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Idaho Judge Allows Class Action Suit Against Public Defense System

Joe Gratz
/
Flickr Creative Commons

An Idaho District Court judge has ruled that the state now faces a class action lawsuit from those claiming the public defense system is severely underfunded.

The case has been brewing since 2015 when a group of four people across Idaho brought suit against the state and the members of the Idaho State Public Defense Commission.

 

Backed by the ACLU of Idaho, the group claims public defenders are drastically overworked, meaning they don’t have time to investigate cases – or sometimes even meet with their indigent clients.

“Some of that stuff is really nonexistent – not because the public defenders are deficient in some way, but because really, the system and everything that’s been put in place to help them, there’s just not much there,” says Jeremy Woodson, a spokesperson for the ACLU.

He says that results in innocent people pleading guilty to get out of jail and rebuild their lives later.

In his order, District Judge Samuel Hoagland notes these conditions are “typical experiences” for clients of public defenders, who are employed by each of Idaho’s 44 counties.

With this ruling, tens of thousands of people facing charges in Idaho and can't afford a private attorney can join the lawsuit.

 

The case had originally been dismissed, but the Idaho Supreme Court reversed that decision last April.

 

The attorney general’s office declined to comment.

 

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I cover politics and a bit of everything else for Boise State Public Radio. Outside of public meetings, you can find me fly fishing, making cool things out of leather or watching the Seattle Mariners' latest rebuilding season. If you have a tip, please get in touch!

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