Justice Raoul Cantero (pic­tured), recent­ly appoint­ed to Florida’s Supreme Court by Gov. Jeb Bush, crit­i­cized the qual­i­ty of pri­vate lawyers han­dling the appeals of death row inmates, not­ing that some attor­neys have botched cas­es, mud­dled and omit­ted key argu­ments, and gen­er­al­ly per­formed the worst lawyer­ing I’ve seen.” He also seri­ous­ly ques­tioned Governor Bush’s effort to replace the state-run region­al offices that han­dle death penal­ty appeals with pri­vate attor­neys as a cost-cut­ting mea­sure.

To date, law­mak­ers have closed one of Florida’s three Capital Collateral Regional Counsel offices. The state has reg­is­tered 150 pri­vate lawyers to take over the cas­es for­mer­ly han­dled by that office, as well as to han­dle any over­flow cas­es from the remain­ing two region­al cen­ters. Cantero stat­ed that the min­i­mal qual­i­fi­ca­tion stan­dards for attor­neys wish­ing to be list­ed on this reg­istry have result­ed in some of the worst briefs that I have read.” He empha­sized that an attor­ney famil­iar with a few bur­glary tri­als does not have the skills to replace some­one devot­ed to the high­ly spe­cial­ized death row appeals process, which takes years to mas­ter. Cantero not­ed, I’m not sure we have enough qual­i­ty lawyers out there that would be able to pick up the slack.… Some of the reg­istry coun­sel have lit­tle or no expe­ri­ence in death penal­ty cas­es. They have not raised the right issues. Sometimes they raise too many issues and still haven’t raised the right ones. In argu­ments, they’re unable to respond to ques­tions, or they don’t know what the record shows. They don’t have a real good under­stand­ing of death penal­ty cas­es.… For us to wade through the morass of base­less claims takes a lot of work for the jus­tices and even­tu­al­ly leads to a lot of inef­fi­cien­cies in the process. That takes a lot of time that we can be spend­ing on civ­il cas­es, on oth­er crim­i­nal cas­es, on impor­tant issues.”

Governor Bush is seek­ing to close all three of the state’s Capital Collateral Regional Counsel offices and to com­plete­ly pri­va­tize appel­late rep­re­sen­ta­tion. Representative Joe Negron, a top-ranked Republican who sup­port­ed clos­ing the first region­al cen­ter, stat­ed that Cantero’s remarks would car­ry a lot of weight” as law­mak­ers decide this spring whether to pro­ceed with plans to close the remain­ing two offices or elim­i­nate the pri­va­ti­za­tion plan.

(Miami Herald, January 28, 2005). See Representation.

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