Across the state of Florida, pub­lic defend­ers and pros­e­cu­tors are fac­ing fur­loughs due to a bud­get short­fall, poten­tial­ly leav­ing the crim­i­nal court sys­tem at a stand­still dur­ing some of the next three months. As we have hung to the cliff by our fin­ger­nails, this 15 per­cent [bud­get] cut is the boot stomp­ing our hands,” the Florida Prosecuting Attorneys Association wrote to Gov. Charlie Crist recent­ly. Public defend­ers say they will not be able to take any new cas­es, though they will still come to court on days they are not paid so their clients are not arrest­ed or stay in jail longer. We feel like it’s come to the point where I can’t ask the lawyers to do any more cas­es,” said Howard Skip” Babb, pres­i­dent of the Florida Public Defender Association. The fur­loughs will like­ly cre­ate a back­log in the courts and in the offices of pros­e­cu­tors and pub­lic defend­ers. The results could affect the entire sys­tem, from an increase in jail pop­u­la­tions to a decrease in time spent on each case due to larg­er case­loads for attor­neys and judges. 

(T. Ruger, Furloughs may clog courts,” Sarasota Herald Tribune, March 30, 2009). Florida spends about $51 mil­lion per year on the death penal­ty. It has the sec­ond largest death row in the coun­try and has had the most death row exon­er­a­tions of any state. See Costs and Representation.

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