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interest is almost unavoidable. If prosecutors screen the cases, they can threaten to deny a <br />criminal defendant counsel, unless he pleads guilty. If the public defenders office verifies the <br />indigency of potential cases, they run the risk of allowing their personal interests to affect their <br />decisions as to accept or reject a criminal defendant. If the presiding judiciary is responsible for <br />verifying indigency, it may violate the American Bar Association Model Code of Judicial <br />Conduct. In 2008, the Nevada Supreme Court developed the applicable rule stating that a <br />"determination of indigency should be performed by an independent board, agency, or <br />committee, or by judges not directly involved in the case "; and <br />WHEREAS, economic verification of potential indigents costs money so a number of <br />jurisdictions charge an application fee for every person who is interested in receiving a public <br />defender, and if the criminal defendant cannot pay the fee in advance, the amount is added to the <br />judgment and sentence if the criminal defendant is convicted; and <br />WHEREAS, a number of states use the "partially indigent" definition to distinguish <br />those who are truly indigent from those who can contribute limitedly to the cost of their counsel. <br />This label would be appropriate when criminal defendants are deemed partially able to pay for <br />their own counsel; and <br />WHEREAS, some criminal defendants who should not have a public defender falsely <br />obtain a public defender and then request a jury trial which costs the State of Hawaii thousands <br />if not millions of dollars; and <br />WHEREAS, because the State of Hawaii has limited resources, it is essential that we <br />make certain that funding is appropriately disbursed. The technique that is currently in place to <br />evaluate the need for and assign court- appointed counsel is inefficient and outdated; furthermore, <br />it discourages both consistency and fairness. These changes will create a far more defined and <br />regulated system, and will streamline the process of determining indigency, ensuring that the <br />constitutional rights of indigent people are met equitably; now, therefore, <br />BE IT RESOLVED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE COUNTY OF HAWAII that it <br />encourages the Hawaii State Legislature to amend the Hawaii Revised Statutes, section 802 -4 <br />with Exhibit A and Exhibit B as its Justification Sheet. <br />3 <br />