by
Matthew Gruchow
The Argus Leader (VA)
Court-appointed
lawyers and public defenders are expensive, and counties - and their taxpayers
- are picking up most of the costs when clients fail to meet their financial
obligations.
Supplying
defendants with their Constitutional right to a lawyer cost Minnehaha and Lincoln
counties more than $2.6 million last fiscal year. Of that, only a little more
than $830,000 was recovered from the clients represented. Those two counties
make up the Second Judicial District.
As both
Minnehaha and Lincoln counties see their populations grow, they will see more
crimes, more court costs and more lawyer fees, and they eventually will need to
make tough budget decisions, Lincoln County Commissioner Jim Schmidt said.
"The
trickle-down effect is that you cut services," he said. "Out of whose
cookie jar do you take to meet that obligation? And that will be a very, very
difficult decision to prioritize that."
The rate of
recovery in 2006 wasn't any better than last year. The Second Judicial District
reported $2.42 million in court-appointed attorney expenses, according to the
Unified Judicial System reports. That year, they collected $692,493, or about
28 percent, of that balance.
There are few
tools available to county governments to collect outstanding lawyer fees.
Schmidt and
Minnehaha County Commissioner Jeff Barth said the primary way the counties
collect legal fees is by a lien on any property owned by a client. But payments
on those liens either do not come or trickle in over years, they said.
"If you
have property, we put a lien on your property, and we ask that you pay it, but
we don't collect very much," Barth said.
The issue is
complicated by the economic status of those who often use public-defender
services, Barth said.
"We do
have a collections agency, and sometimes they do go to court, but a lot of
these people don't have anything," Barth said. "There's nothing you
can do."
In Minnehaha
County, Barth said the commission will review the liens, reduce some of their
amounts or forgive them entirely.
More
aggressive steps to collect legal fees from clients could make the problem
worse, Schmidt said. The repayment of lawyer fees often is a condition of
probation or sentencing, and failure to pay can bring clients into court again,
where they again must rely on a court-appointed lawyer.
"We
wouldn't want to put them back into the position to be back in trouble, back
into court, because of court costs," he said.
Two private
lawyers
The problem
of uncollected attorney fees appears to have little effect on operations within
public defenders' offices.
In Lincoln
County, which contracts with two private lawyers for public defender cases,
both are paid a flat rate each month for their services, regardless of how many
hours they work.
For now, that
is a cost-savings for county taxpayers, said Bill Golden, one of Lincoln
County's public defenders.
"I take
the risk that over the next two years, it's going to be real, real busy,"
he said. "If it slows down, then that would be the county's risk."
Phillip
Peterson, the other lawyer on contract with Lincoln County, said how much a
county can recover in legal fees potentially affects him only at contract
renegotiations.
"The
higher the rate of reimbursement, the better the county commissioners feel about
it if I'm asking for a raise," he said.
So far,
unpaid legal fees have not affected contract negotiations, Peterson said.
The Minnehaha
County Public Defender's Office declined to comment for this story.
Rising
workload
Golden and
Peterson said the chief complication between their duties as public defenders
and the county's payment for their services is workload. It keeps going up.
Peterson said
his caseload has quadrupled since he began public-defender duties in 2000. That
sort of increase in caseload requires more money to manage, to where it could
become too burdensome on county governments, he said.
"And
attorneys are going to get out of it, because there's more and more caseload,
and the pay doesn't keep up with the caseload," he said.
In Lincoln
County, that could become a big problem in the next decade, he said.
Schmidt said
he sees Lincoln County forced to create a full-time public defender's office in
five to seven years.
But with the
option of more aggressive bill collection all but ruled out, county governments
can only look for new revenue streams to keep up with the financial obligations
of those growing court systems, Barth and Schmidt said. That could include
cutting programs, reducing the budgets of other agencies and increasing property
taxes, they said.
"But to
use more aggressive collecting, if you will, just won't work," Schmidt
said. "It's too hard to squeeze any more money out of these people,
because it's simply not there."
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