Ernie Lewis, Executive Director

Ernie Lewis, Executive Director

Contact Information:

Ernie Lewis, Executive Director

National Association for Public Defense

502-545-3142

PRESS RELEASE

The National Association for Public Defense (NAPD) will hold its 2017 Workloads Institute at St. Louis University School of Law on November 17-18, 2017. Public defenders from across the nation will gather in St. Louis to address the problem of excessive public defender workloads. It is no accident Missouri was chosen for this conference.

In 2012, the Missouri Supreme Court decided Kelly v. Waters, and held that when a public defender office demonstrates it has more cases than its lawyers can handle and provide competent and effective representation, those lawyers must refuse additional appointments. Additionally, judges may not appointpublic defenders to represent additional indigent defendants.

In 2014, The American Bar Association and RubinBrown, one of the nation’s leading accounting and professional consulting firms, published The Missouri Report, which provided reliable data and analytics establishing that Missouri public defenders have far more cases than they can handle competently.

For the last several years, Michael Barrett, Missouri’s Chief Public Defender has used The Missouri Report to produce a budget to the Missouri Legislature, and the legislature has responded with substantial increases in the Missouri public defender’s appropriations. However, Governor Jay Nixon vetoed those bills. Barrett made national headlines when heappointed Governor Nixon to represent an indigent defendant in his criminal case.

Recently, Missouri was in the news again as the Missouri Supreme Court disciplined a public defender who could not represent his clients diligently and competently because of excessive workload.

Missouri is not alone. Excessive public defender caseloads are at a crisis level in many states around the nation, including New Mexico, Louisiana, Kentucky, and Tennessee. This conference will feature speakers from many of these hotspots who have had experience with resisting excessive public defender caseloads.

Members of the mediawho wish to attend plenary sessions of the conference cancontact NAPD prior to the conference. Contact information is provided in the header of this release. Requests for interviews will be accommodated.

About NAPD: The National Association of Public was established in 2013. Today, it has a membership of more than 16,000 public defense professionals from across the United States. The NAPD strives to address the systemic failure to provide the constitutional right to counsel. The organization also collaborates with diverse partners for solutions that bring meaningful access to justice for poor people.

You can learn more about NAPD at