional MCILS to consider implementing the recommendations of this study. RECOMMENDATION 1: The State of Maine should remove the authority to conduct financial eligibility screenings from the Maine Commission for Indigent Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1803(1) (2018). Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1803(1) (2018). 299 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1803(1) (2018). 300 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1803(1) (2018). 301 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1803(2) (2018). 302 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1803(2) (2018). This limitation applies to members commencing their term of appointment on or after April 2, 2018. 303 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1803(2) (2018). 304 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1803(2) (2018). 297 298 VI. RECOMENDATIONS Legal Services. The reconstituted Task Force on Pretrial Justice Reform should determine the appropriate agency to conduct indigency screenings. The State of Maine currently has several agencies involved in critical pretrial functions of bail determination, criminal history check, risk assessment of pretrial release, supervision of defendants released, and indigency screening: Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, the bail commissioners of each county, and Maine PreTrial Services.305 The Sixth Amendment Center are not experts on the delivery of pretrial services and thus are not prepared to making sweeping recommendations about agencies outside of the purview of indigent defense services, except to note that indigency screening should not remain a responsibility of MCILS. A conflict exists because indigent defense systems must require their participating attorneys to adhere to their ethical duty to zealously defend in the stated interests of the client, including advocating against fines and fees. MCILS cannot assure that MCILS attorneys fight against the imposition of fees related to the cost of the defense while MCILS simultaneously tries to collect those fees.306 On February 6, 2019, Chief Justice Leigh I. Saufley reconstituted the Task Force on Pretrial Services.307 We respectfully suggest that the Task Force take up the question of the appropriate agency to conduct financial screenings. To assist that effort, we offer the following for informational purposes. The Brennan Center for Justice notes that a number of entities can appropriately serve as screeners without the conflicts presented by the indigent defense system doing so, including: “1) the committing magistrate, court personnel, or judges other than the presiding judge; 2) the pretrial services branch of the adult probation department; 3) an independent pretrial services division; 4) another government agency; or 5) a nongovernment (‘third-party’) organization with a government contract.” We note that the financial information needed for a bail/pretrial release decision and the financial information needed to determine indigency are pretty much the same and that it may make sense for the State of Maine to consolidate these practices. For example, in Massachusetts neither defense counsel nor the indigent defense system is involved in determining eligibility for their services. Rather, statutory language directs the probation department to obtain financial information relevant to indigence Maine Pretrial Services reports that this agency has about 40 to 50 employees statewide and offices in every county but Aroostook. They supervise defendants pretrial. They also screen people who have been arrested before they appear in court to see if they are eligible for services, and then tell the prosecutor and defense counsel. During this screening they have the defendant sign a release of information. 306 Data obtained by 6AC shows that in FY 2018, MCILS financial screeners interviewed 11,031 defendants: 7,704 were found indigent (70%), 2,322 were found partially indigent (21%) and 1,005 were denied (9%). MCILS collected $677,735 in FY2017 in partial indigency payments. 307 See Charter, Pretrial Justice Reform Task Force (Feb. 6, 2019), available at https://www.courts. maine.gov/maine_courts/committees/charter-PJRTF.pdf. 305 87 88 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine determinations from other state agencies, including the departments of revenue, transitional assistance, and the registry of motor vehicles, and to re-evaluate each defendant’s indigence every six months to determine if the assignment of counsel should be revoked.308 Defendants seeking counsel are required to provide financial data under penalty of perjury, however, information provided by defendants in support of their request for counsel may not be used against them in any proceeding except for perjury, and defendants may not be required to provide information regarding their citizenship or immigration status.309 A finding of indigence is made by the judge at arraignment,310 in partial reliance on a financial report and recommendation by a probation officer. RECOMMENDATION 2: The State of Maine should statutorily bar communication between prosecutors and unrepresented defendants, unless and until defendants have been informed of their right to appointed counsel, a judge has conducted the legally required colloquy, and a defendant has executed a written waiver of the right to counsel in each case to ensure that all waivers of the right to counsel are made knowingly and voluntarily. Prosecutors who speak directly with defendants, on their own volition or at the suggestion of the judge, risk violating their ethical duties. As the report of the National Right to Counsel Committee, Justice Denied, notes: “Not only are such practices of doubtful ethical propriety, but they also undermine defendants’ right to counsel.”311 The National Right to Counsel Committee report notes further: Beyond the court’s role in making certain that a defendant’s waiver of counsel is valid, prosecutors have a professional responsibility duty “not [to] give legal advice to an unrepresented person, other than the advice to secure counsel.” Similarly, the ABA has recommended that prosecutors should refrain from negotiating with an accused who is unrepresented without a prior valid waiver of counsel. Prosecutors also are reproached by the ABA to ensure that the accused has been advised of the right to counsel, afforded an opportunity to obtain counsel, and not to seek to secure waivers of important pretrial rights from an accused who is unrepresented.312 Mass. Gen. Laws c. 211D § 2A (2018). Defense counsel’s only role in this process is to zealously represent the client in opposing a later unwarranted revocation of the assignment of counsel. 309 Mass. Sup. Jud. Ct. R. 3:10. 310 Mass. Sup. Jud. Ct. R. 3:10. The basic standard used for indigence is 125% of the current federal poverty guideline. People with income between 125% and 250% of that guideline may be deemed indigent but able to contribute and assessed some of the cost of assigned counsel. People with liquid assets beyond 250% of that guideline may be assigned counsel in superior court felony cases if the court determines they cannot pay for counsel. See id; see also Mass. Gen. Laws c. 211D §§ 2-2B (2018). 311 National Right to Counsel Comm., Justice Denied: America’s Continuing Neglect of Our Constitutional Right to Counsel 88 (2009). 312 National Right to Counsel Comm., Justice Denied: America’s Continuing Neglect of Our 308 VI. RECOMENDATIONS The State of Maine should bar communications between prosecutors and unrepresented defendants until such time as a court has conducted the legally required colloquy to determine that the waiver is knowingly and intelligently made. RECOMMENDATION 3: Except for ministerial, non-substantive tasks, the State of Maine and the Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services should require that the same properly qualified defense counsel continuously represents the client in each case, from appointment through disposition, and personally appears at every court appearance throughout the pendency of an assigned case. In theory, Maine statutes and court rules already require this. Courts must appoint counsel,313 and that counsel remains appointed until withdrawn by court order or other counsel files a notice of appearance.314 However this does not always occur in practice. The problem is that MCILS’ fee schedule policy currently directs attorneys to stand in for each other: When doing so will not adversely affect the attorney-client relationship, Commission-assigned counsel are urged to limit travel and waiting time by cooperating with each other to stand in at routine, non-dispositive matters by having one attorney appear at such things as arraignments and routine non-testimonial motions, instead of having all Commissionassigned counsel in an area appear.315 MCILS should repeal this policy, and the legislature should prohibit the practice of attorneys standing in for each other, other than in an emergency or with advance notice to the client and the court. How to best accomplish such a directive will be based, in part, on how indigent defense services are organized in the future (see Recommendation 7, page 94). To the extent that Maine remains primarily a private counsel system, MCILS needs to assign an adequate number of lawyers to appear at 48-hour hearings, initial appearances, and arraignments, so that each case on that day’s docket is directly assigned to one of the lawyers who is present. Again, Massachusetts can serve as a model. CPCS provides counsel at initial appearance by calendaring certified attorneys to cover all court days to receive case assignments when the court determines that a defendant is indigent and has a right to Constitutional Right to Counsel 88 (2009) (citing American Bar Ass’n, Model Rules of Prof. Conduct 4.3); American Bar Ass’n, Standards for Criminal Justice: Prosecution Function 3-4.1(b), 3-3.10(a), 3-3.10(c) (3d ed. 1993). Contra Me. R. Prof’l Conduct 4.3 (permits attorneys to “negotiate with” unrepresented parties and states they “may” encourage an unrepresented party with adverse interests to secure counsel). 313 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 15, § 810 (2018). 314 Me. R. Unified Crim. Proc. 44, 44A, 44B. 315 96-649 Code Me. R. ch. 301, §4(1)(D) (June 10, 2016). 89 90 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine counsel. The scheduling is done by an administrator in the county who communicates directly with the local attorneys and court personnel, and who constitutes, with a parttime assistant, the staff of the county assignment program. The county administrator is familiar with the usual volume of cases in the local courts and assigns an appropriate number of attorneys to cover each court day, so that each attorney will receive enough cases to make business sense without impairing the quality of representation. In the unlikely event that an attorney receives no cases on a court duty day, the attorney is to be paid for the time spent in court that day. Attorneys may receive two duty days per month in up to two county programs. Attorneys ordinarily keep the cases they receive from arraignment through disposition, so that clients receive vertical representation. Some cases inevitably will need to be reassigned. If an attorney certified for superior court felonies is not on duty in a court when such a case is arraigned, the duty attorney who is certified for lesser criminal cases handles the arraignment and non-evidentiary bail hearing and notifies the county administrator. The county administrator contacts superior court certified attorneys and reassigns the case, the same day if possible. If, due to unexpected volume on a court duty day, an attorney receives too many cases (or in any event more than 10), the attorney contacts the county administrator to reassign the excess cases. Thus, attorneys who do not accept duty days may nevertheless receive case assignments. CPCS is explicitly empowered to assign counsel for a pre-arraignment procedure or in such other proceedings as the chief counsel shall determine necessary.316 This authority is used to assign counsel prior to arraignment for people arrested and held in custody for murder, juveniles facing custodial interrogation, and people in mental health facilities who are accused of crimes. RECOMMENDATION 4: MCILS should use its current statutory power to promulgate more rigorous attorney qualification, recertification, training, supervision, and workload standards. The State of Maine should statutorily require financial oversight by requiring that MCILS limit the number of permissible billable hours, subject to waiver only upon a finding of need for additional capacity. The State of Maine should fund MCILS at a level to ensure rigorous training and effective substantive and financial oversight of attorneys. Substantive oversight MCILS should develop and adopt standards related to attorney qualification, recertification, training, supervision, and workload as detailed in the section on Massachusetts’ Committee for Public Counsel services (see discussion at p. 32.). 316 Mass. Gen. Laws c. 211D §§ 5-6(b) (2018). VI. RECOMENDATIONS Financial oversight The State of Maine should adopt statutory language to require MCILS to limit attorneys’ billable hours in a day and year, subject to waiver for complex cases and systemic capacity needs, and require attorneys to submit bills under the penalty of perjury (see discussion at p. 84.). To provide this recommended substantive and financial oversight, MCILS will need to increase its staff. Indeed, most indigent defense systems have substantially larger administrations than the three employees allotted to MCLIS. For example, in Massachusetts, the CPCS administration has 11 senior management positions,317 each of whom has significant attorney and non-attorney staff. MCILS should be resourced to build on the effort it has begun to provide oversight and mentoring in the field. MCILS should expand its network of Resource Counsel (currently 25 attorneys at 10 hours per month) and require them to conduct assessments of attorney performance in all practice areas measured against the MCILS performance standards, to investigate complaints from clients or judges, and to inform MCILS of local training needs. MCILS should use the information developed by its Resource Counsel, together with information drawn from its billing records, to devise and implement a program of periodic recertification for all participating attorneys. MCILS should also be resourced to assign experienced mentors to assist attorneys with complex issues at least in their first two years of practice to promote efficiency by those providers. Appendix A sets out a recommended budget and budget narrative for an expanded MCILS administration. The projected annual cost of the office is $1,424,740.70. RECOMMENDATION 5: The State of Maine should statutorily ban all public defense contracts that provide financial disincentives to or that otherwise interfere with zealously advocating on behalf of the defendants’ stated interests, including the use of fixed fee contracts. Maine should require that any public defense contract include reasonable caseload limits, reporting requirements on Directories – CPCS Management Team, Committee for Public Counsel Services, https://www. publiccounsel.net/dir/management/ (last visited Mar. 21, 2019). The senior management positions at CPCS are: chief counsel, general counsel, deputy chief counsel for the children and family law division, director of the mental health division, deputy chief counsel of the private counsel division, deputy chief counsel of the public defender division, director of the youth advocacy division, director of administration & operations, chief financial officer, chief information officer, and director of human resources. Massachusetts’ caseload is over ten times that of Maine, so all of these CPCS senior management positions have significant attorney and non-attorney staff. For example, in the central administration offices, there are 11 FTE in house attorneys, all with 20+ years’ experience, and six FTE administrative assistants. In the county offices, there are 30 supervising attorneys and 17 administrative assistants. 317 91 92 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine any private legal work permitted, and substantial performance oversight, among other protections. The contract currently used in Maine to cover the existing caseload in Somerset County without substantive oversight causes conflicts of interest between the indigent defense attorney’s financial self-interest and the legal interests of the indigent defendant. The contract also can cause concurrent conflicts of interest between indigent defendants, and between the indigent defendants and the attorney’s retained clients. Maine should follow the lead of other states that have recently banned these practices, including: • Idaho. County commissioners may provide representation by contracting with a defense attorney “provided that the terms of the contract shall not include any pricing structure that charges or pays a single fixed fee for the services and expenses of the attorney.”318 • Michigan. The Michigan Indigent Defense Commission is statutorily barred from approving local indigent defense plans that provide “[e]conomic disincentives or incentives that impair defense counsel’s ability to provide effective representation.”319 • Nevada. Announcing that the “competent representation of indigents is vital to our system of justice,” the Nevada Supreme Court banned the use of flat fee contracts that fail to provide for the costs of investigation and expert witnesses and required that contracts must allow for extra fees in extraordinary cases.320 • Washington. The Washington Rules of Professional Conduct decree that “A lawyer shall not: (1) make or participate in making an agreement with a governmental entity for the delivery of indigent defense services if the terms of the agreement obligate the contracting lawyer or law firm: (i) to bear the cost of providing conflict counsel; or (ii) to bear the cost of providing investigation or expert services, unless a fair and reasonable amount for such costs is specifically designated in the agreement in a manner that does not adversely affect the income or compensation allocated to the lawyer, law firm, or law firm personnel.”321 RECOMMENDATION 6: The State of Maine should fund MCILS at a level that allows private attorneys to be compensated for overhead expenses plus a reasonable fee (i.e., $100 per hour). MCILS should be authorized to provide Idaho Code § 19-859 (2018). Mich. Comp. Laws § 780-991(2)(b) (2017). 320 Order, In re Review of Issues Concerning Representation of Indigent Defendants in Criminal and Juvenile Delinquency Cases, ADKT No. 411 (Nev. filed July 23, 2015). 321 Wash. R. Prof’l Conduct 1.8(m)(1). 318 319 VI. RECOMENDATIONS additional compensation of $25 per hour for designated case types such as murder, sexual assaults, and postconviction review. Numerous judges and other criminal justice stakeholders report that finding counsel to accept assignment of sex assault and postconviction cases is increasingly difficult. Many assigned defense attorneys say these case types present such difficult challenges that they handle them only when privately retained. The most severe cases are relatively few in number, require a very high level of expertise, and thus warrant a higher compensation rate than ordinary crimes. Permitting MCILS to pay a higher rate for the most serious cases is needed to assure the availability of qualified counsel. All national standards require that “counsel should be paid a reasonable fee in addition to actual overhead and expenses.”322 There is also a significant amount of state case law that requires states to pay attorneys a reasonable fee in addition to overhead expenses. We highlight two: • Kansas. In 1987, the Kansas Supreme Court determined that the state has an “obligation to pay appointed counsel such sums as will fairly compensate the attorney, not at the top rate an attorney might charge, but at a rate which is not confiscatory, considering overhead and expenses.”323 Testimony taken in the case set the average overhead rate of attorneys in Kansas in 1987 at $30 per hour. Kansas now compensates public defense attorneys at $80 per hour. Maine has a higher cost of living than Kansas, making the rate an equivalent of $98.40 per hour in Maine.324 • Alabama. In 1993, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals determined that indigent defense attorneys were entitled to overhead expenses (set at $30 per hour) in addition to a reasonable fee.325 A decade later, when the Attorney General issued an opinion against paying the overhead rate and the state comptroller subsequently stopped paying it, the issue went to the Alabama Supreme Court, which determined that assigned counsel are entitled to a reasonable fee in addition to overhead expenses.326 After this litigation, the Alabama legislature increased the hourly rate to $70. Maine has a higher cost of living than Alabama, making the rate an equivalent of $86.80 per hour in Maine.327 American Bar Ass’n, ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System, Principle 8 cmt. (2002). 323 State ex rel Stephan v. Smith, 747 P.2d 816, 242 Kan. 336, 383 (Kan. 1987). 324 Cost of Living Portland, Maine vs. Wichita, Kansas, PayScale, https://www.payscale.com/costof-living-calculator/Maine-Portland/Kansas-Wichita (last visited Feb. 28, 2019). Portland, Maine has a 23% higher cost of living than Wichita, Kansas. 325 May v. State, 672 So. 2d 1307, 1308 (Ala. Crim. App. 1993). 326 Wright v. Childree, 972 So. 2d 771, 780-81 (Ala. 2006). 327 Cost of Living Portland, Maine vs. Birmingham, Alabama, PayScale, https://www.payscale.com/ cost-of-living-calculator/Maine-Portland/Alabama-Birmingham (last visited Feb. 28, 2019). Portland, 322 93 94 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine Furthermore, the South Dakota Supreme Court set public counsel compensation hourly rates at $67 per hour in 2000. To ensure that attorneys are perpetually paid both a reasonable fee and overhead, the court also mandated that “court-appointed attorney fees will increase annually in an amount equal to the cost of living increase that state employees receive each year from the legislature.” Assigned counsel compensation in South Dakota now stands at $95 per hour.328 For comparison purposes, a $95 hourly fee in South Dakota in 2019 is equivalent to a $114.95 hourly fee in Maine in 2019.329 We recommend that the State of Maine adopt similar statutory language to ensure that Maine’s assigned counsel compensation rate stays current. RECOMMENDATION 7: The State of Maine should authorize and fund MCILS at an appropriate level to employ state government attorneys and support staff to operate a statewide appellate defender office and a Cumberland County trial level public defender office. MCILS does not currently have the statutory authority to establish governmentally employed public defender offices. The relevant part of the statute says: “The commission shall [d]evelop and maintain a system that uses appointed private attorneys, contracts with individual attorneys or groups of attorneys and consider other programs necessary to provide quality and efficient indigent legal services.”330 The statute needs to be amended to give MCILS express authority to create staffed public defender offices. To be clear, there is no pre-existing, uniform “cookie-cutter” indigent defense services delivery model that states must apply. The question for Maine policymakers, in conjunction with criminal justice stakeholders and the broader citizenry of the state, is simply how best to do so given the uniqueness of the state. The 6AC does not presume that the full-time public defender offices recommended here are the only jurisdictions or case types best served by public defender offices in Maine. Indeed, we were struck that, as far back as 1971, the Institute of Judicial Administration, the Supreme Judicial Court, and the Superior Court of the State of Maine recommended a “hybrid public defender/assigned counsel delivery model” with Maine has a 24% higher cost of living than Birmingham, Alabama. 328 See Letter from Greg Sattizahn, State Court Administrator, South Dakota Unified Judicial System, to Andrew Fergel, State Bar of South Dakota, RE: 2019 Court-Appointed Attorney Fees and Mileage (Nov. 15, 2018), available at https://ujs.sd.gov/uploads/docs/2019CourtAppointedAttorneyFees.pdf. 329 For comparison purposes, the cost of living in Portland, Maine, is 21% higher than in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. See Attorney/Lawyer Cost of Living Portland, Maine vs. Sioux Falls, South Dakota, PayScale, https://www.payscale.com/cost-of-living-calculator/Maine-Portland/South-Dakota-SiouxFalls/Attorney--Lawyer (last visited Feb. 28, 2019). Thus, a $95 hourly wage in South Dakota is equivalent to $114.95 in Maine. 330 Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 4, § 1804(3)(a) (2018) (emphasis added). VI. RECOMENDATIONS public defender offices located in Portland, Augusta, and Bangor.331 We note that both Kennebec County (Augusta) and Penobscot County (Bangor) appear to have enough adult criminal cases to justify public defender offices, but because we did not conduct site visits in those two counties we refrain from making that recommendation at this time.332 That said, MCILS and Maine policymakers should consider expanding public defender office to these two counties once the state appellate defender and Cumberland County public defender offices are created and operating. State appellate defender office Many states have found it appropriate to separate the public defense appeals system from the public defense trial system to ensure that the direct appeal is a check against potentially ineffective trial representation. For example: • Florida. Each of the state’s 20 judicial circuits (together covering the state’s 67 counties) has a public defender office, overseen by an elected chief public defender, with full-time attorneys who provide representation to indigent defendants at trial. Five independent state appellate defender offices provide representation in all appeals. • Louisiana. Each of Louisiana’s 42 judicial districts (together comprising the state’s 64 parishes) has a local chief defender who oversees the public defender office or the contract defenders that provide representation to indigent defendants at trial. For all indigent appeals, the Louisiana Public Defender Board contracts with a non-profit that itself contracts with individual attorneys to provide representation. • Michigan. The State Appellate Defender Office, overseen by the Appellate Defender Commission, provides appellate representation to indigent defendants statewide. Separately and independently, the Michigan Indigent Defense Commission oversees trial representation. • North Carolina. The North Carolina Office of Indigent Defense Services oversees the provision of right to counsel services throughout the state. Staff public defenders are employed in a centralized unit to provide appellate representation, separate and apart from the trial services. See Institute of Judicial Administration, The Supreme Judicial Court and the Superior Court of State of Maine 57-58 (1971). 332 Based on MCILS data, Penobscot County and Kennebec County had the second and third highest indigent defense caseloads after Cumberland County. 331 the 95 96 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine • Oregon. Oregon provides trial level indigent defense services entirely through contracts with private attorneys. The Office of Public Defense Services has an appellate division of full-time staff attorneys to provide representation in most direct appeals. Appendix B sets out a budget and budget narrative for a state appellate public defender office that assumes 80% of direct appeals and post-conviction cases statewide will be represented by the new state appellate defender office (based on FY2018 caseloads). The total projected cost of the office in the first year is $2,369,659.22, including $55,100 in one-time capital outlay (furniture, computers, and phones).333 Cumberland County trial level public defender office The American Bar Association states in its ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System that, wherever there is a “sufficiently high” caseload, the public defense delivery system should consist of “both a public defender office and the active participation of the private bar.”334 Although the ABA has never defined what it means by “sufficiently high,” there is little doubt that the number of cases arising in Cumberland County meets this threshold. Appendix C sets out a budget and budget narrative for a Cumberland County trial level public defender office that assumes the office will provide representation in 80% of all adult criminal and juvenile crime cases (based on FY2018 caseloads). The public defender office would not handle any civil cases; those would continue to be handled by appointed private attorneys. The projected annual cost of the office is $3,042,048. The 2018 cost for providing trial level representation in 80% of Cumberland County’s adult criminal and juvenile crime cases was $1,921,804, so creation of a public defender office to handle these cases will cost an additional $1,120,244 over 2018 cost. The current cost for representation in 80% of the appellate cases is $622,215. American Bar Ass’n, ABA Ten Principles of a Public Defense Delivery System, Principle 2 (Feb. 2002). 333 334 APPENDIX A MCILS Administration PERSONNEL TITLE SALARY ATTORNEYS Executive Director BENEFITS POSITIONS TOTAL $101,002.17 $54,385.78 1 $155,387.95 Deputy Director $96,906.00 $54,267.36 1 $151,173.36 Training Director $72,418.42 $38,994.53 1 $111,412.95 Family Law Resource Attorney $72,418.42 $38,994.53 1 $111,412.95 Delinquency Resource Attorney $72,418.42 $38,994.53 1 $111,412.95 Adult Trial Resource Attorney $72,418.42 $38,994.53 1 $111,412.95 Mental Health Resource Atty $72,418.42 $38,994.53 1 $111,412.95 Audit Director $70,675.00 $39,578.00 1 $110,253.00 Training staff $37,408.00 $20,948.48 2 $116,712.96 Auditing staff $37,408.00 $20,948.48 2 $116,712.96 Sub-Total $1,207,304.98 NON-PERSONNEL EXPENSES CURRENT PROJECTED Risk management insurances $1,795.39 $7,181.56 Mailing/postage/freight $4,675.71 $18,702.84 Cellular phones service $1,406.69 $5,626.76 Service center $3,095.00 $12,380.00 Office supplies & equipment $2,062.61 $8,250.44 Office equipment rental $1,274.45 $5,097.80 Eyeglasses reimbursement $300.00 $1,200.00 $27,774.75 $111,099.00 Subscriptions $327.75 $1,311.00 Dues $585.00 $2,340.00 OIT/TELCO Annual report prorated Annual parking permit fee $9.58 $38.32 $1,140.00 $4,560.00 Printing/binding InforME annual fee $22.00 $88.00 $2,640.00 $10,560.00 Sub-Total CAPITAL EXPENDITURES $188,435.72 RATE NUMBER TOTAL Laptop computer $1,400.00 10 $14,000.00 Furniture $1,200.00 10 $12,000.00 $300.00 10 Cell phones Sub-Total GRAND TOTAL $3,000.00 $29,000.00 $1,424,740.70 98 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine Budget narrative In addition to the current Director and Deputy Director, the 6AC recommends the addition of five attorney positions: Training Director, Family Law Resource Attorney, Juvenile Resource Attorney, Mental Health Resource Attorney, and Adult Trial Resource Attorney. Each of the Resource Attorneys will provide direct supervision and provide help desk assistance to attorneys in the field. The Training Director will be responsible for developing and instituting new attorney and on-going training programs, as well as periodic topic-specific trainings to be delivered regionally and remotely. The Training Director will oversee a staff of two to help with logistics and training development. MCILS should also have a dedicated professional with an auditing background to oversee all financial auditing functions, supported by two professional staff members. With the additional staff, the 6AC recommend that the Director position be paid on par with the salary and compensation of a District Attorney ($155,387.95)335 and that the Deputy Director be paid what the MCILS Director is currently being paid ($151,173.36).336 The new attorney positions are paid salaries and benefits at the rate paid to assistant district attorneys ($111,412.95).337 Although the 6AC are not experts in the prosecution function, 6AC staff has travelled all across the country and interacted with numerous prosecutors, and it is our general observation that the prosecution function in Maine is under-resourced, especially in relation to salaries and compensation. Still, we present these recommendations because the prosecution function offers the best current comparison. The Auditing Director is projected at the salary and compensation of the current MCILS Deputy Director ($110,253). The four training and auditing staff are compensated at the current salary and benefits package of the existing rate for the Accounting Technician ($58,356.48).338 Non-personnel expenses reflect the current MCILS budget,339 less line items dedicated specifically for financial screeners. Each expense was prorated based on the existing three MCILS staff members (excluding financial screeners and costs associated Email from Mark A. Toulouse, Division Chief – Finance & Administrative Services, Office of the Attorney General State of Maine, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 12, 2019). This amount reflects salary plus benefits calculated at approximately 35% of salary. 336 Email from John Pelletier, Director, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 7, 2019). 337 Email from Mark A. Toulouse, Division Chief – Finance & Administrative Services, Office of the Attorney General State of Maine, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 12, 2019). This amount reflects salary plus benefits calculated at approximately 35% of salary. 338 Email from John Pelletier, Director, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 7, 2019). 339 Email from John Pelletier, Director, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 7, 2019). 335 Appendix A: MCILS Administration primarily for screening) and then multiplied by the recommended staff of twelve. Capital outlay expenses for new computers, furniture, and cell phones are calculated at available retail rates. 99 APPENDIX B State appellate defender office PERSONNEL TITLE SALARY BENEFITS POSITIONS TOTAL ATTORNEYS Chief Public Defender $101,002.17 $54,385.78 1 Deputy Public Director $96,906.00 $54,267.36 1 $151,173.36 Assistant Public Defender $72,418.42 $38,994.53 11 $1,225,542.45 Investigator $43,068.00 $24,118.08 1 $67,186.08 Social Worker $43,068.00 $24,118.08 1 $67,186.08 Paralegal $38,500.00 $21,560.00 3 $180,180.00 Office Manager $43,068.00 $24,118.08 1 $155,387.95 $67,186.08 Sub-Total $1,913,842.00 NON-PERSONNEL EXPENSES COST/STAFF Risk Management Insurances Mailing/Postage/Freight Cellular Phones Service Center (payroll processing, etc.) PROJECTED $598.46 $11,370.80 $1,558.57 $29,612.83 $468.90 $8,909.04 $1,031.67 $19,601.67 Office Supplies/Eqp. $687.54 $13,063.20 Office Equipment Rental $424.82 $8,071.52 Eyeglasses reimbursement $100.00 $1,900.00 OIT/TELCO $9,258.25 $175,906.75 Subscriptions $109.25 $2,075.75 Dues $195.00 $3,705.00 Annual report prorated Annual parking permit fee $3.19 $60.67 $380.00 $7,220.00 Printing/Binding InforME Annual Fee (webhosting, etc.) Rent $7.33 $7,500.00 $880.00 $16,720.00 $5,000.00 Sub-Total CAPITAL EXPENDITURES $95,000.00 $400,717.22 RATE NUMBER TOTAL Laptop computer $1,400.00 19 $26,600.00 Furniture $1,200.00 19 $22,800.00 $300.00 19 $5,700.00 Cell phones Sub-Total GRAND TOTAL $55,100.00 $2,369,659.22 Appendix B: State appellate defender office Budget narrative For 2018, MCILS reports that there were 235 direct appeal cases and 96 postconviction cases statewide. Assuming 80% are handled in-house, that means a new statewide appellate office will handle approximately 265 direct appeal and postconviction cases. The NAC standards are nationally recognized as the absolute upper limit of cases that a defense attorney can be expected to handle and still provide effective, zealous representation to each and every client. For appellate services, the NAC Standards prescribe that attorneys should handle no more than 25 appeals in a single year.340 Thus eleven attorneys are needed to staff the office. National standards require one supervising attorney for every ten attorneys carrying a full caseload.341 Therefore, in addition to a Chief Appellate Defender, a Deputy Chief Defender is required for supervision. Although national standards require one investigator for every three staff attorneys342 and one social worker for every three attorneys,343 these standards are generally seen as applying to trial practice. Therefore, we are recommending one investigator and one social worker for the appellate office to assist on the post-conviction workload. National standards also require one paralegal for every four staff attorneys.344 The 6AC recommends that the Director position be paid on par with the salary and compensation of a District Attorney ($155,387.95)345 and that the Deputy Director be paid what the MCILS Director is currently being paid ($151,173.36).346 The new attorney positions are paid salaries and benefits at the rate paid to assistant district attorneys ($111,412.95).347 Again, although the 6AC are not experts in the prosecution National Advisory Comm’n on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals, Report of the Task Force Courts, ch. 13 (The Defense), Std. 13.12 (1973). 341 National Study Comm’n on Defense Services, Guidelines for Legal Defense Systems in the United States 4.1 (1976) (“Proper attorney supervision in a defender office requires one full-time supervisor for every ten staff lawyers, or one part-time supervisor for every five lawyers.”). 342 National Study Comm’n on Defense Services, Guidelines for Legal Defense Systems in the United States 4.1 (1976) (“Defender offices should employ investigators with criminal investigation training and experience. A minimum of one investigator should be employed for every three staff attorneys in an office. Every defender office should employ at least one investigator.”). 343 National Legal Aid & Defender Ass’n, Model Contract for Public Defense Services § VII.F, available at http://www.nlada.org/defender-standards/model-contract/black-letter 344 U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance Pub. No. NCJ185632, Keeping Defender Workloads Manageable (2001). 345 Email from Mark A. Toulouse, Division Chief – Finance & Administrative Services, Office of the Attorney General State of Maine, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 12, 2019). This amount reflects salary plus benefits calculated at approximately 35% of salary. 346 Email from John Pelletier, Director, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 7, 2019). 347 Email from Mark A. Toulouse, Division Chief – Finance & Administrative Services, Office of the Attorney General State of Maine, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 12, 2019). This amount reflects salary plus benefits calculated at approximately 35% of salary. 340 on the 101 102 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine function, 6AC staff has travelled all across the country and interacted with numerous prosecutors, and it is our general observation that the prosecution function in Maine is under-resourced, especially in relation to salaries and compensation. Still, we present these recommendations because the prosecution function offers the best current comparison. Support staff salaries and benefits are based on support staff compensation in the Cumberland County District Attorney Office. Non-personnel expenses reflect the current MCILS budget, less line items dedicated specifically for financial screeners. The rent projection is based on $25 per square foot charged against 200 square feet per staff (or $5,000 per staff member). Capital outlay expenses for new computers, furniture, and cell phones were calculated at available retail rates. APPENDIX C Cumberland County trial level public defender office PERSONNEL TITLE SALARY BENEFITS POSITIONS ATTORNEYS Chief Public Defender $101,002.17 $54,385.78 1 Deputy Public Director $96,906.00 $54,267.36 1 $151,173.36 Assistant Public Defender $72,418.42 $38,994.53 12 $1,336,955.40 Investigator $43,068.00 $24,118.08 4 $268,744.32 Social Worker $43,068.00 $24,118.08 4 $268,744.32 Paralegal $38,500.00 $21,560.00 3 $180,180.00 Office Manager $43,068.00 $24,118.08 1 $67,186.08 Sub-Total TOTAL $155,387.95 $2,428,371.43 NON-PERSONNEL EXPENSES CURRENT Risk Management Insurances PROJECTED $598.46 $15,560.05 Mailing/Postage/Freight $1,558.57 $40,522.82 Cellular phones service $468.90 $12,191.31 $1,031.67 $26,823.33 Office Supplies/Eqp. $687.54 $17,875.95 Office Equipment Rental $424.82 $11,045.23 Service Center (payroll processing, etc.) Eyeglasses reimbursement $100.00 $2,600.00 $9,258.25 $240,714.50 Subscriptions $109.25 $2,840.50 Dues $195.00 $5,070.00 OIT/TELCO Annual report prorated Annual parking permit fee $3.19 $83.03 $380.00 $9,880.00 $7.33 $190.67 Printing/Binding InforME Annual Fee (webhosting, etc.) Rent $880.00 $22,880.00 $5,000.00 $130,000.00 Sub-Total CAPITAL EXPENDITURES $538,277.39 RATE NUMBER TOTAL Laptop computer $1,400.00 26 $36,400.00 Furniture $1,200.00 26 $31,200.00 $300.00 26 $7,800.00 Cell phones Sub-Total GRAND TOTAL $75,400.00 $3,042,048.82 104 THE RIGHT TO COUNSEL IN Maine Budget narrative For 2018, MCILS reports 1,232 murder, class A, B, and C cases, 2,022 class D and E cases, and 329 juvenile crime cases in Cumberland County. Assuming 80% are handled in-house, that means a new trial level public defender office would handle 985 felony cases, 1,618 misdemeanor cases, and 263 delinquency cases. The NAC standards are nationally recognized as the absolute upper limit of cases that a defense attorney can be expected to handle and still provide effective, zealous representation to each and every client. For adult trial level services, the NAC standards prescribe that attorneys should handle no more than 150 felonies in a single year, or 400 misdemeanors, or 200 delinquency cases.348 Thus twelve attorneys are needed to staff the office. National standards require one supervising attorney for every ten attorneys carrying a full caseload.349 Therefore, in addition to a Chief Public Defender, a Deputy Chief Defender is required for supervision. National standards require one investigator for every three staff attorneys350 and one social worker for every three attorneys.351 This means that the new Cumberland County public defender office will need four investigators and four social workers. National standards also require one paralegal for every four staff attorneys,352 requiring the new office to have three paralegals. The 6AC recommend that the Director position be paid on par with the salary and compensation of a District Attorney ($155,387.95)353 and that the Deputy Director be paid what the MCILS Director is currently being paid ($151,173.36).354 The new attorney positions are paid salaries and benefits at the rate paid to assistant district National Advisory Comm’n on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals, Report of the Task Force Courts, ch. 13 (The Defense), Std. 13.12 (1973). 349 National Study Comm’n on Defense Services, Guidelines for Legal Defense Systems in the United States 4.1 (1976) (“Proper attorney supervision in a defender office requires one full-time supervisor for every ten staff lawyers, or one part-time supervisor for every five lawyers.”). 350 National Study Comm’n on Defense Services, Guidelines for Legal Defense Systems in the United States 4.1 (1976) (“Defender offices should employ investigators with criminal investigation training and experience. A minimum of one investigator should be employed for every three staff attorneys in an office. Every defender office should employ at least one investigator.”). 351 National Legal Aid & Defender Ass’n, Model Contract for Public Defense Services § VII.F, available at http://www.nlada.org/defender-standards/model-contract/black-letter. 352 U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance Pub. No. NCJ185632, Keeping Defender Workloads Manageable (2001). 353 Email from Mark A. Toulouse, Division Chief – Finance & Administrative Services, Office of the Attorney General State of Maine, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 12, 2019). This amount reflects salary plus benefits calculated at approximately 35% of salary. 354 Email from John Pelletier, Director, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 7, 2019). 348 on the Appendix C: Cumberland County trial level public defender office attorneys ($111,412.95).355 Again, although the 6AC are not experts in the prosecution function, 6AC staff has travelled all across the country and interacted with numerous prosecutors, and it is our general observation that the prosecution function in Maine lacks adequate funding, especially in relation to salaries and compensation. Still, we present these recommendations because the prosecution function offers the best current comparison. Support staff salaries and benefits are based on support staff compensation in the Cumberland County District Attorney Office. Non-personnel expenses reflect the current MCILS budget, less line items dedicated specifically for financial screeners. Each expense356 was prorated based on the existing three MCILS staff members and then multiplied by the recommended staff of eleven. The rent projection is based on $25 per square foot charged against 200 square feet per staff (or $5,000 per staff member). Capital outlay expenses for new computers, furniture and cell phones were calculated at available retail rates. Email from Mark A. Toulouse, Division Chief – Finance & Administrative Services, Office of the Attorney General State of Maine, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 12, 2019). This amount reflects salary plus benefits calculated at approximately 35% of salary. 356 Email from John Pelletier, Director, Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services, to David Carroll, Executive Director of Sixth Amendment Center (Mar. 7, 2019). 355 105 6AC www.sixthamendment.org