Search Term(s):
Blog Tags:
Order by: Date Relevancy
Your search returned 2 entries.
Nevada’s highest court orders public defense improvements
Posted: January 8, 2008 4:03 pm
The Nevada Supreme Court acted Friday on recommendations from a commission created to improve indigent defense in the state. Friday’s order removes judges from the process of appointing defense lawyers to represent indigent clients, reexamines the way defendants become eligible for indigent defense and mandates the collection of statistics on race and income level of defendants. The order does not act on the commission’s recommendation, however, to cap the number of cases any public defender can handle. Public defenders in Las Vegas currently handle more than 360 cases at any given time, while the professional standard is 150. The court will consider caseload caps at a later hearing, the justices said.
Gary Peck of the American Civil Liberties Union of Nevada praised the court order, terming it a significant step in "the long-standing fight to fix a badly broken indigent defense system."Overburdened or unqualified legal representation was a cause of many of the wrongful convictions later overturned by DNA testing. Read more about bad lawyering here.
Peck also predicted that once the caseload studies are done he's confident that limits will be imposed by the high court.
Read the full story here. (Las Vegas Sun, 01/04/08)
Tags: Nevada, Bad Lawyering
New innocence clinic takes root at UNLV
Posted: September 2, 2008 4:28 pm
After learning about the exoneration of Ronald Cotton in North Carolina, University of Nevada Las Vegas law student Lucy Flores pushed the school to create an innocence clinic, where students could work to overturn wrongful convictions. This year, she got her wish.
The new innocence clinic at UNLV’s Boyd Law School recently opened its doors, with students reviewing six cases of possible wrongful conviction. The group is working closely with Utah’s Rocky Mountain Innocence Center to identify and investigate the cases.
"The fact is there are a lot of innocent people in prison," Flores said.
Read the full story here. (Las Vegas Review-Journal, 09/02/08)
Tags: Nevada


















