The Tennessee Supreme Court has appointed judges, attorneys, and others with ties to the criminal justice system in the state to the Indigent Representation Task Force. The group will review practices regarding how attorneys are compensated for work with defendants who are unable to afford legal counsel. Judge Barry A. Steelman, criminal court judge, 11th Judicial District, is among those the court appointed.
The task force will review the current indigent representation system, including indigency determinations, the delivery of services, and the administration of the indigent representation fund. Their charge is to guarantee the system is addressing the needs of its recipients as well as benefiting the taxpayers of Tennessee.
Currently, the judicial system’s budget provides for an expenditure of approximately $19 million in criminal indigent representation, $12.5 million in child welfare and child support representation, and several more million for judicial hospitalizations, as well as experts and investigators who work on the criminal cases. That’s about $36 million each year.
Chief Justice Sharon Lee said the task force is a necessary step in reviewing Tennessee’s current indigent representation system. She announced the creation of the task force to the Tennessee Judicial Conference Wednesday, Oct 21.
“We must not accept anything less than the most qualified representation in our courts, but we must also be sure that those receiving indigent representation qualify for those services and that the lawyers who perform the services are adequately compensated,” she said.
Dean of Nashville School of Law and retired Tennessee Supreme Court Justice William C. Koch, Jr. will chair the task force.
“It’s imperative that Tennessee meet the constitutional obligation owed to all criminal defendants. But, there is also the necessity to do so in the most accountable, efficient, and effective manner possible,” said Koch. “I look forward to undertaking this important task.”
The task force will meet for the first time on Friday, Nov. 6 at 9:30 a.m. in the Legislative Plaza in Nashville. Members are: Koch; Lela Hollabaugh, partner, Bradley Arant Boult Cummings; Judge Deanna Bell Johnson, circuit court judge, 21st Judicial District; Susan L. Kay, Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs and Clinical Professor of Law, Vanderbilt Law School; Rep. William Lamberth, State House District 44; Susan Mattson, principle legislative research analyst, Tennessee Comptroller of the Treasury Office; Mark A. Mesler, II, attorney, Rosenblum and Reisman in Memphis; Judge Loyce Lambert Ryan, Shelby County General Sessions Court; Judge Vicki S. Snyder, Henry County General Sessions Court; Dwight Tarwater, general counsel, office of Gov. Bill Haslam; Steelman; Sen. John Stevens, State District 24; and DarKenya Waller, managing attorney, Legal Aid Society of Middle Tennessee and the Cumberlands.
Source: State Supreme Court