
Oregon Lawmakers Debate Legal Aid to Immigrants as Public Defense Crisis Spirals
Oregon lawmakers are considering two bills that would provide $21 million to provide free legal aid to noncitizens and illegal immigrants.
Separately,
Meanwhile, the state faces a severe public defender crisis.
More than 5,500 criminal defendants are now waiting for a court-appointed attorney, according to the Oregon Judicial Department's
Some people facing criminal charges have waited months for a public defender to be appointed, including, in some cases, being held in jail without counsel,
The Due Process Argument
Oregon's Universal Representation Fund aims to ensure that illegal immigrants receive due process.
Related Stories
1/9/2024
12/20/2023
'Unlike in criminal court, immigrants facing deportation in civil immigration court are not guaranteed access to an attorney,' Senate Democrats said when advocating for SB 1543.
Access to an attorney is one of the most important factors in determining whether an immigrant will be deported, they said.
'Without legal representation, immigrants are unfairly disadvantaged during immigration court proceedings,' said Sen. Kayse Jama (D), calling it a matter of 'equity and human rights.'
'Everyone deserves due process,' she said.
Now advocating to replenish the program under SB 2543, the Oregon Legislative BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color) Caucus argues in its
Use of Taxpayer Funds
Monique DeSpain, executive director and general counsel for the nonprofit
The Sixth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution specifically guarantees the rights of the accused in criminal prosecutions, she told The Epoch Times.
'It doesn't apply to providing assistance of counsel for defense of every person embroiled in any legal proceeding,' DeSpain said.
Immigrants who are trying to address their legal status are not criminal defendants, she said.
'At a time when [the state] can't even meet its basic constitutional requirement to provide lawyers for criminal defendants, we should not be providing them for the civil matter of an immigrant working on their legal status,' said DeSpain.
'Leaving legal citizens who are criminal defendants waiting while millions are spent on those who are not entitled is a fraud on the taxpayers and an abuse of our criminal justice system.'
Is Public Funding Necessary?
Senate Bill 703 would direct the state Department of Human Services to provide $6 million in grants to nonprofit service providers to help eligible individuals apply for lawful permanent resident status.
The bill's authors have declared the issue an 'emergency,' meaning that it would go into effect immediately after being signed by the governor.
'Now more than ever, we must work together to protect some of our most vulnerable populations in Oregon,' wrote the bill's sponsor, Ricki Ruiz (D), cochair of the BIPOC Caucus on Instagram.
Rep. Ed Diehl, a Republican, said he appreciates that the $6 million request is narrowly focused on helping DACA recipients and Special Immigrant Visa holders from Iraq and Afghanistan.
These groups, he said, have 'deep ties to our communities and, in many cases, have contributed meaningfully to our country.'
But Diehl is concerned about fiscal priorities.
'This bill directs taxpayer money—intended to serve our state's most vulnerable citizens—toward helping noncitizens adjust their immigration status,' Diehl told The Epoch Times. 'Those funds would be better spent on pressing needs like elderly care, services for individuals with disabilities, foster care support, and mental health treatment.'
In addition, he said, there are many nonprofit organizations—both local and national—already dedicated to supporting immigrants.
'It's worth asking whether public dollars are necessary here when private and philanthropic resources could fulfill this role.'
It's also worth asking if Oregon's legal landscape can accommodate more cases, he said.
Public Defense Crisis
The state finds itself in the midst of a decade-long public defense crisis caused, in part, by a shortage of defense attorneys.
In 2019, the nonpartisan, nonprofit Sixth Amendment Center (6AC) found the state's public defense system so flawed that it was out of compliance with the U.S. and Oregon constitutions.
The state's 'compensation plan creates an incentive for attorneys to handle as many cases as possible and to do so as quickly as possible, rather than focusing on their ethical duty of achieving the client's case-related goals,'
The American Bar Association's
In 2023, Gov. Tina Kotek signed sweeping legislation that overhauled public defender services in Oregon.
The new law adopted many of the recommendations from
However, the backlog of cases continues to grow. In 2022, there were fewer than 1,000 defendants waiting for a court-appointed attorney, according to the Oregon Judicial Department
Today, there are more than 5,500.
According to the Oregon Justice Resource Center,
The governor's current budget proposal recommends spending $720 million on attorney services for the 2025–27 budget cycle, representing nearly a 20 percent increase.
The budget calls for 40 new state public defenders.
Meanwhile, the number of public-defense related cases is projected to increase by 22 percent statewide by 2027, according to the Oregon Judicial Department.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
33 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Democratic New York lawmaker erupts with f-bombs at GOP Rep. Lawler on House floor
Democratic Rep. John Mannion erupted at fellow New York Rep. Mike Lawler (R) on the House floor Thursday afternoon — with no shortage of f-bombs — in apparent outrage over Sen. Alex Padilla's (D-Calif.) incident with law enforcement earlier in the day. The blowup — some of which was picked up by the cameras in the House chamber — came shortly after Padilla was forcibly removed from a press conference Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem was holding in Los Angeles and handcuffed, prompting a debate in the Capitol over who should be condemned for the altercation: the senator or law enforcement officials. Video of the House floor caught Mannion's booming voice, with the New York lawmaker yelling, 'Get on your f—ing side, Lawler.' 'This is f—ing madness, man. We've had enough. F—ing get over there and get some f—ing balls,' Mannion could be heard saying. At that point the chamber grew quiet, with lawmakers in both parties stopping their conversations and turning their attention to the dispute on the Democratic side of the chamber. Many looked confused in the immediate aftermath. 'Tell them. Tell them. You know who I am. You know who I am, a New Yorker just like you,' Mannion added. 'The country's falling apart.' In a post on the social platform X after the incident, Lawler called Mannion's conduct 'entirely unhinged and unprofessional.' 'That was a shameful display that exposed his complete lack of temperament,' he added. 'No wonder numerous staffers have previously alleged a toxic work environment. He should go seek help for anger management — and f— off.' Asked about the altercation, Lawler told The Hill: 'I told him to go f— himself.' Mannion's office passed along a statement from the congressman defending his actions, referencing Padilla's arrest as well as immigration raids as the Trump administration aims to deliver on his promise of mass deportations. 'I'm a kid from Tipp Hill that's fighting for my hometown and my country. I'm giving everything I have to stop the rise of authoritarian government and the destruction of American democracy,' Mannion said in a statement. 'If making some noise on the House floor and calling out Trump enablers draws attention to what's happening to our country right before our eyes — good. Today it's roughing up and handcuffing a United States Senator and a politicized military patrolling the streets of American cities.' 'It's the willing abandonment of the rule of law and a gross fealty to a want-to-be dictator who is tearing the country apart. None of this is normal or okay,' Mannion continued. 'I'm always going to stand up and speak out and fight for the people of this country.' The House floor squabble was not the only confrontation in the Capitol on Thursday: As Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) delivered remarks about the Padilla incident — endorsing censure for the senator — a string of House Democrats heckled the Speaker. Rep. Sam Liccardo (D-Calif), who represents the San Francisco Bay area, shouted, 'Mike, that's absurd.' Rep. Dan Goldman (D-N.Y.) yelled 'why don't you stand up for Congress?' Another House Democrat exclaimed 'that's a lie.' Asked to respond to some of the remarks, Johnson declined. 'I'm not going to respond to that,' the Speaker said. 'I think the American people can draw their own conclusions. They saw a senator acting like a, wildly inappropriate, I'll leave it at that.' 'What I saw was agents asking him to quiet down so that the secretary could continue her press conference. He refused to do so. What were they supposed to do? They have to restrain someone who is engaging in that kind of behavior. They moved him out of the room,' Johnson later added. 'A sitting member of Congress should not act like that, it is beneath a member of Congress, it is beneath a U.S. senator. They are supposed to lead by example, and that is not a good example.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
33 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump's top diplomat in Africa leaving State Department
President Trump's top diplomat in Africa, Troy Fitrell, will retire from the State Department next month, and Jonathan Pratt, the Bureau of African Affairs deputy assistant secretary, will take his place. 'After a long and distinguished career, the Department of State's Bureau of African Affairs Senior Bureau Official Ambassador Troy Fitrell is retiring in mid-July as planned,' a State Department spokesperson told The Hill in an emailed statement on Thursday. 'The Bureau of African Affairs Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Jonathan Pratt will step into the Senior Bureau Official role after Ambassador Fitrell's departure,' the spokesperson added. Fitrell, a foreign service official, previously worked as the United States ambassador to Guinea. He has served in various State Department posts across Africa, including serving as the director of the Office of Western African Affairs and Southern African Affairs. He was also the deputy chief of mission at the U.S. embassies in Ethiopia and Mauritius. Fitrell has been the head of the State Department's African bureau since the assistant secretary, a Senate-confirmed position, has not yet been chosen. Fitrell, who has been a diplomat for more than three decades, previously said that the Trump administration is changing the U.S. approach to Africa from 'one rooted primarily in development assistance to a strategy that prioritizes robust commercial engagement.' The administration sees trade as a way to counter Chinese and Russian influence on the continent. Semafor first reported on Fitrell's forthcoming exit. Pratt, who will succeed Fitrell, previously served as the U.S. ambassador to Djibouti from 2021 to 2023. He also had other assignments within the State Department, working in places such as Pakistan, Sudan and Angola. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
33 minutes ago
- Yahoo
‘Horrifying': PNW senators slam forced removal of Sen. Padilla from DHS press conference
PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) — Senators from the Pacific Northwest are reacting Thursday after a U.S. senator was taken to the ground and handcuffed at a press conference held by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. Senator Alejandro Padilla (D-Calif.) was forcibly removed from the press conference after introducing himself and saying he had questions for Noem amid immigration raids in his state that have led to protests. Videos of the incident shows officers aggressively pushing Padilla out of Noem's press conference and eventually restraining him on the floor outside the room. Oregon joins brief opposing Trump's military deployment to California Sen. Jeff Merkley says what happened is an overstep by the FBI and police, resembling that of a dictatorship. 'It's about not wanting to hear a voice of dissent,' he said. 'Our constitution is based on the freedom of assembly and the freedom of speech and the freedom to petition your government with grievances and that was exactly what he was doing. He has a grievance, he feels it is outrageous — and so do I and I must say, much of the nation — that the president overrode the governor of California and the mayor of L.A. and has poured gasoline on this fire.' When , Sen. Ron Wyden put forth what he believes to be the potential broader significance of this incident. 'It is a horrifying video, truly horrifying,' he said. 'And I'm of the view, Mr. President, why I especially wanted to come to the floor, it is not about it happening to a United States senator. Here is what it's about: If they'll do this to a sitting United States senator in front of a roomful of media, imagine what is being done to powerless people in secret.' Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) said it was the closest she had come to tearing up on the floor in her 32 years in the Senate. 'It is unacceptable that a United States senator in his own home state, elected by millions of people, went to ask a question for his constituents to get an answer and was brutally thrown to the ground and handcuffed,' Murray emphasized. 'That is wrong and I cannot believe that we don't have senators on both sides of the aisle calling this out as outrageous.' Former Washington state worker claims she was ousted over trans athlete vote Senate Republicans were mostly silent on the situation. But Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) said that he would have a response, 'but I want to know the facts, find out exactly what happened.' In a statement, the Department of Homeland Security said Padilla 'chose disrespectful political theater and interrupted a live news conference.' They defended the officers' conduct and claimed erroneously that Padilla did not identify himself and said the Secret Service believed him to be an attacker. The Democrats described Padilla, the son of immigrants from Mexico, as a 'kind and gentle person' and said that disrespect is not a crime in the United States. They also invoked the end of Trump's last presidency, when a mob of his supporters attacked the Capitol and sent them running. The Associated Press contributed to this report. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.