I would like to point out which rights assigned counsel most often waive, and most often without telling their clients that such rights even exist. That I know because people often came to my office with a criminal record created through "plea deals" negotiated by assigned counsel and learnt for the first time that they had certain rights that were waived without their knowledge - and as a result they have a criminal record when the case could have been dismissed, and that the criminal record will affect their present legal position in a new case.
Here are rights that assigned counsel most often waive in felony cases (incarceration of over 1 year in state prison):
No
|
Name
|
How
and when it is asserted
|
Why
it is important
|
What
happens if the right is not timely asserted
|
1
|
Right to a felony hearing
|
If the defendant is in jail, the demand is to be
made immediately. By law, a felony
hearing must be provided within 144 hours if the felony case is first brought
in the criminal justice court
|
The purpose of the hearing for the defense is dual:
1) Obtain
a release of the Defendant from jail without bail (for free) if People refuse
to provide a felony hearing (which happens often, because People’s evidence
is not yet ready)
2) To
see what evidence People have before they coached their witnesses how to lie
|
Usually, assigned counsel waives the felony
hearing. As a result, their indigent
(poor!) clients remain in jail because they cannot pay the usually high bail
set for felonies, and prosecution is allowed by assigned counsel unlimited
time to prepare their case.
|
2
|
Speedy trial time limits
|
Asserted by not agreeing to adjournments
|
New York law requires that felonies be prosecuted by indictments of
the Grand Jury, and such indictments must be brought within 6 calendar months
from the filing date of criminal charges in the lower court. Prosecution often misses the date, and then
the felony case MUST be dismissed for failure to comply with the speedy trial
statute.
|
Assigned counsel usually waive speedy trial time limits by agreeing to
adjournments of proceedings in court.
Because of such waivers, People get extra time to prepare their case
and dismissal on speedy trial grounds is not possible.
|
3
|
Right to indictment by the grand jury
|
Asserted by refusing a waiver of such grand jury
proceedings when offered by the prosecution
|
Grand Jury proceedings provide an extra layer of
protection since
1) the
grand jury may refuse to indict or may indict for a lower-level crime;
2) legal
sufficiency of the indictment may be challenged on many grounds, which may
provide additional grounds for a dismissal of the case at a pre-trial stage
|
Assigned counsel routinely coerce their clients into
waiving grand jury proceedings, often for nothing in return, and without
explaining to their clients what rights exactly they are waiving and why such
rights are important. After the waiver “by consent”, prosecution proceeds by
the so-called “Superior Court Information” (SCI), usually on the same count
as initial felony complaint was, and without any possibility for the criminal
defendant to attack legal insufficiency of the SCI.
|
4
|
Right to be notified of the grand jury proceedings
|
The right is automatically asserted when a felony complaint is
brought in the lower justice court, and the defendant appears there, with or
without counsel. “Appearance” is
arraignment when the criminal defendant is first brought before the court.
If there is no such notification, a motion must be made within 5 days
only (!) from the arraignment on the indictment in the County Court,
otherwise the right to challenge failure to notify defendant of the pending
grand jury proceedings is waived
|
If the felony proceedings started in the lower court where the
defendant appeared, the prosecution must notify the defendant or his/her
counsel of the pending grand jury proceedings, so that the defendant can have
an opportunity to testify at the grand jury proceedings and call his/her own
witnesses there
Failure to notify the defendant or his counsel of the pending grand
jury proceeding, if timely brought up on a motion, leads to dismissal of the
indictment (if the judge knows and properly applies the law). Even if the judge denies the motion, making
such a motion provides an extra layer of protection on appeal.
Criminal appeals are notoriously difficult to win, and the most
likely ways of winning a criminal appeal are on procedural grounds – when certain
procedures were not observed. Failure
by prosecution to notify the defendant or his counsel of the grand jury
proceedings is a reversible error on appeal, and waiving such a right
(especially without telling the criminal defendant that such a right even
exist) is client neglect and attorney misconduct – even though it is never
prosecuted as such.
|
Prosecution in Delaware County, for example, fails to notify criminal
defendants and their attorneys of the pending grand jury proceedings and
asserts that as a matter of right even if such failures are brought up on
motion. Otsego County is better, I’ve
never had a felony case there where I was not notified.
Assigned counsel routinely waive this right, as it requires immediate
involvement into motion practice, while assigned counsel usually do not do
motions in criminal cases and usually do not like to do any drafting under
time pressure.
|
5
|
Judicial, police, prosecutorial misconduct
|
Must be affirmatively asserted in motions
|
Can be grounds for dismissal of the case (or
reversal on appeal), waived if not properly asserted on record
|
Such issues are an unspoken “taboo” with assigned
counsel, they are never asserted, and thus the criminal defendant loses his
or her right to claim dismissal of the case in the interests of justice,
often without knowing that such a right existed
|
For those of my readers who would like to see for themselves how the first of these rights are waived, you can attend felony arraignments in any local criminal justice court in New York - criminal arraignments are public hearings.
You will see criminal defendants, shackled and handcuffed, come one by one before the court with their assigned counsel, and go away back to jail in shackles and handcuffs, with their counsel not even trying to request a felony hearing.
That is, I understand, one of the "cost-effective" solutions for the indigent criminal defense that the Indigent Legal Defense Fund is funded to work on - when it does not give away to the State of New York the money it receives from fines squeezed out of the poor convicted because of "cost effective"/a.k.a. pathetic legal defense.
And the vicious circle continues.
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