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The survey then looks at the fees and costs imposed on supposedly indigent defendants who are assigned counsel. These include application fees, payable at the time a request for counsel is made, and reimbursement fees, payable at the conclusion of the case or over time. The report concludes that in adopting unduly restrictive eligibility criteria and other policies, too many states have been able to ignore the central premise of Gideon that “lawyers in criminal courts are necessities, not luxuries.”
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Continue with Part III and catch up with Part I of the Gideon at 50 Project: A Three-Part Examination of Public Defense in America
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