Search About Newsletters Donate
Support independent, nonprofit journalism.

Become a member of The Marshall Project during our year-end member drive. Our journalism has tremendous power to drive change, but we can’t do it without your support.

The Mississippi Supreme Court in April 2021.
News

Some Are Jailed in Mississippi for Months Without a Lawyer. A Court Just Barred That.

The Mississippi Supreme Court moved to end the “dead zone” before indictment in a notoriously dysfunctional public defender system.

Poor defendants in Mississippi are routinely jailed for months, and sometimes even years, without being appointed an attorney due to the state’s notoriously dysfunctional public defender system. The Mississippi Supreme Court now says this practice must end.

The state’s highest court approved a mandate on Thursday that criminal defendants who can’t afford their own attorney must always have one before an indictment.

Across the state, people facing felony charges lose their appointed attorneys after their initial court appearances, where a judge rules whether they can be released from jail before trial. In many counties, defendants aren’t appointed new lawyers until they’re indicted — or formally accused — a process that can take years. Critics call this gap the “dead zone.”

This article was published in partnership with ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network and the Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal.

In the Mississippi Delta’s Coahoma County, Duane Lake spent almost two years behind bars without bond and without an attorney while waiting to be indicted on triple murder charges. After he was indicted, he spent four more years in jail before he was acquitted at trial in November 2021.

There are others like him, trapped in a system that leaves defendants who can’t afford their own lawyers with no legal advocate to ask a judge to reduce their bonds or dismiss their cases as they wait in jail to be indicted. Meanwhile, prosecutors face no deadlines to bring cases before a grand jury.

“There is no other state where a defendant can be sitting in jail without an attorney for months or years while charging decisions are made,” said David Carroll, executive director of the Sixth Amendment Center, which studies how states provide indigent criminal defense.

Several years ago, at the request of a task force appointed by the Mississippi Legislature, the Sixth Amendment Center evaluated the state’s indigent defense services. In a highly critical report, the group proposed a number of reforms, including stronger state oversight of how local governments provide public defenders.

The legislature shelved the report and the task force’s recommendations, even as criminal justice reformers identified defendants like Lake who sat in jail for years.

But in February, a three-member committee of the Mississippi Supreme Court requested public comments on a proposed change to the rules of criminal procedure. It would require that defendants who can’t afford their own attorneys be represented the entire time they’re awaiting indictment.

The Supreme Court approved the rule change Thursday. It takes effect in July.

“This landmark change in Mississippi’s public defense system marks the end of the dead zone and is a huge step toward a criminal legal system that doesn’t unfairly punish people who are unable to afford an attorney,” said Cliff Johnson, who as director of the MacArthur Justice Center’s Mississippi office has long argued for such a change.

But researchers like Pam Metzger, director of the Deason Criminal Justice Reform Center at Southern Methodist University in Texas, say that simply requiring the assignment of an attorney will do little to improve legal representation for poor defendants.

“It’s giving you a warm body and briefcase,” she said of the rule. “But it doesn’t deal with what in my view is the real problem,” which is that people spend too long in jail before they’re indicted.

Current and former public defenders have also cautioned that Mississippi’s decentralized justice system will make it hard to implement the Supreme Court’s new rule.

The amended rule prevents an appointed attorney representing an indigent client at any stage of criminal proceedings from withdrawing until another lawyer is appointed. Right now, this provision applies only after an indictment.

The new rule was proposed in May by Russ Latino, who was then executive director of the conservative think tank Empower Mississippi. His request sat for nearly 10 months until the Supreme Court’s criminal procedure committee invited feedback and set a March 15 deadline for responses.

A raft of ideologically diverse legal activists, attorneys and policy advocates urged the court to adopt the amendment.

“No just or useful purpose is served by allowing such incarceration without benefit of legal counsel,” wrote Brad Pigott, who served in the 1990s as one of Mississippi’s U.S. attorneys. “Certainly no legitimate law enforcement purpose is thereby served.”

The problem has been documented for years across the state.

After prisoners in eastern Mississippi’s Lauderdale County jail filed complaints, a federal judge ordered the county in 2016 to provide him with a list of all people held in jail without indictments and without lawyers.

“Something needs to be put in place to make sure someone doesn’t fall through the cracks in this way,” said U.S. District Judge Carlton Reeves, according to an Associated Press story.

Along the Gulf Coast, an autistic teenager was arrested in 2018 on burglary charges and spent more than 270 days in jail because his family didn’t post a $10,000 bond. The charges were ultimately dropped after a grand jury declined to indict him.

The Wayne County Sheriff’s Office, in southeast Mississippi’s Pine Belt region, reported that 24 of 31 prisoners in the jail as of the end of September had not been indicted, including 13 who had been there 90 days or longer. Only six of these 13 people had lawyers as of September, according to the report.

One person without a lawyer had been jailed for about six months awaiting indictment on a drug possession charge, according to the report.

Of those 13, only one is still in jail and hasn’t been indicted as of this week, said Kassie Coleman, the district attorney for Wayne County.

Life Inside

Essays by people in prison and others who have experience with the criminal justice system

Gregory J. Weber, a part-time public defender in Madison County, said he sees delays with many cases, particularly drug charges.

“We’ve got people languishing in jail and nothing is being done,” Weber said in an interview before the Supreme Court acted. For defendants with a private attorney, “something usually is done about it. There is a bond reduction, or they get into drug court and they plead. So we’ve definitely got a problem with people falling through the cracks.”

Even as Carroll, of the Sixth Amendment Center, called the new rule an important first step, he cautioned that “the state still has no oversight function to make sure that the court rule gets implemented,” because indigent defense is handled by local court systems.

The center has found that in counties without full-time public defender’s offices — which is most of them — the payment structure discourages lawyers from doing extensive work on behalf of indigent clients.

In most counties, attorneys are paid a flat fee, no matter how many indigent clients they are assigned. That incentivizes lawyers to spend little time on indigent clients so they can take on those who can pay, the center argued.

In addition, the new rule doesn’t spell out how defendants will be transferred between appointed counsel working for different court systems and different local government bodies. “I think it needs to be delineated much more clearly about when the handoff occurs and who is responsible for that person,” Weber said.

But better payment structures and effective administrative procedures won’t change a key factor in long jail terms: State law gives prosecutors unlimited time to indict someone after they’ve been arrested.

“We’re really focused in Mississippi on the charging time,” said Metzger, who has studied this phase of criminal proceedings in courts across the country.

She said it would be more effective to institute deadlines for indictment, mandatory bail hearings and early disclosure of evidence.

Even when lawyers are appointed early on, such as in Yazoo County, defendants still spend months or years in jail. Defense attorneys in the county have filed almost 100 motions since 2019 seeking to reduce bonds or dismiss charges. Many of those defendants had spent a year or more in jail while waiting to be indicted.

Yazoo City police arrested John Paul Thornton on Dec. 3, 2018, and charged him with two counts of commercial burglary involving a local dollar store. Over a year later, Thornton was still in jail and had not been indicted.

Belinda Stevens, an attorney who works part-time as a public defender in Yazoo County, filed a motion on Thornton’s behalf in January 2020, seeking to dismiss the case. She argued that his constitutional right to a speedy trial had been denied. Stevens didn’t respond to requests for comment.

A month later, prosecutors dropped the case. A judge signed an order, and Thornton walked free the next day after 436 days in jail.