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Poor Boys Need Better Lawyers

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Mr. Ridley-Thomas and Sheila Kuehl

On a motion by County Supervisors Mark Ridley-Thomas and Sheila Kuehl, the Board of Supervisors has voted to look into reforming how Los Angeles County provides legal counsel to those in the juvenile justice system.

When children and teenagers cannot afford an attorney, the County provides a public defender. If there is a conflict – such as when the public defender already is representing another party in the case – the County hires a private “panel attorney.”

This person is paid a flat fee of $340-$360 regardless of the complexity and severity of the case. He or she must use his own resources to hire investigators.

“The juvenile justice system was created to recognize the unique needs of youth and to ensure that they were provided opportunities for rehabilitation and not simply punishment,” Mr. Ridley-Thomas said.

“We have lost our way.

“This motion seeks to put us back on the right track.”

He said the current flat-fee system puts panel attorneys, and the youth that they represent, at a disadvantage.

“We pay them inadequately,” Mr. Ridley-Thomas said. “We don’t afford them the resources they need to maximize the potential for justice in the case of indigent juveniles. It’s like sending them into a fight with one arm tied behind their back.”

Ms. Kuehl said the motion is part of the Board’s effort to better serve youth w under the County’s care. She hopes reforms would include advocacy and other services that would give youth a “second chance.”

Several advocates for youth and for juvenile justice system reforms testified in support of the motion, including attorney Carol Chodroff. She said the proposals “can address disparities in the current system, save taxpayer dollars, and ensure that all juvenile defendants are afforded competent representation.”

Retired Superior Court Judge Jan Levine said if panel counsel “no longer labor with comparatively inferior tools, the real beneficiaries would be the youth appearing before the court.”

In response to a 2014 motion by Mr. Ridley-Thomas, the Warren Institute at the U.C. Berkeley School of Law conducted an unprecedented analysis of the juvenile indigent defense system.

They found the flat fee could be a disincentive for panel attorneys to spend additional time and effort on a case.

The analysis noted the County has virtually no oversight on its juvenile indigent defense system , including around panel attorneys’ caseloads and training. Nor does it monitor whether panel attorneys advocate for their young clients to receive services like housing, special education, and treatments for abuse, trauma, substance addiction and mental illness. The report showed this resulted in disparate outcomes. Youths represented by panel attorneys were more likely to be sent to probation camps or transferred to the adult system.

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