Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
A Gideon v. Wainwright Reminder
A Gideon v. Wainwright Reminder
Mar 12, 2026 2:32 AM

Over the past decade media coverage of the problems surrounding indigent defense has been increasing. For example, The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is currently suing the state of Utah for failing to uphold that 6th Amendment which now provides opportunities for government provided criminal defense. The ACLU is claiming that Utah fell short of its obligation to provide attorneys to criminal defendants who cannot afford to hire one. While the merits of the case have yet to be properly sorted out, what is true is that public defenders offices are under much needed scrutiny.

With the 50th anniversary of the 1963 Gideon v. Wainwright decision back in 2013 a flurry of articles were published that highlighted some of the injustices in the public defense system that the Gideon verdict created. The Gideon verdict required states to provide defense attorneys, especially for the poor.

In 2013, a New York Times article by Lincoln Caplan on the anniversary of the Gideon decision summarized several of current problems around the United States regarding public defense. The article highlighted the problems with meeting the requirements of Gideon at the state level where 95 percent of America’s criminal trials take place. The best programs in the United States still struggle to meet the high number of cases that require public defenders. Caplan’s article highlights the Miami public defender’s office which handles far above the American Bar Association’s mendation of 150 cases per year for a attorney. The demand in Miami has reached 500 cases a year, and has far outpaced the funding for indigent defense. The important distinction the author makes in this article is that not only is financing of public defense an issue, but the general attitude towards the poor the system has created. It is an attitude that Caplan and others describe as “contempt.”

A 2011 report published by the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL) found that, “Florida’s county courts are consistently sacrificing due process for case-processing speed.” The study found that 66 percent of defendants in Florida appeared at arraignment without counsel. Most of these defendants were pleading guilty (70 percent), while those who had hired counsel were less likely to be entering pleas of guilty. Only 21 percent had been appointed public counsel at their first appearance in court. The defendants were often handed documents that encouraged them to waive their right to counsel and enter guilty pleas or no contest. The study found that, “Half of the individuals who appeared at arraignment without counsel wholly waived their right to counsel.” Defendants that were in custody were 10 times more likely to waive their right to counsel. Those accused of less serious crimes were more likely to waive their right as well. In Florida, public defenders are not free, and defendants are often reminded of this before arraignment, which also may lead to the high rates of defendants refusing counsel. If the Florida system is actually encouraging defendants to plead guilty and forgo their right to counsel than it does not fully provide justice for those poor persons arrested.

Ultimately, this is an issue of how we view the poor. If we believe that the poor, regardless of their allege crimes, are worthy of dignity, we should whatever is necessary to see that rule of law is applied in an impartial manner. Otherwise, the poor remain vulnerable to the abuses of the state.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Only in Jerusalem: Building Institutions Of Freedom
Religious liberty and economic freedom in the heart of … Israel? In September, the foundational message of the Acton Institute was featured at “Judaism, Christianity, and the West: Building and Preserving the Institutions of Freedom,” a conference that brought together Jewish and Christian scholars in Jerusalem. One featured speaker was Professor Daniel Mark, an Orthodox Jew and an assistant professor of political science at Villanova University, Pennsylvania’s oldest Catholic university. Mark is also a visiting fellow in the Department of...
The Call of the Martian
I sawThe Martian this week and was struck by the number of resonant themes on a variety of is issues, including creation, creativity, innovation, entrepreneurship, exploration, work, suffering, risk, and civilization. I won’t be exploring all of these in the brief reflections below, but will simply be highlighting some salient features. The municates something seriously important about the threefold relations of human beings: to God, to one another, and to the creation. There will be some potential spoilers in the...
How Foreign Aid Can Keep Poor Countries in Poverty
Giving foreign aid directly to poor countries may end up keeping those countries poor. For most readers of this blog and others associated with the Acton Institute this claim will be neither surprising nor controversial. Indeed, it’s been a core assumption behind our work on PovertyCure. But until recently, many Americans would have found the idea to be counter-intuitive, if not obviously wrong. But thanks to the work of the Angus Deaton, the recent winner of the Nobel prize in...
Bernie Sanders Loves to Decry ‘Casino Capitalism,’ But What About Economic Freedom?
Inlast Tuesday’sDemocratic debate, Senator Bernie Sanders stayed true to his famed aversion to capitalism, proclaiming the fanciful virtues of “democratic socialism.” Yet when prodded by Anderson Cooper — who asked, “you don’t consider yourself a capitalist?” — Sanders responded not by attacking free markets, but by targeting a more popular target of discontent: Wall Street and the banks. “Do I consider myself part of the casino capitalist process by which so few have so much and so many have so...
Family in Decline: How Should Christians Respond?
As Christianity loses influence in the West, and as culture corresponds by taking itscues from the idols of hedonism, it can be easy to forget that most of these challenges are not new. In an article for Leadership Journal, Ryan Hoselton highlights theserecurring “crises,” pondering whatlessons we might learn from Christian responses of ages past. On the topic of family, and more specifically, family in decline, Hoselton points to Herman Bavinck’s The Christian Family,whichtakes aim attherange of threats tothe family...
Who Protects Us From Government Polluters?
“The rules don’t apply to me,” is a favorite maxim of toddlers, narcissists, and government officials. This is especially true of the legislative branch, which frequently exempts itself—and its 30,000 employees—from federal laws that apply to the rest of us. But just as often government at all levels simply ignores laws it finds too burdensome ply with. A recent study published last month in the American Journal of Political Science titled “When Governments Regulate Governments” found that pared with private...
Life in Exile: Bringing Peace and Prosperity to Rural New York
The Acton Institute’s latest film series is having a profound influence on churches munities of all kinds. Hearts are being stirred and inspired, mindsare connecting mission withculture, and as a result, the church is unlocking a bigger-picture vision of God’s plan for creation. Over at the Letters to the Exiles blog, Evan Koons piling letters and testimonials from viewers of the series, sharing how For the Life of the World is transforming their lives munities. In the latest letter, we...
Samuel Gregg: Why Does The Left Keep Winning?
In today’s American Spectator, Acton’s Director of Research Samuel Gregg notes that left-wing politicians, supporters of socialism, and social engineers seem to have taken over – not just in American politics, but globally. Why? Gregg suggests three reasons: One abiding cause of the left’s on-going ascendency, I’d suggest, is that the visible weakening of orthodox religion throughout the West. As the 20th century Jesuit theologian Henri de Lubac observed, liberalized forms of Judaism and Christianity don’t involve abandonment of a...
What’s the Real Problem with Payday Loans?
Since its inception in the 1990s, the payday lending industry has grown at an astonishing pace. Currently, there are about 22,000 payday lending locations—more than two for every Starbucks—that originate an estimated $27 billion in annual loan volume. Christians and others worriedabout the poor tend to be very fortable with this industry. While there may be forms of payday lending that are ethical, the concern is that most such lending is predatory, and that the industry takes advantage of the...
Leftist Shareholders’ GMO Crusade Runs Aground on Science
Ahhhh, the Left! So often passionate, so obstinately assured of the rightness of their secular crusades mounted under the variety of flags and anthems espousing “social justice” and “environmental sustainability.” And, unfortunately, so often just plain wrong. Such is the case with As You Sow, the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility and other shareholder activist groups that each year apply their supposed religious authority to the proxy resolutions they submit to panies. Certainly, AYS and ICCR investors believe from the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved