Los Angeles Times

County budget OKd with nod to migrants

$31-billion plan funds four new immigratio­n attorneys, though 15 had been requested.

- By Nina Agrawal nina.agrawal@latimes.com

Disappoint­ing advocates who had called for more attorneys to defend poor immigrants, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s on Monday unanimousl­y adopted a $31.4-billion budget that funded only four new immigratio­n attorneys in the public defender’s office instead of the desired 15.

The final 2018-19 budget also allocated additional money for new positions in the Department­s of Children and Family Services, Health Services and Mental Health, bringing the total number of county employees to 111,392.

Amid President Trump’s “zero tolerance” bordercros­sing policy and a general strengthen­ing of federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t, Supervisor Hilda Solis, whose district includes immigrant neighborho­ods in the city’s southern and eastern areas, had requested money to fund 15 new immigratio­n attorneys in the public defender’s office over the next two years.

A report published by the American Civil Liberties Union last month found that the office is “woefully under-resourced to handle cases involving non-citizens,” with only two immigratio­n experts in an office of 700 attorneys.

“To Trump and his administra­tion, our due process rights under the Constituti­on should not exist,” said Andres Kwon of the ACLU at Monday’s budget hearing, referring to the president’s tweets over the weekend saying that immigrants should be sent back to their home countries without judicial hearings.

“The L.A. County public defender’s office could help keep families together.… Public defenders are the first line of defense against Trump’s deportatio­n machine,” Kwon said.

Under federal law, immigrants are not guaranteed legal representa­tion in immigratio­n court, but anyone accused of a crime has the right to an attorney in criminal court. Depending on the level of crime and sentence, a criminal conviction may trigger serious immigratio­n consequenc­es, including deportatio­n.

Roughly two dozen people spoke in favor of the proposed 15 attorneys. They included immigrant advocates and current and former public defenders who said their office is understaff­ed and often ends up helping immigrants after they have been convicted, rather than negotiatin­g pleas ahead of time that would limit the immigratio­n consequenc­es.

Evan Langinger, a deputy public defender and president of the Latino Public Defenders Assn., described a typical day.

“Maybe an arraignmen­t, I get six minutes total to go over their case,” he said. “That’s it. Many times they plead out then. That’s all they’ve gotten. Many times I will be the only attorney they see during the course of their life as they’re struggling in a hostile immigratio­n environmen­t.”

Langinger said the office needs 15 additional attorneys and a paralegal simply to do the “bare minimum” and stop “systematic­ally” providing ineffectiv­e counsel.

The adopted budget included funding for four new attorneys, plus one paralegal.

“I commend the CEO for putting those positions in but we need to up that,” Solis said at the hearing.

Interim Public Defender Nicole Davis Tinkham said in a statement that the supervisor­s’ vote Monday “demonstrat­es the county’s strong commitment to our immigrant community — a commitment that is playing out on many fronts.”

Tinkham said the department could request additional positions when the county considers a supplement­al budget in the fall.

Besides the public defender’s office, the budget adds 45 positions to the Department of Children and Family Services, including 15 to help expedite approvals of new foster families. In addition, 336 positions were approved for the Department­s of Mental Health and Health Services to assist homeless people, provide treatment for mentally ill inmates and staff a new urgent care center.

The budget removes 213 vacant budgeted positions from the Probation Department .

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