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Long before the Supreme Court ruled that impoverished defendants in
criminal cases have a right to free counsel, Philadelphia’s
public defenders were working to ensure fair trials for all. In
1934, when penniless defendants were routinely railroaded through
the courts without ever seeing a lawyer, Philadelphia attorney
Francis Fisher Kane helped create the Voluntary Defender
Association, supported by charity and free from political
interference, to represent poor people accused of crime.Â
When the Supreme Court’s 1963 decision Gideonv. Wainwright
mandated free counsel for indigent defendants, the Defender
(as it is now known) became more essential than ever, representing
at least 70 percent of those caught in the machinery of justice in
the city. Its groundbreaking work in juvenile advocacy, homicide
representation, death-row habeas corpus petitions, parole issues,
and alternative sentencing has earned a national reputation. In The
Defender, Edward Madeira, past president of the Defender’s Board
of Directors, and former Philadelphia Inquirer journalist Michael
Schaffer chart the 80-plus-year history of the organization as it
grew from two lawyers in 1934 to a staff of nearly 500 in 2015.
This is a compelling story about securing justice for those who
need it most.
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