Some Georgia death row inmates may soon be with­out rep­re­sen­ta­tion for their appeals, poten­tial­ly delay­ing the entire death penal­ty process. The Georgia Bar Foundation has tra­di­tion­al­ly pro­vid­ed funds to the Georgia Appellate Practice and Educational Resource Center, a twelve-per­son non-prof­it orga­ni­za­tion that rep­re­sents or assists most of the 90 inmates on Georgia’s death row. Because of the eco­nom­ic down­turn, the Foundation’s col­lec­tions have declined in recent years and their grant to the Resource Center dropped to zero this year. The state leg­is­la­ture has also been pro­vid­ing funds to the Center annu­al­ly, but the recent bud­get cri­sis has forced it to cut fund­ing by more than $200,000. Rob Remar, chair­man of the Resource Center’s board, said, If the Resource Center los­es more employ­ees, it will have to take few­er cas­es, and there will be some inmates who are unrep­re­sent­ed. The like­ly out­come is that the sys­tem will grind to a halt for those peo­ple who don’t have lawyers.” State Rep. Jay Powell, a Republican from Camilla, who heads a key House bud­get sub­com­mit­tee, agreed: My feel­ing is we can be pen­ny wise or pound fool­ish, because if we don’t pay enough on the front end, we’ll pay more in the back end. If appeals aren’t prop­er­ly han­dled, the cas­es drag on.”

(B. Rankin, Cuts threat­en death row cas­es,” Atlanta Journal-Constitution, January 1, 2012). See Costs and Representation. Read more about the death penal­ty in Georgia.

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