THREAD: A bill is now racing thru Louisiana's legislature pushed by this guy. A former prosecutor. To destroy public defender independence, install a "defense czar" beholden to the Governor, & keep public defenders dependent on conviction fees of the very people they represent.
I'll start this story in the summer of 2016. That was when Alton Sterling, a 37 y/o Black man, was shot dead by 2 cops in East Baton Rouge. What does a police murder have to do with public defense funding? Answer should be "nothing." But in Louisiana, it was everything.
Alton Sterling's killing sparked widespread protests and calls for justice & accountability, which lead to even more violence & clashes w/ police. Just one month later, Baton Rouge then endured catastrophic flooding, which caused unprecedented damage.
The floods & protests over Alton Sterling's killing lead to another devastating outcome. As police were removed from active duty to address the protests & natural disasters, traffic tickets were simply not written.

In Louisiana, that meant that public defense was not funded.
The result of traffic tickets drying up: Public defender layoffs. Unfilled positions. Waiting lists of people in need of counsel. Public defenders w/ sky-high caseloads. Tens of millions of taxpayer dollars wasted on people jailed pretrial w/o an attorney to represent them.
Four years later, East Baton Rouge defenders & the community they served were still struggling. Then COVID struck. History repeated. The traffic tickets & court fines & fees public defense offices are forced to rely upon for funding--the “User Pay” system—have been depleted.
True throughout Louisiana. Public defense is in crisis in Louisiana. 1000s in Louisiana are jailed w/ no lawyer. Why?

They fund public defense off the backs of those who can't afford a lawyer. Fines/traffic tickets. The pandemic has dried up those funds.
Public defenders are needed now more than ever. Needed to save lives, provide counsel for those detained, & save taxpayers the costly waste of thousands locked in jail pretrial, uncounseled, waiting indefinitely for their case to resolve.
Fortunately, public defenders had independence to petition the legislature not just for what they needed, but for what was right -- stable state funding without having to rely on a racist, costly, unstable, and just plain wrong system of depending on their clients for funding.
Public defenders didn’t have this independence before 2007. There were no public defender offices at all. Just an “old boys club." Private attorney friends of judges appointed. A plea mill. Then in 2007, a new law allowed for public defender offices to be created w/ independence.
With this independence, public defense offices opened up & started to do extraordinary things. Judges hated it. I was in the 2nd intern class of Orleans Public Defenders. Remember the head of the office frequently being cuffed out of courtrooms for making simple legal arguments.
This past year, they did the impossible. Just one public defender in East Baton Rouge saved 1400 people the brutality of jail. Kept families together. Saved millions. And they started calling for more adequate funding & the end to “user pay.” Campaign:
Public defenders united & called for an end to a system that:

Kept 1000s in jail waiting for their day in court
Families Separated
Police misconduct, abuse, and violence unchallenged.
Evidence lost
Victims denied justice
Taxpayer dollars wasted.
And Louisiana legislators *heard public defenders.* Less than a year ago, defenders testified before the same house that just yesterday voted to end the public defender board. And legislator after legislator were moved.

“It’s our constitutional duty to fund you.” Listen/watch:
Given all of this, youd expect the Louisiana legislature would be spending their time ending reliance on user pay & strengthening public defense. No. Instead they’re overhauling the public defense system & further engraining reliance on the user pay system.

These guys:
Yesterday, legislation passed the House thatll(1) End public defense board, (2) put all power in hands of a "public defense czar" beholden to Governor, & (3) instead of doing *anything* for public defense funding, further ingrains fines and fees into law.
And it’s all happening so fast, no one has any idea about it all. Public defenders are all adamantly opposed to it. The community hasn’t even had an opportunity to learn about the law that will affect their lives & communities, let alone be heard. It’s all so wrong.
Just a few months ago, the bill sponsor -- Tanner Magee -- joined public defenders to decry Louisiana's system of relying on fines & fees for public defense funding. Magee: "It's truly a broken system." Here's a link to the video. facebook.com/watch/live/?v=…
In this segment, the Louisiana legislator Tanner Magee--currently speeding a bill to destroy public defense through legislature--acknowledges there's an outstanding inquiry into fines/fees & public defense. "We don't know what's going on with the money." facebook.com/12070584800799…
The same bill drafter--Tanner Magee--who is further entrenching conviction fees into state law just in January: "The only way a public defender gets paid is if their client gets convicted. That is a crazy, perverse system. It shouldn't be that way.

What happened @TannerDMagee?
And the Bill sponsor responds. Legislator Magee. With a lengthy statement *by a former federal prosecutor* about why we should be abolishing the public defender board instead of just, I don’t know, improving it. All while actually funding public defense at the levels needed.
Again then, Rep., pull the bill. Fix the board. Don’t replace it with something far worse. Instead spend time working with local defenders like Derwyn Bunton in NOLA & Lindsay Blouin in East Baton Rouge to fully fund public defense & end user pay. Stop wasting time w/ garbage.
Then get rid of the racist & unconstitutional fee! You *are entrenching it. You admit right here you wrote it into another state law. You’re “routing it through the state so that we can better account for it. It still goes to the locals.” It shouldn’t come from or go to anyone.
Question: Given Tanner’s stated goal of ending dependence on fines/fees & funding defense, why not do it? He’s widely respected. He can do this. Instead hes taking a risk every defender I know/respect is opposed to & writing conviction fees into a new law.
Tanner didnt answer question. Also there’s no reason to talk here like we’re in a schoolyard snark fight. I live in Brooklyn, but know & care about humans directly impacted by one of the most carceral states in the country. Legitimate questions. All them.
I don’t “love the board.” The board needs fixing. Clearly. So do that. What public defense & the communities & people they serve certainly don’t need is a single political appointee subject the whims of the executive. That’s far worse & more dangerous.
A) I’m not calling you names. Don’t question my sincerity. B) I don’t think youre insincere. C) I think youre making a giant mistake w/o taking enough time to think through implications & speaking w/ enough folks who know/do care. D) You reached out to me?

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More from @ScottHech

7 May
When leaders mislead, they must be called out. Rosenblum is Oregon Attorney General. Chelsea Clinton demanded she "use her power to topple a racist law" imprisoning hundreds. Her response sounds good, right? No: Supreme Court *mandated these retrials. She's fighting all the rest.
Most think of the KKK in terms of physical violence. But they also used legal & legislative process to pass laws exacting legal violence. In Oregon they enabled laws to silence Black jurors. To convict who they wanted. "Non-unanimous juries."
Last year, over Oregon AG Ellen Rosenblum's objection, the U.S. Supreme Court *finally* ruled that non-unanimous juries were unconstitutional. Even Kavaunagh acknowledged the law was "rooted in racism." Problem: Decision only applied for those cases on direct appeal or in future.
Read 17 tweets
7 May
HORROR IN TEXAS: "I have a 5 y/o little girl & a 4 y/o little boy. I've lost the rights to them since in jail." Kdee suffers mental health issues & seizures. Caged a year pretrial. Denied medication. Hogtied. Attempted suicide. Texas about to pass a law allowing more of this.
Kdee courageously shared her story w/ @TxJailProject. Wanted to be heard. *Content warning.* Last thing in the world Texas should be doing right now is passing a law to send more people to these torture chambers. "My name is Kdee. I've been here since way before COVID started."
"I'm sitting here in jail since August of last year. It's my first time ever being in trouble. I'm bipolar & I have seizures also. Been like that since the age of 5. They did not ask me any questions about that. I went to general population. I didn't get to see mental health."
Read 15 tweets
6 May
"To me ya'll the same in this jailhouse." What a guard told Willie while assaulting him. Caged pretrial in Texas for *over 3 years.* Tortured. Denied medication. Beaten. "My mom told me I have rights. But I'm behind this door." Texas is about to pass a law allowing more of this.
Willie shared a story of an assault that landed him in solitary. “I was taking my medication. I ran out of water. Told the officer, I need to get some more. As I'm walking next thing you know, he grabbed me from behind. Flung me against the wall. My medication went everywhere.”
“I don't ever do nothing but color. And I stay to myself. So everybody knows that I'm not a problem in this jail house. No, no. This is my first time ever, ever, ever having any kind of trouble like this, in here. Like I don't give them no problems."
Read 17 tweets
4 May
OUTRAGEOUS: Bobby Sneed. 74 year old veteran. Caged in Angola Prison for 47 years. Finally, unanimously granted parole. Then hospitalized. Prison claims it was a drug overdose. It's now over a month after his scheduled release date. They won't let him go. thelensnola.org/2021/05/04/a-m…
Family: “We were planning to meet him in Baton Rouge the day he was released with open arms to welcome him home. He has four children. And they were all ready to come and welcome him home.” 4 days before this date, he collapsed.
Bobby's since recovered & he's now being held in "administrative segregation." A fancy way of saying the torture of solitary confinement.

Next hearing: May 5. "The stakes are going to be whether Bobby dies in prison, or spends the final years of his life w/ his family members."
Read 6 tweets
3 May
🚨CRISIS IN TEXAS: 40,000 caged pretrial. State violence, denial of medical care, starvation, solitary, infection. Jaquaree was killed. I’ve listened to hundreds of desperate calls. Yet *this week, TX poised to pass a racist law to significantly expand pretrial caging.* Thread:
Jaquaree Simmons. Probably haven't heard of him. Just 23. Caged pretrial in TX. Called mom almost every day from his jail cell. Crying & begging for help. One week later, found dead. Only answers for his family is HB 20. Law that'll only make things worse. click2houston.com/news/local/202…
More than 60% in Texas jails--40000--have not been convicted of a crime. Majority are caged bc they cannot afford bail. Yet racist Gov. Abbott, police, prosecutors want more to suffer. This bill--HB 20--will literally take away power from judges to release people. It's sinister.
Read 18 tweets
28 Apr
THREAD: Meet Cash Spencer. Oregon juror. Only Black person other than defendant. Thought he was innocent. White jurors didn’t need her. Convicted him anyway. Oregon juries didn’t have to be unanimous. “It breaks my heart. The system is not built for me.”
Most think of the KKK in terms of physical violence. Lynchings. Intimidation. But they also used legal & legislative process to pass laws exacting legal violence. In Louisiana & Oregon they pushed laws to silence Black jurors. To convict who they wanted. "Non-unanimous juries."
Impact: Black people are already less likely to be selected to be on a jury. More likely to be accused of crime. Non-unanimous juries led to disproportionate convictions. *They would have never been convicted & sent to prison anywhere else in the country.* The KKK got their way.
Read 14 tweets

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