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Defendants released in Massachusetts as pay dispute with public defenders remains unresolved

BOSTON, MA — JULY 07 - Peter O'Karma speaks to the judge as he explains he can't take on DaiShaun Lawrence, left, as his client because he has too many other ongoing cases inside the BMC central courtroom in Boston, on Monday, July 7, 2025. (Jessica Rinaldi/The Boston Globe via AP)
Original Publication Date July 08, 2025 - 1:01 PM

BOSTON (AP) — Defendants are being released in Massachusetts in the wake of a prolonged dispute over pay for the state’s public defenders, and one of those set free was charged with a serious crime.

The first four defendants without legal representation were freed Monday by a Boston judge following a ruling last week by the state’s highest court to implement a process that requires releasing defendants without attorneys after a week. Among them was a man accused of strangling his pregnant girlfriend.

Under the so-called Lavallee protocol, more are expected to be released in the coming days unless lawmakers address demands from public defenders for a moderate pay increase. The state agency representing public defenders had proposed a pay increase from $65 an hour to $73 an hour over the next two fiscal years for lawyers in district court, an increase from $85 an hour to $105 an hour for lawyers in Superior Court and $120 an hour to $150 an hour for lawyers handling murder cases.

Budget doesn't include a pay raise

But the 2026 fiscal year budget of $60.9 billion signed Friday by Democratic Gov. Maura Healey didn't include any increase. Public defenders mostly in district courts have refused to take on new cases since May, arguing they are New England's lowest-paid public defenders.

“While the court’s decision last week to implement the Lavalle protocols is welcome news and a critical step in making sure that people are not held in custody without lawyers, it is far from a solution to the crisis the courts are in,” said Shira Diner, a lecturer at the Boston University School of Law and the immediate past president of the Massachusetts Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.

“Every day that our courts are without bar advocates is another day the criminal legal system isn't running the way that it’s supposed to,” she said. “Without appropriately compensated lawyers in court, the system cannot function."

No signs of progress in settling the dispute

Democratic legislative leaders would need to consider a supplemental budget to accommodate a pay raise, but there were no signs of one in the works.

“The right to legal representation is a crucial element of the Constitutional guarantee to a fair trial," a House spokesman said in an email statement. “At the same time, the House has a responsibility to Massachusetts taxpayers to ensure that we budget in a fiscally responsible manner, especially during this period of significant economic uncertainty.”

Republicans were quick to pounce and suggest Healey, who's up for reelection next year, was to blame.

“This situation is spiraling into a full-blown constitutional crisis and Governor Healey is nowhere to be found," said Paul Craney, executive director of the Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance, which promotes fiscal responsibility.

A Healey spokesperson, Karissa Hand, said bar advocates deserve a “fair wage” but expressed concern about the work stoppage.

“Governor Healey is concerned about the negative public safety impacts of this work stoppage,” she said. "She urges all those impacted to work together to reach a resolution and ensure that all defendants receive the representation to which they are entitled.”

State Sen. Michael Rodrigues, chair of the Senate Committee on Ways and Means, said he was open to talks but urged public defenders to get back to work.

“We are ready and willing to work with them, but a pre-emptive work stoppage serves only to harm victims, defendants, and the overall justice system,” Rodriques said in a statement.

A top court takes up the issue

The Committee for Public Counsel Services, or CPCS, which oversees public defenders, petitioned the Supreme Judicial Court to allow the Lavalle protocol to take effect because of the work stoppage.

Along with releasing defendants after seven days, the protocol requires that charges be dropped for a defendant lacking legal representation after 45 days. The judge ruled to enact the protocol Thursday.

“Despite good faith efforts by CPCS and the local bar advocate organization(s), there is an ongoing systemic violation of indigent criminal defendants’ constitutional rights to effective assistance of counsel due to CPCS’s incapacity to provide such assistance," Associate Justice Dalila Argaez Wendlandt said in her order.

As of June 29, the judge noted, there were 1,144 defendants in the district courts of Middlesex and Suffolk counties without attorneys. More than 60 were in custody.

The pay of public defenders is a national issue

Massachusetts is just the latest state struggling to adequately fund its public defender system.

In Wisconsin, a two-year state budget signed into law last week by Democratic Gov. Tony Evers would increase the pay of public defenders and district attorneys in each of the next two years. That comes after the Legislature in 2023 also increased the pay to address rising caseloads, high turnover and low salaries.

Public defenders in Minnesota averted a walkout in 2022 that threatened to bring the court system to a standstill. A year later, the legislature came up with more funding for the state Board of Public Defense so it could meet what the American Bar Association recommends for manageable caseload standards.

Oregon, meanwhile, has struggled for years with a critical shortage of court-provided attorneys for low-income defendants. As of Tuesday, nearly 3,500 defendants did not have a public defender, a dashboard from the Oregon Judicial Department showed. Of those, about 143 people were in custody, some for longer than seven days. Amid the state’s public defense crisis, lawmakers last month approved over $2 million for defense attorneys to take more caseloads in the counties most impacted by the shortage and over $3 million for Oregon law schools to train and supervise law students to take on misdemeanor cases.

“Across the nation, we’re seeing a concerning pattern: public defenders and appointed counsel, who are the bedrock of a just criminal legal system, are being financially squeezed," Lisa Wayne, executive director for the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, said in a statement. “When their compensation stagnates, it’s not just an insult to their dedication; it’s a direct assault on the constitutional right to counsel.”

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Associated Press reporters Claire Rush in Portland, Oregon, Steve Karnowski in Minneapolis and Scott Bauer in Madison, Wisconsin, contributed to this report.

News from © The Associated Press, 2025
 The Associated Press

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