Scott Hechinger Profile picture
Sep 1, 2020 25 tweets 5 min read Read on X
Meet Lacie Dauzat. The only public defender advocating for the release of 18,000 people arrested each year in East Baton Rouge. Since the pandemic, she's successfully gained release of over 1000 people. "I am actually your typical Southern girl." This: teenvogue.com/story/public-d…
"I love to hunt, fish, do anything outdoors. I grew up on a farm in Bordelonville, a very rural, country town w/ no sidewalks & no stoplights. Raised by my aunt & grandparents, taught to believe you get more flies with honey & you give the respect that you would want in return."
“I sit alone in a bleak concrete-walled room in the Prison of East Baton Rouge. It’s hot. No windows & only hard wooden benches. The ceiling is covered in mold. Only sounds I hear are from the desperate people arrested within the last 48 hours, locked in cages just outside.”
“The place I am describing is considered a courtroom. It’s tough to practice social distancing & difficult for those I will soon represent to hear me thru my mask. Still, I try to gather as much information as possible before the judge appears on the 32-inch television screen.”
“Once the judge appears, those arrested will quickly be called up & told what they are being charged w/ & what their bonds will be. Several thousand for taking food from a Walmart or marijuana. The judge will then ask if they can afford an attorney & appoint me if they cannot.”
“My goal is to always show the humanity of the people I represent — that they’re not just another number on the list or face in the crowd, another statistic. Silenced out of fear that anything they say will incriminate them, I speak up. I tell their story.”
“I let it be known that any day locked in a cage, too poor to afford bond payments, will essentially hit the reset button on a person’s life. Any good accomplished, any housing or employment obtained, or care they’ve devoted to their loved ones can essentially evaporate.”
“Since the onset of COVID-19 in March, my advocacy has helped gain the release of hundreds of people. I have reunited families. I have improved public health outcomes. I have helped keep crime down. I have connected people with needed resources.”
“I am the only public defender advocating for the release of the 18,000 people arrested each year in East Baton Rouge, in a state that, because of an avoidable public-defense funding crisis, is on the cusp of losing public defense altogether.”
“I grew up on a farm in Bordelonville, a very rural country town w/ no sidewalks & no stoplights. Raised by my aunt & grandparents, taught to believe that you get more flies with honey and you give the respect that you would want in return.“
“With family working in local prison, I learned early how easily society could lock people away & out of sight. Hearing stories from people incarcerated is where my path to defense began. Learning they had a life before they went inside & unsure of what they’d have once out.”
“Today, the stories I encounter on the job are all unique and each is just as important as the last.”
“It’s the crying I hear when a person I meet knows there is no way his family can afford the $10,000 bond for an alleged drug offense.”
“It’s the profound pain I feel when I’m told that they are afraid their families will try to sell everything they own just to get them out.”
“The fear I have when an elderly person who comes through tells me of his numerous medical conditions, and I know that he is at risk of contracting COVID-19.”
“Before I started this work a few years ago, there was no public defender to advocate for those incarcerated at this early stage whatsoever. Though it’s hard to believe, people who were arrested used to be left alone to stand before a judge & prosecution & represent themselves.”
“This cruel practice — uncounseled bail hearings — is the norm in Louisiana. It’s the reason why my office’s pretrial release unit was created. We saw results right away. We took a prison with a population of 1,700 down to under 1,000 in a matter of weeks.” And more:
“We didn’t just secure release. We provided resources & communication to keep them from returning. Connected w/ services they never even knew existed in their community. Won key dismissals. Some humanity in a cruel & impersonal system that turns the Prison into a crisis center.”
“My pretrial unit is not even funded by Louisiana. We do this work only thanks to grant funding we had to find from outside the state. Public defense in Louisiana is barely funded at all. Instead, we’re forced to rely on an unjust and unstable system referred to as a “user pay.”
User pay: “Traffic tickets, court fees and fines from the arrest, conviction and incarceration of the very people too poor to afford public defense are what the state relies on to support public defender offices. Only a small amt of state budget is allocated to indigent defense.”
“Public defense offices like mine were reeling from lack of funding before COVID-19 struck. Now, we have no choice but to layoff/furlough essential staff bc the pandemic has depleted this unstable funding source. 1000s remain jailed, waiting w/o an attorney to represent them.”
"Louisiana defenders represent already-traumatized communities, serving tens of thousands of men, women, and children each year who suffer from poverty, homelessness, mental health issues, and substance abuse disorders that have only been made worse by the pandemic."
"Public defenders are needed now more than ever to save lives, provide counsel for those detained, & save taxpayers costly waste of caging people pretrial. Unless the state legislature steps in, we may now lose public defense altogether. Somehow I have faith they’ll do right."
Lacie & public defenders from her office & across the state, along with organizers teamed up to launch a powerful campaign to end the user pay system and fully fund public defense. Watch this video (narrated by a formerly incarcerated advocate) to learn:
Learn more. Take action. And call on the Louisiana legislature to save public defense. ForTheSixth.org

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More from @ScottHech

Mar 18
“No judge has ever lost their job setting bail on someone.”

A NYC judge whispered that. To a public defender. Before depriving their destitute client of freedom. This happens every day. Judges are intimidated to throw poor people in cages.

Thread on a history of intimidation: Image
Public defenders @elizaorlins & @APetrigh tell about the open secret of "justice" throughout the country People are deprived of liberty, not based on merit. But judicial fear of negative press.

Story is paywalled. So Im transcribing it here:nydailynews.com/2024/03/15/int…
"The NYPD’s recent social media attack against a judge who released a defendant under supervision instead of setting bail and detaining them. The case drew headlines because the NYPD’s aggressive social media posts were full of misinformation, including misidentifying the judge." Image
Read 11 tweets
Feb 17
How copaganda works. Police, prosecutor, & prison interests use media to exaggerate & lie about "sensational" cases. Amplify them on repeat. Create the *perception* that "crime" or "migrants" are a "Crisis!"

Perpetual anger/fear buys votes & public opinion. Facts be damned. Image
How copaganda works. Police release a highly edited video that doesn't include their unprovoked, violent, & unjustified attack on a migrant. Manufactured "outcry" ensues. Lawmakers call for sweeping policy changes. New video later released. It's too late. Profound damage done. Image
How copaganda works. Even after previously withheld police footage showed the "attack on police" in Times Square was the opposite: An unprovoked attack *by police* on innocent people, reports continue only center the lie.

None (that I've seen) report on the overt police lie. Image
Read 12 tweets
Dec 4, 2023
An interesting story for you. Was catching up w/ a friend at coffeeshop. The mother of her friend walked by & joined us briefly. She’s from Chicago. She told us a story about talking to a Chicago police officer. Thanking him for his service.

What he told her will surprise you.
As quick background, she is a white woman. In her 60s. Well off. Grew up in the suburbs of Chicago. Now downtown. Forever Dem. Supported the end of cash bail. But is “fed up” w/ “all the violence.” Thinks “something has to be done.”

She saw a cop the other day & went up to him.
She told the cop how scared she was by everything she was reading in the news. Couldn’t imagine how tough things were “for him” given the “crime rates.” (Note: Homicides are down significantly in most of Chicago, but violence remains a scourge).

The cop told her to “buy a gun”
Read 17 tweets
Sep 18, 2023
Extraordinary work again from @TeenVogue -- the best justice journalism outlet in the country. On the day that cash bail is finally eliminated in Illinois, they release a critical explainer on "Copaganda."

How to identify & respond to lies & fearmongering about safety. Watch:
Must watch. The week that cash bail is finally eliminated in Illinois, local experts debunk harmful myths that the media peddles about bail reform. In this @TeenVogue video explainer.

"This fear has been built up & stoked by media misinformation. A refrain. A scapegoat " Watch:
Last year: Artists, survivors of violence, organizers, entrepreneurs, public defenders, policy experts, restorative justice practitioners, and system-impacted people sat for a series of conversations while exploring a groundbreaking exhibition on torture and incarceration.
Read 9 tweets
Aug 4, 2023
Teen Vogue out again w/ the best in political commentary, justice journalism & truth. A compelling & easily digestible explainer on "Abolition."

New vision of safety: "If policing prosecution & incarceration created safety, we'd be the safest country in the world." Watch. Learn:
When people hear the word "abolition" they think 'crazy leftist.' 'Idealistic.'

In reality: "We're the clear eyed ones. We have the whole history of the world to let us know what were doing now is not sustainable. We want a world where violence isn't the norm." Part 2:
Last year: Artists, survivors of violence, organizers, entrepreneurs, public defenders, policy experts, restorative justice practitioners, and system-impacted people sat for a series of conversations while exploring a groundbreaking exhibition on torture and incarceration.
Read 9 tweets
Aug 1, 2023
An important story to share. With a conservative Supreme Court for decades to come, state judges are more important & powerful than ever before.We should all care about state court decisions.

But right now, NY judges are fighting against any scrutiny. Calling it "intimidation."
As a public defender, even judges would admit the outsized media influence on their decisionmaking. "What if I end up on the cover of NY Post?" So theyd condemn people to Rikers.

But soon as researchers began studying their behavior, judges attacked it as "dangerous." More: Image
Judges are some of the most powerful actors in the criminal legal system. They perpetuate mass incarceration through their sentences and bail decisions. They decide if the cops violated the constitution or not.

Yet judges mostly operate in empty, unaccountable courtrooms. Image
Read 11 tweets

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