|
Updated: 8:06 AM Mar 20, 2010
Poor Defense
Michigan has one of the nation's stingiest and most fragmented systems for representing the 80 percent of defendants who can't afford a lawyer.
Posted: 8:00 AM Mar 20, 2010Reporter: AP/DAVID N. GOODMAN Email Address: Associated Press |
|
Michigan was a 19th century pioneer in providing legal aid to poor criminal suspects.
Now, many critics say it has one of the nation's stingiest and most fragmented systems for representing the 80 percent of defendants who can't afford a lawyer.
The system often leads to people's convictions being reversed on appeal. One agency says Michigan could save $132 million a year in prison costs if it eliminated excess penalties judges impose because of poor defense at sentencing.
The state Supreme Court hears arguments next month on a class-action challenge to the system.
And the state House Judiciary Committee is drafting a bipartisan proposal to overhaul the indigent defense system.
- Update: Police Find Missing Child
- Hawk Island Snow Park Fires Up Snow Guns
- AT&T Technician Saves Customer's Baby
- Fire Destroys Home In Onondaga
- Help for Refinancing Underwater Loans
- Jackson Senior Missing for 2 weeks
- State Employee Furlough Days Canceled
- Historical Museum To Screen WWII-Era Short Films
- Four Felony Counts Filed Against Former Jackson County Judge
- Waverly Parents Talk Budget, Image and Fights at Coffee Chat
- Hoekstra Standing By Super Bowl Ad
14 Comments - Humane Society Blocks Tortured Dog's Return to Owner
9 Comments - Proposed Internet Sales Tax Changes
8 Comments - AT&T Technician Saves Customer's Baby
7 Comments - Update: Police Find Missing Child
7 Comments - Michigan Signs up for Foreclosure Settlement
5 Comments





