The Illinois Cook County Public Defender’s Office has run out of funds to cov­er the expens­es need­ed to pro­vide ade­quate death penal­ty rep­re­sen­ta­tion. Cook County Public Defender Abishi Cunningham Jr. said the short­fall orig­i­nat­ed from for­mer-Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s veto of a bill that would have increased the pub­lic defend­er bud­get from $1.75 mil­lion to $2.25 mil­lion. Without that $500,000, Cunningham said they have run out of mon­ey to pay for expert wit­ness­es, foren­sic test­ing, and the oth­er expens­es that dri­ve the cost of a death penal­ty case towards $2 mil­lion. I urge those inter­est­ed in jus­tice to rec­og­nize that if the pol­i­cy of this state is to have a death penal­ty, that pol­i­cy must be accom­pa­nied by an appro­pri­ate finan­cial com­mit­ment to the defense of the accused,” Cunningham added. Now the office is forced to file dozens of motions ask­ing judges to bar the state from seek­ing the death penal­ty or allow pub­lic defend­ers to with­draw from cap­i­tal cas­es since they do not have the funds to pro­vide ade­quate defense. If pub­lic defend­ers with­draw from death penal­ty cas­es, judges are com­pelled to pay pri­vate attor­neys to serve as defense coun­sel from a dif­fer­ent $2 mil­lion por­tion of the state litigation fund. 

(J. Byrne, Public Defender: No mon­ey, no death penal­ty,” Chicago Tribune, June 3, 2009). See Costs and Representation.

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