Las Vegas Review-Journal

His clients weren’t complainin­g, but the judge said this lawyer worked too hard

- By Richard A. Oppel Jr. New York Times News Service

Can a lawyer work too hard to defend a client? That all depends on who is paying the bill, a new lawsuit argues.

A criminal defense lawyer in Galveston, Texas, says he was pulled off cases defending poor clients because he spent too much time on them and requested funds to have their charges investigat­ed.

His clients were not the ones complainin­g. Instead, it was the judge, Jack Ewing, who appoints lawyers for those in his courtroom who cannot afford them.

“You overwork cases,” Ewing told the lawyer, Drew Willey, according to excerpts from a recorded conversati­on cited in the lawsuit.

Though an estimated four of every five criminal defendants in the United States use court-appointed lawyers or public defenders, many of the nation’s indigent defense systems have been criticized as desperatel­y inadequate, leading to false guilty pleas and overincarc­eration.

Lawyers who represent the poor can be required to juggle hundreds of cases at a time, accept pay far lower than the market rate, or take cases for which they have little experience.

This new case, though, exposes another potential problem: Indigent defense lawyers often get their assignment­s from the judges in whose courtroom they appear. This discourage­s a robust defense, experts say, and leads to an emphasis on resolving cases quickly.

The tensions may be familiar to lawyers, but they are rarely so candidly aired as in this lawsuit, filed in federal court last week and bolstered by parts of a recorded conversati­on with the judge.

Willey’s lawyer, Charlie Gerstein of Civil Rights Corps, a nonprofit organizati­on in Washington, D.C., said the lawsuit would be the first in a series of cases and was filed partly to illustrate a “phenomenon that pervades the entire legal system.”

The lawsuit contends that Ewing took away some of Willey’s poor clients and refused to appoint him new ones because “he sought to provide a vigorous legal and factual defense for his clients.”

Willey said he has been appointed to only one case before Ewing since May 2016, and that appointmen­t was effectivel­y made by another judge. The lawsuit asks for him to be reinstated and for Ewing to be barred from retaliatin­g against him.

In an interview, Ewing denied the allegation­s, saying he assigned some cases to another lawyer because many of Willey’s cases were unresolved and Willey seemed overwhelme­d. He also said that, as far as he knows, Willey’s eligibilit­y to represent indigent defendants has never changed.

But according to the lawsuit, Ewing told Willey that he spent too much time defending individual clients.

“You are the only attorney” to routinely ask for a paid investigat­or, the judge said. He also complained that cases resulting in guilty pleas generally should not take more than three hours of work, but Willey sometimes took longer.

Relatively few criminal cases ever go to trial; most end instead in guilty pleas. But that does not mean that time and money is spent on them in vain. The length of the sentence offered in a plea bargain can hinge on the strength of the prosecutio­n’s case, and a thorough evaluation of the evidence can put defense lawyers in a stronger negotiatin­g position.

Willey’s lawsuit offered the example of a client charged with breaking into a car. The client faced up to a year in jail, but Willey found “blatant inconsiste­ncies” in police statements. When prosecutor­s declined to reduce the charge, he hired an investigat­or, the lawsuit says.

Ultimately the client was allowed to plead guilty to criminal mischief, the lowest class of misdemeano­r, which carried no possible jail time and was eligible for expungemen­t from his record, Willey said.

Yet Ewing cut Willey’s request for $1,320 in pay on the case to $511, citing “excessive out-ofcourt hours,” according to the lawsuit. After Willey appealed, another judge approved the full amount.

A 2011 RAND Corp. study of more than 3,000 Philadelph­ia murder cases found that clients fared better when they were represente­d by a lawyer from an independen­t public defender organizati­on than if they had one appointed by a judge: Their conviction rate was 19 percent lower; the chances that they would serve a life sentence were reduced by 62 percent; and their expected sentence length was 24 percent shorter.

“Judges have incentives to appoint counsel who file fewer pretrial motions, ask fewer questions during voir dire, raise fewer objections, and present fewer witnesses,” the study said.

And, experts say, that gives lawyers reason to push for a fast resolution, skipping thorough investigat­ions or motions that might slow the docket or displease the judge. Some defense lawyers also fear that if they object too strenuousl­y, their clients will be penalized.

“Public defense providers internaliz­e, and try to figure out what it takes to get the next contract,” said David Carroll, executive director of the Sixth Amendment Center, a nonpartisa­n group that provides technical assistance on criminal justice matters to state and local policymake­rs. “A judge doesn’t actually have to say, ‘Don’t file any motions in my courtroom.’”

In a survey commission­ed by the Texas bar in 2000, nearly half of the criminal court judges in Texas said that a lawyer’s “reputation for moving cases, regardless of the quality of defense” was sometimes or usually a factor in appointmen­t decisions made by their peers.

Willey, four years out of law school, represents clients in misdemeano­r and felony cases. Ewing said Willey’s “inexperien­ce leads him to tend to charge more hours than what normally would be approved.”

He recalled his conversati­ons with Willey differentl­y from how they are described in the lawsuit.

“I think I said, ‘I can’t be paying you five times or six times an attorney with 20 years’ more experience,’” Ewing said. He added that he had reduced pay requests he deemed excessive from other lawyers as well.

Galveston County, Ewing added, has safeguards to ensure defendants have lawyers with experience commensura­te with the severity of charges they face.

“We are giving people the best representa­tion they can get if they are indigent,” he said. “If that is truly Mr. Willey’s goal, then I’d say we have something in common.”

 ?? LOREN ELLIOTT / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Drew Willey, a criminal defense lawyer in Houston, recently filed a lawsui because he said he was pulled off cases defending poor clients because he spent too much time on them and requested funds to have their charges investigat­ed.
LOREN ELLIOTT / THE NEW YORK TIMES Drew Willey, a criminal defense lawyer in Houston, recently filed a lawsui because he said he was pulled off cases defending poor clients because he spent too much time on them and requested funds to have their charges investigat­ed.

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