Texas Bill clears need for Legal experience in representing capital defendants
Sunday, March 20, 2005 at 11:50AM
TheSpook
Former prosecutors with no experience
as defense attorneys could qualify for appointment to death penalty
cases under a bill given preliminary House approval Thursday. House
Bill 268 would create a larger pool of attorneys who could be appointed
to represent indigent defendants, said House Criminal Jurisprudence
Committee Chairman Terry Keel, R-Austin, author of the bill. The House
voted unanimously in favor of the bill. A final vote is scheduled
Monday. Under current law, an attorney must have experience as lead
defense counsel in a significant number of felony cases, including
homicide trials, before being appointed to a death penalty case. Keel's
bill would require attorneys to "exhibit proficiency and commitment to
providing quality representation to defendants in death penalty cases"
and to receive training. Supporters say former prosecutors have
experience and skills that defense attorneys lack, such as the ability
to anticipate the prosecution's strategy and cross-examination. Critics
say the bill is a step backward in efforts to improve the quality of
lawyers who defend individuals on trial for their lives. "The idea that
you're going to improve the quality of lawyers by lowering the
standards and expanding the pool of lawyers who are able to get
appointed is exactly the opposite of what's needed to improve capital
defendant representation," said Bill Beardall, director of the Equal
Justice Center. Andrea Marsh, director of the Fair Defense Project of
the ACLU of Texas, said death penalty cases are the "wrong kind of case
to have someone learning as they go along." [more]
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