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2023 Annual Report

  A year of client-centered advocacy from the Department of Public Defense.
The King County Department of Public Defense represents indigent adults and children facing a loss of liberty. Our department is an independent voice that promotes justice and equity for our clients and advocates for their objectives, interests, and dignity.

Preserving Clients' Dignity in a Collapsing System

Anita Khandelwal, Director of Public Defense

Anita Khandelwal reflects on this past year

As promises made in the summer of 2020 to dismantle racially disproportionate systems of oppression continue to fade in the minds of policymakers, our work defending those facing a loss of liberty has become even more crucial.

Although those systems are seemingly teetering, they persist. Our clients have faced the impacts of staffing shortages, aggravated by long outdated caseload standards, and increasingly dire conditions for people incarcerated in King County jails.

But even working in these collapsing systems, and with heavy workloads, our staff stood by our clients in court and spoke up for them in the halls of power. Our lawyers raised the alarm about continually deteriorating conditions in King County’s jails and battled to keep our clients out of inhumane conditions of incarceration.  We won not guilty verdicts in numerous homicide trials, we ensured that clients facing misdemeanors did not find themselves caught in the revolving door of misdemeanor probation and prosecution, and we helped families stay together.

In spite of the growing backlash against systemic reform, DPD also won our fair share of victories for our clients in 2023. The Keeping Families Together Act that we worked to pass in partnership with a coalition of community-based advocates finally went into effect. The law now requires the State to prove that a child is danger of imminent harm before taking that child away from their parents, providing a much more protective standard for our family defense practitioners to oppose the removal of our clients’ children.  

We managed to continue advancing reforms to mitigate the harm of the criminal legal system, helping to pass legislation to reduce sentences for people entangled in the system during childhood and allowing more than 2,500 people to have their names removed from an ineffective sex offender registry. DPD staff pushed back in the state legislature and Seattle City Hall against policymakers determined to repeat failed strategies of criminalization to combat the opioid crisis, making them confront the harm that a criminal conviction inflicts on someone in need of housing, treatment, and compassion.

Finally, we have helped jumpstart a long overdue conversation about caseloads. We have used a new national study of the work required to zealously represent indigent clients to help policy makers and the public understand that public defenders need far lighter caseloads in order to meet their ethical responsibility to their clients, and to avoid pitting one client’s needs against another’s. In part due to the advocacy from DPD leadership and staff, Washington became the first state in the nation to adopt new criminal caseload standards for public defenders. 

Our Department’s many achievements would be impossible without the tireless dedication of DPD’s lawyers, investigators, mitigation specialists, paralegals, and legal assistants. They unearthed exonerating evidence, provided context for the trauma that shapes our clients’ lives, helped keep clients without stable housing informed about their cases, and preserved clients’ dignity by making sure they had clothes while standing in court and when they walked free from incarceration.

Their determination inspires me each and every day and drives my commitment to the work of public defense. Within this report, you’ll find that tenacity runs throughout our department and our resolve to keep up the fight against systems of oppression harming our clients remains undaunted.

Opposing a Return to the War on Drugs

Anita Khandelwal testifying in opposition to Seattle's ordinance criminalizing public drug use with DPD staff holding signs in audience

Anita Khandelwal testifying in opposition to Seattle's ordinance criminalizing public drug use.

Early in 2023, the ACLU of Washington sued King County over deteriorating jail conditions that led to a record spike in deaths of people incarcerated there. A few months later, King County contracted for additional jail capacity with a regional jail where four more people would die while incarcerated before the end of August. Against that backdrop, the Seattle City Council attempted to re-criminalize drug possession and public drug use based on the false narrative that jail would be a “tool” to get people treatment.

In June, DPD joined a coalition of community groups, medical providers, and service providers to oppose the City Council’s proposed return to a carceral strategy against King County’s worsening opioid crisis.

Anita Khandelwal testified in opposition to the proposal at the hearing, pointing out that decades of research and experience have shown the war on drugs to be a policy failure and inflicted immeasurable harm on communities of color disproportionately prosecuted for drug offenses. Lawyers, mitigation specialists, and investigators from DPD also lined up for hours of public comment. They stressed the practical failures of the jail to support people with addiction while incarcerated and upon release, and emphasized the collateral harm of misdemeanor convictions for clients’ prospects for employment and stable housing. One DPD attorney even appealed directly to the Councilmember widely recognized as the swing vote on the ordinance, who he had practiced against when they both worked in Seattle Municipal Court.

The opposition prevailed. The measure was defeated in a 5-4 vote, and although the Council eventually passed a similar proposal months later, 2023 ended without a single prosecution for drug possession filed in Seattle Municipal Court.

A Year of Outstanding Advocacy under Challenging Circumstances

Clare Riva, a felony attorney at DPD.

Notwithstanding pressure from prosecutors and judges to clear the backlog of cases remaining from the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, DPD’s defense teams worked through an extraordinary volume of trials and negotiated resolutions to felony and misdemeanor charges on behalf of thousands of clients. The department’s lawyers, mitigation specialists, investigators, and administrative staff demonstrated exceptional tenacity and ingenuity to achieve clients’ stated interests and preserve their humanity. 

Through their determination, they won not guilty verdicts at trial, convinced prosecutors to dismiss or reduce charges, secured clients’ release from inhumane conditions while incarcerated pretrial, and helped people avoid exiting jail only to end up on the street without support. DPD’s staff also continued fighting for resentencing hearings for people sentenced to decades in prison for offenses committed in their youth.

DPD worked in partnership with community, the department’s line staff, and other institutional system participants to propose court rules, advance legislation, and advocate for policies that to mitigate some impacts of the classist and racially disproportionate systems that oppress DPD’s clients.

Conditions Worsen for People Incarcerated in King County

Despite a surge of in-custody deaths in 2022, King County prosecutors continue to advocate for, and judges continued to impose, bail amounts that result in the incarceration of our community’s most vulnerable members. Rather than heed the calls of community advocates to close the King County Jail, the County attempted to adapt to the continued shortage of corrections officers by shuffling clients between its facilities in Seattle and Kent while contracting for additional capacity to cage people at the South Correctional Entity (SCORE) jail. Both strategies failed to address the excessive time spent by our clients in their cells. Disruptions in medications to support the physical and mental health of those jailed continued, and re-entry resources grew increasingly scarce

The shuttling between facilities increased hardships for clients and DPD staff as some clients failed to be transported to court, requiring rescheduled hearings and releases, unnecessarily prolonging clients’ time in jail. Following media reports about four people who died while in custody at SCORE, thankfully none of whom were DPD clients, the County terminated its contract after three months.

Heavy Caseloads Compound the Crisis

Against this backdrop, DPD’s staff worked tirelessly to minimize the time their clients spent incarcerated. Their efforts were stymied, not just by jail operational challenges, but also by King County’s Prosecuting Attorney’ Office, which continued to flood the County’s criminal legal system with new cases (primarily involving property crime) while also pressing to resolve older cases.

Attorneys faced a persistent lack of responsiveness from prosecutors when attempting to negotiate resolutions to serious charges, according to felony attorney Clare Riva. In one particularly exasperating case from last year, she recounted conveying her client’s willingness to plea to a lesser misdemeanor during an early stage of the case but Riva never got a response from the prosecutor assigned to the case. After committing substantial time and resources to preparing for trial, the State made the very same offer to her client on the eve of opening statements.

Felony attorney Noah Lerner echoed the frustration with the KCPAO’s willingness to press forward with weak charges on which jury after jury refused to convict his clients. In the final two months of 2023, Lerner said he secured three not guilty verdicts in a row – but had to begin each trial while still waiting for a verdict in the trial he’d just finished. That pace isn’t sustainable, in his opinion: “No one can do that forever without taking some time to decompress and time off from that level of intensity.”  While presiding judges in both Seattle and Kent have acknowledged that driving defense attorneys at this pace destabilizes the criminal defense bar, the pressure to push cases forward remained relentless.

While the KCPAO pointed to declining plea rates as the source of overload in the system, Clare Riva insightfully recognized that prosecutor’s possessed a far more efficient mechanism of reducing the backlog by "actually looking at their cases and talking to their witnesses and not filing things.”

Client-Centered Representation Gets Results

Dre Glaspy with his defense team (from left to right): Anna Samuel, Emily Willard, Alix Willard, Dre Glaspy, Michael Schueler, and Molly Gilbert

Dre Glaspy and his defense team were thrilled by the outcome of his 14-week trial. From left, Anna Samuel, Emily Willard, Alix Willard, Dre Glaspy, Michael Schueler, and Molly Gilbert.

One notable trial from 2023 exemplifies the importance of DPD’s client-centered approach to public defense. D’Andre Glaspy, who goes by Dre, spent 5 years in jail simply because he couldn’t afford the $1 million bail imposed in his case. Prosecutors alleged he was responsible for the death of his girlfriend’s two-year-old son Moses, when in actuality he had done everything in his power to save the boy’s life. 

Moses died after Mr. Glaspy, who was like a father to the boy, followed devastatingly incorrect instructions from a 911 operator on how to perform CPR.

Mr. Glaspy appreciated not just the work but the humanity that his defense team, Michael Schueler, Anna Samuel, Gary Shaleen, Alix Willard, Emily Willard, and Molly Gilbert, brought to his case: “They put their everything into it; they made my truth come to light. That means the world to me.”

Providing this kind of quality representation to every client is DPD’s goal. But heavy caseloads driven by unrelenting filings from prosecutors complicate that effort and lead to long stays in jail prior to trial. As the resulting strain caused more and more attorneys qualified to represent clients facing Class A charges like Dre’s to leave DPD in 2023, the transfer of those cases to an even smaller group of lawyers delayed those clients’ day in court even further.

Overcoming that “rapport deficit,” as felony attorney Kyle Ehlers described the challenge public defenders face in bonding with clients rightly suspicious of anyone involved in the criminal legal system, takes an incredible amount of work and attention to detail. “If you miss a couple calls or a couple text messages, you can destroy a relationship very easily. And that's something you can't necessarily get back.”

Mitigating the Harm of Racist Systems of Oppression

Katie Hurley (far right) among coalition partners with Gov. Jay Inslee as he signs DPD-backed legislation

Katie Hurley (far right) joins coalition partners as Gov. Inslee signs law restricting youth sex offender registration.

To complement and support the outstanding representation DPD’s line attorneys provide to their clients, the department also worked at the city, county, and state level to reduce the harm of the systems that oppress poor people in King County. 

In 2023, DPD won a significant victory for the department’s current and future clients in passing a state law that prevents someone’s juvenile adjudications from leading to a longer sentence when convicted for wholly separate conduct as an adult. An “offender score” – based on prior convictions or adjudications – determines a person’s standard sentence range. 

The new law ended the automatic use of the vast majority juvenile court adjudications in calculating that score – but prior to passage, lawmakers stripped a provision from the proposal that would have made the reform retroactive and grant resentencing hearings for people serving unnecessarily long prison sentences as a result of the now-outlawed practice.

“This bill will make a tangible difference for thousands of our clients,” Anita Khandelwal said. “Long sentences are a driver of mass incarceration, and anything we can do to shorten those sentences and make a harshly punitive system a little less punitive is movement in the right direction. But we still have a long way to go. We’re disappointed that people now in prison due to sentences made longer by this harmful policy will not be resentenced, and we’ll continue to work with our partners to ensure people receive the relief they deserve.”

DPD also finally managed to get another legislative proposal over the finish line in 2023, passing a law to limit the list of circumstances that require a young person to register as a sex offender and completely ends registration for almost all youth under the age of 16. The reform was badly needed, as youth required to register are four times more likely to report having actively attempted suicide compared to unregistered youth; five times more likely to be approached by an adult for sex, and twice as likely to be the victim of sexual assault by an adult.

“The passage of this bill will help thousands of young people who will no longer suffer from the harm and trauma of registration,” Katie Hurley said. And in fact, it did: by the year’s end, more than 2,500 young people had their names removed from Washington’s sex offender registry because of the new law.

In addition to working to pass legislation, DPD proposed amendments to several court rules that would effectively render the private bail bonds industry unnecessary, expedite the availability of redacted discovery for DPD’s clients without adverse consequences for ongoing plea negotiations, and broaden judicial authority to dismiss a case in the interests of justice. As 2023 came to a close, Washington’s Supreme Court ordered all of those proposals published for public consideration and potential adoption in 2024.

Fighting the Family Policing System to Keep Families Together

Anya Perret, a family defense attorney at DPD.

Defense teams in all four of DPD’s divisions provide a vigorous defense to parents and children over the age of 12 ensnared in the family policing system. These public defenders work to oppose the removal of their clients’ children, reunite families torn apart by government intervention disguised as assistance, and fiercely litigate to prevent or reduce the harm inflicted when the state disproportionately scrutinizes the parenting of low-income people of color and Indigenous people.

In 2023, hard fought legislative victories radically transformed DPD’s family defense practice as the Keeping Families Together Act became effective on July 1st. The law, passed in 2021, borrowed key portions of the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) applying “the imminent physical harm” standard for removal to all dependency cases in Washington state. In addition, for the first time, judges weighing must consider the harm that the child will experience if taken away from their parents before allowing the state to remove a child from their parent’s care. Judges must also place a child with their family or loved ones unless those people are shown to present an imminent physical harm or to hinder reunification with the parent. Finally, judges must now scrutinize the states’ proposed foster placement and can impose restrictions necessary to ensure the wellbeing of the child.

Across DPD’s four divisions, the new law made a difference in hundreds of cases where the department’s attorneys argued to preserve their clients’ families. “Once you've been in this field, you see how important it is for kids to have the chance to stay with their families, if at all possible,” said Anya Perret, a family defense attorney.

A safety net made of barbed wire

For Perret, family defense is an incredibly challenging but rewarding practice. Despite the public’s misconception that the Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF) provides help to parents and kids in need, the five years she spent as a social worker at DCYF taught her that the surveillance and government intrusion that accompanies any assistance people get often ends up being more traumatizing than whatever instigated DCYF involvement in the first place. As a result, Perret said the system that many think of as a safety net ends up trapping people who would be better served with community-based solutions to their challenges.

“I love kids, and I think kids should be with their families,” Perret said. “I also like serious litigation, legal research, and courtroom advocacy. This job melds those two things.”

DPD’s family defense teams represent clients at 72-hour emergency shelter care hearings, dependency trials, and termination trials where the state seeks to permanently end a parent’s legal claim to care for their child, and many other stages of the dependency system. Unlike criminal defense, where cases are typically limited to a specific allegation of unlawful conduct, clients in family defense cases essentially have their entire lives put on trial.

Grainne Griffiths, another of DPD’s family defense attorneys, was in trial with her clients from September through the end of the year. In her first career termination trial, she successfully prevented her client from losing their parental rights – a huge victory. But even when the state prevails, as it did in another of her termination trials last fall, Griffiths said she could tell how much it mattered to her client to have had that fight. “She was sobbing, she valued the fight and needed to have that trial.”

Just like the other systems in which DPD practices, the family policing system disproportionately burdens people of color and Indigenous people with state surveillance and government intrusion. Despite the rhetoric of the system’s stated goals of protecting the safety of children and families, often the only reason DPD’s family defense clients are ensnared in the system is their poverty.

Perret recalled one such case from 2023 involving parents of a medically fragile baby. “These parents were doing the best they could. If they were upper middle class on Mercer Island, there would not be a CPS case open, but because they are very recent immigrants, there’s an allegation they are medically neglecting their kid.” In situations like these, family defense lawyers like Perret work quickly to get their clients out of the family policing system though intensive litigation.

For those clients who do have challenges that need to be addressed before they can reunify their families, Griffiths stressed that delivering that assistance through the dependency system only serves to add to the difficulty her clients face. While she values the relationships she’s formed with clients as they work together to demonstrate to a judge that they’re ready to have their child return home, Griffiths argued that her clients would be better served by programs that provided community-based treatment and cash assistance without the strain on their schedules and familial relationships attached to intervention through the family policing system.

"A drug test is not a parenting test"

As judges began to apply the new removal standard from the Keeping Families Together Act, one element garnered significant public scrutiny against the backdrop of the worsening opioid crisis in Washington state. Because the law requires DCYF to demonstrate that a parent’s substance use presents some specific threat of harm to a child before inflicting the trauma of family separation, more of DPD’s family defense clients have been able to keep their kids in their homes while they work to manage their substance use – an outcome vastly better than removal for both parents and children.

As Tara Urs, DPD’s special counsel for civil policy and practice, wrote in a memo to state legislators about the Keeping Families Together Act, “people who use substances love their children.” In fact, the trauma inherent in having a child removed from a client’s home can further destabilize them and jeopardize their recovery, which can undermine their ability to provide a safe home for their kids, harming both the child and their parent.

In her memo, she cited research collected by the Children’s Rights Litigation Committee of the American Bar Association Section of Litigation which showed that children who were removed from their homes were two to three times more likely to enter the criminal legal system and twice as likely to have learning disabilities and developmental delays than children who were allowed to remain with their parents – even when those parents were accused of maltreatment.

Those findings reflect the daily experience of DPD’s family defense attorneys like Perret, who noted that “every family has someone who’s struggling with a mental health issue, or intellectual disability, or substance use disorder.” In her experience, whether a client is targeted by the system comes down to their lack of resources. “If they or their extended family had a lot of money, they would not be involved in the child welfare system.”

A "tough-on-crime" approach to misdemeanor prosecutions brings chaos to Seattle Municipal Court

Katie Melnick, an attorney at DPD, began her career in public defense in SMC in 2023.

In contrast to the extraordinary caseloads DPD’s felony attorneys carried in 2023, this year marked the beginning of a new contract with the City of Seattle that brought caseloads for the department’s new lawyers practicing in Seattle Municipal Court (SMC) much closer to the ABA’s new recommendations for misdemeanor defense. The new contract also provided more support staff for those lawyers, with three additional mitigation specialists, four additional paralegals, and two more legal assistants dedicated to DPD’s work representing clients in SMC.

The increased support and ability to dedicate more time to each client couldn’t have come at a better time. Following the decision in 2022 to ban clients on its “high utilizer” list from Community Court in 2022, the Seattle City Attorney’s Office (SCAO) unilaterally walked away from a program that mitigated the harm of the criminal legal system on clients accused of nonviolent misdemeanors this year.

In a statement following the SCAO’s decision, Anita Khandelwal criticized the choice to “push people deeper into a criminal legal carceral system that is expensive, deadly, and deeply racially disproportionate.”

Without Community Court, most cases assigned to our teams practicing in SMC had to be resolved through traditional prosecution. That meant countless hours spent drafting and reviewing discovery, negotiating with prosecutors, and investigating allegations of minor property offenses like theft and criminal trespass – time and public resources that could have been better spent on finding housing for clients living on the street and community-based treatment for those struggling with substance use or mental health issues.

Despite the additional time required for cases in mainstream court, DPD’s lawyers have one advantage most public defenders in misdemeanor practices in other jurisdictions lack: most of their clients walk free while fighting their cases. According to Katie Melnick, an SMC attorney, the King County Jail’s restrictions on booking clients accused of misdemeanor offenses make an extraordinary difference in her clients’ lives.

“My out-of-custody clients can focus on fighting their cases and attacking the evidence,” Melnick said. “Then, if we plead, it’s because pleading is the best option for their goals, not just the best option to get them out of jail.”

SMC attorney Marième Diop agreed with the impact of incarceration on her clients’ objectives. “Because they have their freedom, and they’re still working their jobs and are still with their family, they’re more willing to take a case to trial,” she said. “But the ones who had to be in custody until trial, none of them wanted to take their cases to trial.”

DPD's Multi-disciplinary Approach to Client Representation

Roopali Dhingra, a mitigation specialist at DPD, has worked in three of the department's four divisions over her 17 years in public defense.

Each division employs mitigation specialists who use their training in social work to develop relationships with clients and ensure prosecutors and judges consider the full context of a client’s life when making decisions about their case.

“Most of the clients that I talked to have had extensive histories of trauma,” said Lauren Cudaback, a mitigation specialist who came to DPD after several years working in crisis care for people with mental health issues. Through motivational interviewing and gathering records from a client’s past treatment providers, mitigation specialists like Lauren prepare social histories and mitigation reports that a client’s attorney then uses to advocate for a reduction in charges, a lower sentence, or an alternative to incarceration. Kelly Trujillo, another of DPD’s mitigation specialists, reported one prosecutor quoting her report during a sentencing hearing when explaining his agreement with the defense’s recommendation for a reduced sentence.

Over the course of 17 years working as a mitigation specialist, Roopali Dhingra says the attitude of prosecutors and judges to the work of people in her role has shifted dramatically. “When I started, abstinence was the thing,” she said. “Over the years, we have really gotten judges to understand the importance of harm reduction, and that relapse is part of recovery.”

“This is not a therapeutic environment.”

Although their work can sometimes help clients understand how the trauma they’ve endured has led to their involvement in the criminal legal system, mitigation specialists are quick to point out that they are not providing therapy to clients. The best they can offer a client who wants treatment is assistance in connecting with a community-based provider, but the stigma of a criminal charge or a client’s incarcerated status often frustrates those efforts.

“They don't get any therapeutic services in jail,” said Cudaback. “At the bare minimum, they can reach out to a psychiatrist to start medications, but they're not given tools, and they're not regularly meeting with the psychiatrists.”

Contrary to rhetoric from policymakers advocating for jail as a ‘tool’ to get people treatment for addiction, Cudaback says clients face a waitlist of “months and months” in jail before getting access to in-patient treatment for substance use disorder. “The path to treatment does not have to go through jail,” Cudaback pointed out. “There are resources in the community where you can get outpatient mental health and outpatient substance use treatment. And in fact, I would say it's easier to get those things when someone is not in jail.”

Trujillo echoed the importance of finding ways to get young clients the support they need outside the jail, fostering relationships that will hopefully outlast their entanglement in the youth legal system.

She remembers one case involving a young client where her work to document his lack of support prior to his arrest helped convince a judge to reduce his bail to an amount his family could afford. Upon release, Trujillo connected him with a mentor and found him housing that enabled him to live independently. Now, she says, “he’s gone above and beyond” in seeking a GED and thriving as a part of the supportive community his mentor helped him build for himself.

Overcoming the scarcity of community-based supports

The continued lack of investment in housing, treatment facilities, and other services needed by the clients can stymie mitigation specialists’ best efforts at achieving a client’s goals or complying with a judge’s order.

Unhoused clients offered the possibility of electronic home detention as an alternative to continued incarceration, for example, need to provide a permanent address to take advantage of the opportunity. But most shelters DPD’s mitigation specialists can connect their clients to only allow them to stay there overnight, meaning they would be in violation of their terms of release when they are forced to leave each morning. “There’s no pathway to get someone into long term housing from jail,” Cudaback said.

The unique circumstances of the only client she has found a place to live demonstrates the counterproductive nature of incarceration. Cudaback recounted finding a placement in an adult family home for an elderly black man with Alzheimer’s who was arrested while living in supportive housing. After years of experiencing chronic homelessness, his arrest and consequent stay in jail caused him to lose that housing. In turn, the judge overseeing his case would not authorize his release without an assurance that he had a permanent place to live, and so he languished in jail, unaware of why he was incarcerated, as Cudaback and the client’s attorney worked to find somewhere that would care for him. Once they did, a review of the client’s medical records demonstrating the extent of his illness convinced prosecutors to drop the charges against him.

Challenging the State's Case: The Essential Role of Investigators in Public Defense

Investigator David Becker believes his work at DPD makes a meaningful difference in the lives of people from the same community where he grew up.

At DPD, investigators are an essential part of our public defense teams. They interview witnesses, sift through hours and hours of video footage, fact-check police reports, and much, much more. Providing quality client-centered representation simply wouldn’t be possible without them.

Often, diligent work from investigators wins cases. “Police have all the resources in the world,” said felony attorney Clare Riva in recounting the crucial contribution an investigator made in getting a client acquitted at trial in 2023. “Just by having the time and pounding the pavement, our investigator literally solved the crime. In one memorable case from 2023, investigator Kaitlyn Symanns said she spent 10 hours across multiple visits to follow up on surveillance footage from a scene that ultimately exonerated the client involved.

Finding the four minutes that matter

April Tate began her career at DPD as a legal assistant after getting her paralegal certification during the early days of the pandemic. After spending a year as a paralegal, she transitioned into a role as an investigator and was immediately assigned to a team preparing for trial on behalf of a client charged with assault in the first degree. 

As the client and his attorneys were unwilling to waive the client’s right to a speedy trial while he sat in jail unable to bail out, April had to hit the ground running in her very first case as an investigator. She was tasked with sifting through hours and hours of footage from police officers’ body-worn cameras, their in-car video, and surveillance footage where prosecutors claimed the incident took place.

After processing the entirety of the footage turned over to the client’s lawyers in discovery, April found the four minutes when the alleged incident occurred and revealed, in her opinion, that the client was not actually involved in the conflict. Following up on her finding, she canvassed the neighborhood where the assault was alleged to have taken place and found a witness who backed up April’s theory that another person was responsible for the alleged incident.

"It really feels like we're making a tangible impact on people's lives."

For investigator David Becker, working in public defense brings a sense of purpose in serving the community where he grew up. After working in a low barrier homeless shelter in Seattle and serving the same population as a social worker, Becker left a job as a criminal investigator with the Air Force to join DPD in a similar role. 

In contrast to the investigation work he did in the Air Force, Becker said he values the immediacy of his work for DPD’s clients: “Steps I take in an investigation or phone calls I make really could lead to the exoneration of someone or getting a case dismissed, and you get to see that play out in real time.”

In addition to gathering and reviewing evidence, Becker appreciates the opportunity his role provides to make direct connections with clients. In one case from last year, he recalled the effort it took to locate a client who had been out of contact with his attorney for a significant period of time due to the client’s lack of stable housing. After hours spent driving around the client’s last known location and interviewing other people experiencing homelessness, Becker successfully found the client and reengaged him with his attorney.

Though this kind of work to reach a client might seem basic, Becker pointed out that the criminal legal system routinely fails to account for people who lack a permanent address or the ability to afford technology to stay in touch with their lawyer. “People have so many things going on in their lives, especially if they’re experiencing homelessness, that it’s really not fair to just presume that they don’t care about what’s happening to them legally because they don’t show up for a court date,” he said. 

“When you have clients that grew up in the same neighborhood as you, or went to the same elementary school, or had similar interactions with the community, those things kind of stick with you,” said Becker. “It reminds you of how fortunate you are to be in the position that you're in and how it could have gone differently earlier on in life.

Promoting Clients' Agency and Protecting Their Dignity in ITA Court

Hong Tran, an attorney at DPD who represents clients facing civil commitment in Involuntary Treatment Act court.

For people who the state seeks to have civilly committed to a mental health institution against their will, the only people working to advance their stated interests is their defense team at DPD. Facing the possibility of anywhere from 14 to 90 days of confinement and involuntary treatment, more than four thousand people in King County mental health care facilities relied on our representation in 2023.

DPD’s lawyers, mitigation specialists, and other support staff worked with clients to negotiate orders granting less restrictive alternatives to forced hospitalization, oppose the state’s petition to keep them confined to a treatment facility, or continue proceedings in the hope that a temporary extension of their time in a hospital may yield an uncontested release. Even when a client decides not to contest a commitment, DPD’s defense teams ensure their agency is respected and they are able to reach that decision without coercion from the state.

“It can be a very challenging practice,” said Hong Tran, an attorney in one of the two units at DPD who represent clients in ITA court. “You're dealing with people that can be in the throes of psychosis,” making it challenging to get clear direction from them. Complicating matters further, the quality of care patients receive varies greatly depending on the facility they get sent to once a designated crisis responder decides they should be held for an initial period of 120 hours against their will. Tran recalled one case from 2023 where a client who had fled religious persecution abroad had his legitimate trauma misdiagnosed as evidence of schizophrenia, resulting in an unnecessary month-long stay in the hospital.

A system bursting at the seams

In 2023, cases assigned to DPD in ITA court reached a tipping point where attorneys were in danger of exceeding their maximum caseload and required the department to oppose the assignment of new cases from Superior Court. In an unprecedented move, the Court initially ordered DPD to assign new cases regardless of caseload maximums without citing to any statute or case law that would grant the Court such authority. Following DPD’s opposition, the Court ultimately rescinded its order mandating assignment of counsel in excess of the annual limit for each attorney of 250 cases.

The resolution of this standoff with the Court did not end the intractable crisis in ITA court, however. Incoming assignments continue to push the limit of DPD’s capacity to represent clients facing involuntary commitment, just as the lack of investment in alternative interventions for people in crisis has flooded the involuntary treatment system itself with more patients than it can handle. DPD will not allow this systemic failure to compromise the quality of representation clients in ITA court receive, and has continued opposing assignments that would exceed attorneys’ caseload limits.

Lawmakers in King County and the state legislature took action last year to fund more treatment capacity and bolster the ranks of mental health treatment providers in the community, but those investments in building additional crisis care centers and training more staff will take years to pay off. Meanwhile, DPD’s clients in ITA court cycle in and out of the system without effective long-term treatment.

“We don’t have enough off-ramps for people as they start slipping into a crisis to try different modalities, so they don’t end up in the ITA system,” said Katy Wallace, who supervises one of DPD’s units representing clients in ITA court. “All roads seem to lead to here instead of other places.”

Even the programs designed to support clients released on less restrictive alternatives struggle to handle the volume of people who need assistance, and their inability to deliver care often lands clients back in a hospital court room facing the loss of their liberty. Since the key to keeping many clients stable enough to live independent lives depends on consistently taking medication, the PACT program—when properly staffed—sends a case manager to wherever a client is living to ensure they keep their prescriptions filled and take their medication.

But when that support fails due to a lack of staffing, clients can decompensate rapidly. “Some of my clients who have been enrolled in the PACT program, they haven't seen their case managers for weeks, sometimes a month, when they're supposed to be seeing these case managers every day,” said Tran. “You can see how these clients would deteriorate without anybody knowing. They're not taking their medications. They're not going to counseling. And nobody knows until the point that a crisis responder has them recommitted to the hospital, which is the most expensive way of triaging someone.”

Despite the challenging nature of the practice, Tran emphasized she finds meaning in the importance of having an advocate at the side of anyone facing the loss of their freedom in a system with a well-documented history of abuse. “We are here to ensure that they have a voice in the process.”

Transforming Public Defense for Our Clients and Our Staff

2023 marked the first time in more than fifty years that national experts in public defense convened by the RAND corporation and the ABA came to a consensus on new ethical standards for the maximum number of cases a public defender should carry each year. Six months after those standards were published, they were adopted as binding ethical requirements for public defenders across Washington state – in large part due to the advocacy of DPD leadership and staff. This change will mean that our clients will have lawyers who have adequate time to devote to their cases and that our staff will have more manageable workloads.

DPD’s work to make the new recommended caseload standards a reality in Washington began shortly after the RAND/ABA study was published when Anita Khandelwal co-authored an op-ed in the Seattle Times spotlighting the attrition among the department’s most experienced attorneys. Unsustainable caseloads required lawyers representing clients facing murder charges or the possibility of life in prison to also find time for dozens of clients charged with lesser felonies; by contrast, under the new standards an attorney’s entire workload would be comprised of seven or eight of these incredibly serious cases.

Consistent with the department’s values of dismantling and divesting from the systems that oppress DPD’s clients, the op-ed did not argue for a blank check to balloon the ranks of DPD’s attorneys and staff. Rather, the op-ed argued for public investment in alternatives to the criminal legal system that would reduce the volume of assignments sent to the department: “diversion programs for lower-level offenses and more evidence-based strategies for reducing crime, like supportive housing, community-based accountability, and mental health and addiction recovery infrastructure.”

Capitalizing on the public attention to the issue generated by the study, Anita Khandelwal and SEIU 925 chapter president Molly Gilbert worked to shepherd the new standards through the state bar association’s Council on Public Defense. In partnership with CPD Chair Jason Schwarz and other voting members of the CPD, they secured a unanimous vote on the implementation of lower caseload limits. They also won a 9-8 majority vote in favor of adopting the standards on a three-year phase-in timeline rather than a longer five-year plan others on the Council favored.

Meanwhile, at the county level, DPD leadership and staff coordinated a hearing in the King County Council’s Law & Justice Committee to draw attention to the cost the old standards inflicted on public defenders and their clients. Gordon Hill, DPD’s deputy director, advised the Council that the department had lost 18 Class A qualified attorneys over the course of 2023 largely due to the unsustainable workloads they carried. Several of those who remained recounted for the Council how every departure and consequent transfer of cases further delayed those clients’ day in court, as well as the incredibly stressful nature of constantly being in trial to minimize those delays.

Finally, on March 8, 2024, the WSBA Board of Governors convened to vote on the new standards. After hearing from Anita Khandelwal and DPD staff including Adam Heyman, Michael Schueler, Molly Gilbert, Theodore Hastings, Colin Bradshaw, Sam Sueoka, and Shannon Kelly, the Board voted 12-1 to approve the CPD’s proposal. As a result, the new caseload standards will phase in over the next three years and cap felony attorneys at 47 cases by July 2027 – with attorneys handling more serious cases capped at even fewer than that.

The resounding endorsement of the new standards was welcome news to everyone at DPD. As Anita said in a message to staff following the vote, “the adoption of these new caseload standards marks a victory for our clients and for us—it will ensure higher quality representation for our clients and more sustainable workloads for our attorneys, and more investigators and more mitigation specialists to ensure that our clients get the multi-disciplinary defense they deserve.”

Helping Clients at McNeil Island Reintegrate into the Community

 

A small but dedicated unit of lawyers and support staff at DPD focus entirely on defending people who have already completed a prison sentence, and yet face a potential of a lifetime in confinement based on the state’s fear of what they might do upon release. For people who the state believes to be “sexually violent predators,” DPD’s Special Commitment Unit works diligently to prevent their commitment to the Special Commitment Center (SCC) on McNeil Island or assist them in seeking release from the SCC at their annual reviews.

 

Chris Jackson, who leads the SCU, described the work of her unit as a “marathon” in contrast to the series of unrelenting sprints to trial she remembered from her time carrying a felony caseload. Unlike a typical criminal charge focused on a single alleged incident, the clients represented by the SCU face trials that encapsulate their entire lives. In the effort to demonstrate that the client is more likely than not to re-offend, the state can introduce evidence of any kind of alleged misconduct ranging back to childhood.

 

As a result, preparing a client’s defense routinely takes as long as a year, Jackson said. Further complicating the trial preparation process is the difference in procedural protections for SCU clients: unlike a criminal defendant, they have no right to remain silent and are often forced to sit for videotaped depositions by prosecutors.

 

Despite those challenges, the SCU successfully argued for unconditional release from the SCC for five clients in 2023 – a huge victory for the unit. Jackson credits the SCU’s dedicated mitigation specialist, Aimee Martin, as a significant contributor to that success. Martin organizes a detailed release plan for clients, testifies in their favor at trial, and builds trust with clients throughout the lengthy process that allows the unit to advocate for placement in less restrictive alternatives for those who are not unconditionally released after trial or at their annual reviews.


The SCU also relies on Deb Scott, an investigator, to find family members and other supports who can bolster a client’s argument that they can successfully live independently. Doug Vavrick, the unit’s paralegal, plays a critical role in preparing attorneys’ release arguments by organizing tens of thousands of pages of discovery in every client’s case.

 

On a policy level, DPD continues to press the state legislature on enacting proposed reforms from the Sex Offender Policy Board, with particular focus on reducing restrictions on siting housing options for SCU clients seeking release from the SCC to a less restrictive alternative. Though the legislation did not advance last year, DPD will continue advocating for more humane housing conditions for those unable to obtain unconditional release.

Bolstering DPD's Defense Teams with Comprehensive Training

DPD’s training program works to help both attorneys and non-attorney staff develop their skills, keep current on the changing legal landscape of modern public defense, and support our staff in finding healthy ways to manage the stress incumbent in our work.

In 2023, we continued developing our core skills training program for attorneys new to the department, with the goal of helping them build confidence in trial tactics and a sense of community among those who relocated from across the country to work at DPD. Over the course of a week, several senior attorneys and members of the Director’s Office provided training on core advocacy skills – a program offered to all DPD staff during the onboarding process for the department’s 2023 class of new attorneys.

At our Annual Gathering, DPD staff convened in the indoor/outdoor event space at the Seattle Center to connect with their colleagues and attend a variety of continuing education opportunities. Laura van Dernoot Lipsky, a nationally recognized expert on secondary trauma, gave the feature presentation that provided staff with tools and strategies to process the difficult things they hear about and witness every day while serving our clients.

At the Annual Gathering, we also heard from Dwayne Betts, who delivered a keynote speech and poetry reading asking us to rethink which human struggles get villainized and which struggles, instead, earn public respect. The focus of his keynote was on the idea of sainthood, encouraging us to imagine canonizing or honoring the imperfect people in our modern lives.  He also shared a story of his own family that complicated the narrative of prison abolition, asking us not to ignore any person’s pain as we struggle to reimagine the harmful criminal legal system.

Throughout the year, DPD’s staff had access to 65 different trainings to support skill development and meet continuing education credits – and that doesn’t count the dozens of additional offerings from partner organizations whose trainings DPD staff can attend for free. The department brought in medical professionals to provide updates on the latest research on supporting clients who are managing substance use disorder, experts in emerging technologies used in criminal investigations, and continued our Public Defense 101 and 201 training series for non-attorney staff.

Most of those trainings were added to DPD’s on-demand training library, a resource with hundreds of accredited CLE options for attorneys to keep their skills sharp while meeting their continuing education requirement from the state bar association. In 2024, DPD will continue expanding our offerings to fit the needs of our staff, attempting to meet the varied training needs of our different job classes and practice areas.

From Our Unions

SEIU 925

SEIU 925’s DPD chapter has two priorities: advocating for our members and advocating for DPD’s clients. Like all effective advocacy, SEIU’s work is a team effort. Over the past year, our members have fought to protect our clients—and their advocates—from the criminal system’s routine violence. SEIU 925 members have testified before City, County, and State committees, lobbied elected officials, educated the public, and acted in solidarity with fellow unions. Here are SEIU members describing that hard work in their own words:

Emily Willard: I am really proud of the work that we did as a labor union the past year. In particular, we achieved remarkable milestones, reshaping the landscape of advocacy within the confines of the jail. By linking our working conditions to the well-being of those we represent, we've leveraged a powerful argument for change. This approach not only underscores our commitment to solidarity but also amplifies our effectiveness in serving our clients. Together, we continue to pave the way for meaningful progress and justice.

Austin Field: I was one of several SEIU 925 members, including Molly Gilbert and Brandon Davis, who testified against the Seattle City Council’s attempt to re-start the War on Drugs by pointlessly re-criminalizing public drug use. Ultimately, the ordinance passed, but the overwhelming opposition during public comment—much of it led by 925 members—delayed implementation and put the City on the defensive. To date, the City has filed very few drug charges, exposing this ordinance as the empty political stunt it was. Our members showed Seattle that this ordinance is meaningless at best and deeply harmful at worst, and I am proud to have played a small part in that.

Adam Heyman: I was honored to help the union fight to defend our clients’ constitutional rights in the context of helping to change indigent defense caseload standards. Along with Molly Gilbert and Elbert Aull, we spoke at the October 2023 King County Council meeting sounding the alarm for the need to change public defender caseloads.  Subsequently, we met with individual County Council members to provide personal advocacy.  Finally, along with many other union members, we spoke at the Washington State Bar Association to help convince the Board of Governors to adopt the recommendations from the Rand Study, a watershed moment for public defense and for our clients’ constitutional rights.

Amanda Hoang: Through my role as the Paralegal Representative on the SEIU Bargaining Team, I led meetings with my fellow paralegals to try to analyze our body of work and find ways to advocate for improvements. That work will continue in the face of incredible change within our department over the next few years, but it has been personally rewarding to engage with my peers; not just to analyze and professionalize our work, but also because I've enjoyed meeting new people and hearing about the diversity of ways that Paralegals operate across our office. Improving workplace conditions would allow us to focus on what matters most: our dedication to our clients and providing the best possible defense representation.

Shannon Kelley: Ahead of the Seattle City Council vote to determine whether SCAO would start prosecuting public drug possession and use, I participated in a panel, ‘Gaps in the Service Landscape,’ to provide some insight into what happens when people with substance use disorders are arrested. I explained that there is no formal diversion mechanism that connects criminal defendants to substance use treatment, and that job is often relegated to defense mitigation specialists. Most other panelists discussed their “diversion” programming and need for increased funding. I emphasized that coerced care is not effective or ethical. Unfortunately, the vote passed, and our Mitigation Specialists are still working tirelessly to connect folks to treatment with few resources available.

Molly Gilbert, Chapter President: 2023 was a pivotal year for our union chapter; an increase in member engagement allowed us to see what impact we could have as a collective beyond day-to-day workplace issues. We tackled many things: calling attention to deplorable jail conditions, demanding appropriate access to our incarcerated clients, fighting against drug laws that criminalize our community’s health crisis, drawing political support for our members who have been suffering, negotiating a bonus for our attorneys with the highest rate of burnout, and ensuring we were included in statewide analysis of our own workloads. The momentum, passion, vision, and hard work of our chapter members was an incredible thing to witness. DPD employees are tenacious and innovative, and we are a force to be reckoned with. 

Teamsters 117

The supervisors at DPD are represented by Teamsters Local 117, which represents approximately 22,000 people at nearly 300 places of employment throughout the region. DPD supervisors strive to solve problems, support our staff, and inspire others. We focus on our clients and staff, we act responsibly and expeditiously, we champion racial justice, and seek to understand the bigger context in which our members work. We regularly attend the Public Defense Advisory Board’s meetings to share developments with the panel as well as seek support for our critically important work. In our roles as supervisors, we are charged with a wide array of responsibilities, and none are more important than our responsibility to protect our clients and staff.

Our stewards work to meet regularly and when issues arise, we are the frontline for lifting issues and concerns to the appropriate platforms for quick resolution. Teamsters 117 bargains as a part of the King County Coalition of Unions, negotiating to address our collective priorities related to the Coalition Labor Agreement, including total compensation and employees’ health care benefits. We have already started our process for preparing for contract negotiations by electing our member leaders (who will join their negotiating teams at their respective tables), we had record breaking participation in our contract surveys, and we have ongoing Demands Meetings scheduled throughout the months of April and May.

As an organization, Teamsters 117 strives to lift communities beyond the confines of our Collective Bargaining Agreements. In 2023 alone, we marched for Breast Cancer, we “Painted Tacoma Beautiful”, and donated nearly 700 blankets to those currently experiencing homelessness. In February 2024, we dedicated our Membership Meeting to assembling “comfort packages” for those who need small items while living on the street. There was also an educational component to this activity where we discussed the circumstances and systems that perpetuate and exacerbate this pervasive problem. Our members were eager to take these comfort packages with them to distribute in their communities.

All people deserve dignity, and at Teamsters 117 we strive to live out our mission: We build unity and power for all working people to improve lives and lift up our communities. This is our Union.

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