Restrictions on Legal Assistance With Respect to Criminal Proceedings, 65933-65936 [2013-26102]
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 213 / Monday, November 4, 2013 / Proposed Rules
Signed at Washington, DC, on October 30,
2013.
David Michaels,
Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational
Safety and Health.
[FR Doc. 2013–26337 Filed 11–1–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–26–P
LEGAL SERVICES CORPORATION
45 CFR Part 1613
Restrictions on Legal Assistance With
Respect to Criminal Proceedings
Legal Services Corporation.
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
This proposed rule updates
the Legal Services Corporation (LSC or
Corporation) regulation on legal
assistance with respect to criminal
proceedings. The Tribal Law and Order
Act of 2010 (TLOA) amended the LSC
Act to authorize LSC funds to be used
for representation of persons charged
with criminal offenses in tribal courts.
This proposed rule will bring the
regulations into alignment with the
amended LSC Act. The proposed rule
will also revise the conditions under
which LSC recipients can accept or
decline tribal court appointments to
represent defendants in criminal
proceedings.
SUMMARY:
Comments must be submitted by
December 4, 2013.
ADDRESSES: Written comments must be
submitted to Stefanie K. Davis, Assistant
General Counsel, Legal Services
Corporation, 3333 K Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20007; (202) 337–6519
(fax) or lscrulemaking@lsc.gov.
Electronic submissions are preferred via
email with attachments in Acrobat PDF
format. Written comments sent to any
other address or received after the end
of the comment period may not be
considered by LSC.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stefanie K. Davis, Assistant General
Counsel, Legal Services Corporation,
3333 K Street NW., Washington, DC
20007, (202) 295–1563 (phone), (202)
337–6519 (fax), lscrulemaking@lsc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
EMCDONALD on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
DATE:
I. Statutory and Regulatory
Background.
The Corporation first issued 45 CFR
part 1613 in 1976 to implement a
statutory prohibition on the use of LSC
funds to provide legal assistance in
criminal cases. Section 1007 of the LSC
Act prohibited the use of LSC funds to
provide legal assistance ‘‘with respect to
any criminal proceeding.’’ Public Law
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93–355, § 1007(b)(2), 88 Stat. 383 (Jul.
25, 1974) (42 U.S.C. 2996f(b)(2)). The
original section 1613.2 defined
‘‘criminal proceeding’’ as ‘‘the adversary
judicial proceeding prosecuted by a
public officer and initiated by a formal
complaint, information, or indictment
charging a person with an offense
denominated ‘criminal’ by applicable
law and punishable by death,
imprisonment, or a jail sentence. A
misdemeanor or lesser offense tried in
an Indian tribal court is not a ‘criminal
proceeding.’ ’’ 41 FR 38506, Sept. 10,
1976. Neither the proposed rule nor the
final rule explained why the
Corporation exempted minor criminal
cases in tribal courts from the general
prohibition.
The following year, Congress
amended the LSC Act to codify the
Corporation’s exemption of minor
crimes in tribal courts from the types of
criminal proceedings for which LSC
funds could not be used. Public Law
95–222, § 10(b), 91 Stat. 1620–1623
(Dec. 28, 1977). According to the House
Report on H.R. 6666, which became
Public Law 95–222, it made this
amendment at the Corporation’s request.
H.R. Rep. 95–310, 1977 U.S.C.C.A.N.
4503, 4515–16 (May 13, 1977). The
Committee on the Judiciary explained:
Section 7(b)(2) permits a legal services
program to provide representation in a very
narrow category of technically criminal cases
that may be viewed as basically civil in
nature to a person charged with an offense
involving hunting, fishing, trapping or
gathering fruits of the land when the
principal defense asserted involves rights
arising from a treaty with Indians. A number
of legal services programs have developed
expertise in the highly specialized area of
Indian treaty law. Prior to the passage of the
Legal Services Corporation Act they provided
assistance to Indians charged with criminal
offenses when the defense arose out of an
asserted treaty right. Because an effective
defense depends on knowledge of treaty law,
rather than of criminal law, state-appointed
private counsel and public defenders
generally lack the legal background required
to provide an effective defense.
The provision of section 7(b)(2) authorizing
representation of an Indian charged with a
misdemeanor or lesser offense in an Indian
tribal court is declaratory of existing law and
codifies current Corporation Regulations.
The committee approves the provisions of
current Corporation Regulations, that
appropriately define the scope of the
prohibition against criminal representation
and the narrow exceptions to the prohibition
that are required for fulfillment of a lawyer’s
professional obligations and responsibilities.
In 2010, Congress enacted the TLOA.
The TLOA had two major effects on
tribal criminal jurisdiction. First, it
authorized tribal courts to impose
longer sentences, raising the maximum
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duration from up to one year to a total
of nine years for multiple charges.
Public Law 111–211, Tit. II, Subtitle C,
§ 234(a), 124 Stat. 2280 (Jul. 29, 2010).
Second, it required tribes exercising the
expanded sentencing authority to, ‘‘at
the expense of the tribal government,
provide an indigent defendant the
assistance of a defense attorney.’’ Public
Law 111–211, Tit. II, Subtitle C,
§ 234(c)(2), 124 Stat. 2280. Of most
relevance for LSC funding recipients,
the TLOA amended section 1007(b)(2)
of the LSC Act to authorize the use of
LSC funds to provide representation in
all criminal proceedings before tribal
courts. Public Law 111–211, Tit. II,
Subtitle C, § 235(d), 124 Stat. 2282.
Congress further expanded tribal
court jurisdiction in 2013. Through the
Violence Against Women
Reauthorization Act of 2013 (2013
VAWA), Congress amended the Indian
Civil Rights Act of 1968 to authorize
tribal courts to exercise special criminal
jurisdiction over domestic violence
cases. Public Law 113–4, § 904(b)(1),
127 Stat. 120–121 (Mar. 7, 2013) (25
U.S.C. 1304(a)). This ‘‘special domestic
violence criminal jurisdiction’’ is
exercised concurrently with state or
Federal jurisdictions, or both, as
applicable. Public Law 113–4,
§ 904(b)(2), 127 Stat. 121 (25 U.S.C.
1304(b)(2)). Unlike prior congressional
enactments, the 2013 VAWA explicitly
authorizes tribes to exercise jurisdiction
over both Indian and non-Indian
defendants in certain circumstances.
In order for the tribe to assert special
domestic violence criminal jurisdiction,
the alleged act must have occurred
within Indian country. Public Law 113–
4, § 904(c), 127 Stat. 122. ‘‘Indian
country’’ is a term of art defined in 8
U.S.C. 1151. If neither the victim nor the
accused is Indian, the court may not
exercise jurisdiction. Public Law 113–4,
§ 904(b)(4)(A)(i), 127 Stat. 121. If only
the accused is a non-Indian, the court
may exercise jurisdiction only if the
accused resides in the Indian country
over which the tribe has jurisdiction; is
employed in the Indian country of the
tribe; or is a spouse, intimate partner, or
dating partner of a member of the tribe
or an Indian who resides in the Indian
country of the tribe. Public Law 113–4,
§ 904(b)(4)(B), 127 Stat. 122.
The 2013 VAWA also introduced
another set of crimes in Indian country
for which defendants are entitled to
counsel at the tribal government’s
expense. Section 904(d)(2) states that if
a sentence of any length of time may be
imposed, the defendant is entitled to all
of the rights laid out in Section 202(c)
of the Indian Civil Rights Act. Public
Law 113–4, § 904(d)(2), 127 Stat. 122.
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The TLOA previously amended section
202(c) to require tribes exercising
expanded criminal sentencing authority
to provide counsel only to defendants
facing total terms of imprisonment that
would exceed one year. Public Law
111–211, § 234(a), 124 Stat. 2280.
In summary, the TLOA and the 2013
VAWA amended the Indian Civil Rights
Act to expand both the sentencing
authority and the jurisdiction of tribal
criminal courts. The TLOA also
amended the LSC Act to allow the use
of LSC funds for representation of
criminal defendants in tribal courts
facing sentences of more than a year.
LSC grant recipients now have the
option of using their LSC funds to
provide criminal representation.
Additionally, because tribes must
provide defendants with counsel at
tribal government expense in certain
circumstances, LSC recipients may be
faced with increasing numbers of
appointments to represent criminal
defendants.
II. LSC Consideration of the Statutory
Changes
On January 25, 2013, the Operations
and Regulations Committee (the
Committee) of the LSC Board of
Directors (the Board) voted to
recommend that the Board authorize
rulemaking to conform Part 1613 to the
amendments to the LSC Act and to
address recipients’ concerns regarding
criminal appointments. On January 26,
2013, the Board authorized the
initiation of rulemaking.
In response to the statutory changes
described above, LSC sought input from
experts in tribal law, including tribal
court officials and practitioners, and the
public to determine whether the
Corporation needed to amend its
regulations. LSC published a Request for
Information (RFI) regarding the
restrictions on legal assistance with
respect to criminal proceedings in tribal
courts. 78 FR 27341, May 10, 2013.
Additionally, during its July 22, 2013
meeting of the Board of Directors, the
Committee heard from a panel of five
experts in tribal law representing a
variety of perspectives.
During the July 22, 2013 panel
presentation, the panelists’ commentary
focused on two main issues: the limited
availability of resources to provide
representation in criminal cases, and the
political and cultural difficulties of
representing defendants charged with
domestic violence, particularly nonIndian defendants. One commentator
noted that at the current time, LSC’s
Native American grants are too small to
meet the existing needs of tribal
communities. The clients tend to live far
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from the grantees’ offices and from each
other, requiring attorneys to travel long
distances and incur expenses for gas
and lodging. The costs associated with
this travel and the limited funding
available to cover them make it difficult
to attend frequent court hearings. For
this reason, the commentator did not
anticipate LSC Native American grant
recipients undertaking widespread
representation under the TLOA. He
recommended that any potential
amendments to the regulations allow
flexibility for recipients of LSC Native
American grants to take on this type of
representation if they determine it is a
priority, but not to require grantees to
do it.
In a similar vein, a member of the
Board raised a concern he had heard
from recipients: that tribal courts would
execute their responsibility to provide
representation at tribal expense by
simply appointing LSC-funded
attorneys. One commentator concurred
with the concern and recommended that
any amendments to the rule provide the
flexibility that the previous panelist
preferred, but at the same time protect
grantees from having to accept
compulsory appointments. A third
commentator followed up on a related
question by opining that LSC-funded
grantees, as the attorneys working in
tribal communities and conversant with
tribal cultures, are better positioned to
undertake expanded criminal
representation than attorneys with
expertise in criminal law, but with no
background in Indian law or tribal
communities.
With respect to the policy of
representing defendants in domestic
violence cases, panelists generally
agreed that doing so would raise thorny
issues of parity among victims and
defendants, as well as Indian and nonIndian defendants. Two panelists noted
that their organizations approach
domestic violence representation from
the victim’s perspective and would be
reluctant to represent the defendant in
a domestic violence case. One panelist
also identified the possibility that
representation of a defendant would
prevent an LSC-funded organization
from representing the alleged victim in
the case, thereby reducing the amount of
assistance available to victims.
Similarly, the two panelists also stated
opposition to using LSC Native
American funds to represent non-Indian
defendants in cases involving Indian
victims. Their opposition arose out of
both the potential use of Native
American grant funding to represent
non-Indian defendants, thereby
reducing the amount of funding
available to assist Indian victims, and to
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the need to ensure that if non-Indian
defendants had access to counsel,
Indian victims would have access to
counsel as well.
The RFI, published on May 10, 2013,
asked commenters to answer questions
about the impact of the TLOA and
VAWA on criminal laws in tribal
jurisdictions and on tribal appointments
of defense counsel. 78 FR 27341, May
10, 2013. The comment period closed
on August 23, 2013. LSC received
comments from three tribes, one tribal
prosecutor, and one organization
representing attorneys practicing in
front of tribal courts. Of the four
responding tribal entities, one does not
exercise criminal jurisdiction, one
indicated that it was not aware of any
changes that the tribe would be making
to its authority to hear and hand down
sentences in criminal cases, one was in
the process of reviewing its criminal
laws to determine whether they needed
amending to be consistent with the
TLOA and VAWA, and one had
received a grant to begin drafting a
criminal code that would comply with
TLOA and VAWA. Both of the tribes
that are working on their criminal codes
welcomed the ability of grantees to use
LSC funds to represent defendants in all
criminal matters, including domestic
violence cases. One tribe invited LSC’s
involvement as it develops its domestic
violence case policies and identified
direct contracts between itself and LSC
grantees as a way to ensure that it can
fulfill its responsibility under TLOA to
provide counsel to defendants in
criminal cases. Another stated its
opinion that representation of indigent
defendants is hindered by a lack of
funding, and that LSC funds could help
provide proper representation for
indigent defendants facing criminal
charges in its tribal court.
The representative organization’s
comments were substantially similar to
some of the comments made by
panelists at the July 22, 2013 Committee
meeting. For example, the organization
reiterated that LSC’s Native American
grant funding is limited and inadequate
to meet existing needs, such that
requiring grantees to provide counsel in
criminal proceedings would exacerbate
financial pressures. It stated that the
primary mission of LSC Native
American grant recipients is to provide
high-quality civil legal services in
matters that uniquely affect tribes, such
as ensuring that the rights of tribes and
tribal members guaranteed by the Indian
Child Welfare Act are protected. The
organization also reiterated two
additional concerns stated by panelists
at the July 22, 2013 Committee meeting.
The first was that a provider’s
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representation of a defendant in a
domestic violence case would create a
conflict of interest that would prevent
the provider from providing legal
assistance to the victim. The second was
that requiring representation of criminal
defendants could mean using the
limited LSC Native American funding to
represent non-Indian defendants in
tribal criminal proceedings. Finally, the
commenter recommended that LSC
amend Part 1613 to be consistent with
the TLOA and allow grantees the option
of representing defendants in tribal
criminal proceedings, but not require
such representation.
Pursuant to the LSC Rulemaking
Protocol, LSC staff prepared a proposed
rule amending Part 1613 with an
explanatory rulemaking options paper.
On October 22, 2013, the Board
approved the proposed rule for
publication in the Federal Register for
notice and comment. A section by
section discussion of the proposed rule
is provided below.
III. Authority
The authority is revised to update the
provision of the LSC Act governing
representation in criminal proceedings
and reflect the change in authorization
made by the Tribal Law and Order Act
of 2010.
IV. Proposed Changes
EMCDONALD on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
1613.1
Purpose
The Corporation proposes to revise
this section to state that LSC grant
recipients may not represent individuals
in criminal proceedings unless
authorized by Part 1613. Previously, this
section only recognized that recipients
were authorized to provide assistance in
criminal proceedings if the attorney’s
responsibilities as a member of the bar
required him to provide such assistance.
The LSC Act has been amended twice
to authorize criminal representation in
tribal proceedings since the regulation
was originally enacted in 1976, and the
Corporation now proposes to amend
Part 1613 to be consistent with those
statutory amendments. For these
reasons, the Corporation believes it is
necessary to amend this section to
recognize that, in addition to an
attorney’s professional responsibilities,
Federal statutes and regulations may
also authorize an LSC-funded attorney
to undertake criminal representation.
1613.2
Definition
The Corporation proposes to amend
the definition of ‘‘criminal proceeding’’
to remove the exclusion of
misdemeanors or lesser offenses in
Indian tribal courts from the definition.
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This change is proposed for two
reasons. First, removing the exclusion of
misdemeanors or lesser offenses within
tribal court jurisdiction would bring the
rule into alignment with section
1007(b)(2) of the LSC Act, which
authorizes LSC funds to be used for
representation in criminal proceedings
before Indian tribal courts. Second,
removing the exclusion makes clear that
criminal proceedings in Indian tribal
courts are ‘‘criminal proceedings’’
subject to the provisions in proposed
1613.5.
1613.4 Authorized Representation
The Corporation proposes to revise
section 1613.4(a) to allow recipients to
undertake criminal appointments after a
determination that such appointment
‘‘will not impair the recipient’s primary
responsibility to provide civil legal
services.’’ Under the current rule,
recipients must determine that
accepting a criminal appointment will
be ‘‘consistent with’’ its primary
responsibility to provide civil legal
services. The Corporation believes that
changing the standard to impairment of
the recipient’s primary responsibility to
provide civil legal services will allow
recipients to consider the impact a
criminal appointment will have at a
more meaningful level because it
contemplates that such appointments
may have a measurable impact on a
recipient’s financial and human
resources.
The existing language in section
1613.4(a) has been the subject of
litigation in several jurisdictions in
which trial courts appointed attorneys
at LSC recipients in criminal cases over
the Part 1613 objection of the recipients.
Courts have overwhelmingly upheld
recipients’ declinations of criminal
appointments under section 1613.4(a).
See, e.g., Rehmann v. Maynard, 376
S.E.2d 169, 172 (W.Va. Dec. 21, 1988);
Central Florida Legal Servs v. Perry, 406
So. 2d 111, 113 (Fla. App. 1981). Courts
considering this issue placed
considerable weight on the recipients’
determinations that an appointment was
not consistent with their duty to provide
civil legal services. See, e.g., Rehmann,
376 S.E.2d at 173 (‘‘We conclude . . .
that a circuit judge is prohibited by 42
U.S.C.S. 2996f(b)(2) (1974) and 45 CFR
1613.4 (1978) from appointing an
attorney employed by a local legal
services program that receives funds
from the federal Legal Services
Corporation to represent an indigent
criminal defendant, where the local
legal services program has made a
formal policy determination that such
criminal representation is inconsistent
with its primary responsibility to
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65935
provide legal assistance to eligible
clients in civil matters.’’); Central
Florida Legal Servs, 406 So. 2d at 113;
Central Florida Legal Servs. v.
Eastmoore, 517 F.Supp. 497, 500 (M.D.
Fla. 1981) (‘‘[T]he CFLS attorneys may
not represent criminal defendants in
light of the CFLS determination that it
does not have sufficient resources to
devote to a criminal proceeding.’’).
Because the proposed change to section
1613.4(a) does not affect a recipient’s
discretion to determine whether a
particular court appointment will
impair its ability to provide quality civil
legal services, the Corporation believes
that the precedents discussed above
should continue to apply.
1613.5 Criminal Representation in
Indian Tribal Courts
The Corporation proposes to add a
new section 1613.5 to address
representation in criminal cases before
Indian tribal courts and the
circumstances under which recipients
may accept a tribal court appointment to
represent a criminal defendant.
Subsection (a) reiterates the statutory
authorization for LSC funds to be used
for representation of a person charged
with an offense in an Indian tribal court.
Subsection (b) is similar to section
1613.4(a) in that it allows recipients to
accept court appointments when the
recipient determines that the
appointment will not impair the
recipient’s primary responsibility to
provide legal assistance to eligible
clients in civil matters. The Corporation
has incorporated the revised language
from section 1613.4(a) into section
1613.5(b) to make clear that, consistent
with the discussion of this language and
related court precedents in section
1613.4 above, the recipient remains the
final arbiter of whether accepting a
criminal appointment from a tribal court
will impair the recipient’s responsibility
to provide legal assistance to eligible
clients in civil proceedings.
Section 234 of the TLOA requires
tribal courts exercising the expanded
sentencing authority to provide indigent
defendants with the assistance of a
licensed attorney ‘‘at the expense of the
tribal government.’’ In conjunction with
the TLOA’s amendment to the LSC Act
authorizing the use of LSC funds for
representation in any criminal
proceeding in tribal court, this provision
may lead to increased interest on the
part of tribal courts to appoint recipient
attorneys to serve as defense counsel.
Indeed, in response to the RFI, two
tribes commented that they welcome the
increased ability of LSC recipients to
use LSC funds to serve as defense
counsel. Because the provision
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requiring that tribes provide defense
counsel at the tribes’ expense and the
provision authorizing LSC recipients to
use LSC funds to provide criminal
representation are not linked in the
TLOA, it is unclear whether tribal
courts will reimburse LSC recipients for
providing representation pursuant to a
tribal court appointment.
Proposed section 1613.5(b) allows a
recipient to consider whether accepting
an appointment from an Indian tribal
court will impair the recipient’s
responsibility to provide civil legal
assistance. A recipient may evaluate
many factors in determining whether
impairment will occur, including but
not limited to the recipient’s civil legal
workload, the recipient’s program
priorities, the recipient’s existing
expertise in tribal criminal law, the
recipient’s capacity to investigate and
defend a criminal case competently, the
frequency and number of proceedings in
the case, and the distance to the court
where the proceedings will take place.
A recipient may also consider whether,
and to what extent, the tribal court will
compensate the recipient for accepting
the appointment. The fact that a tribal
court will or will not compensate the
recipient may or may not be dispositive
of whether the appointment will impair
the recipient’s responsibility to provide
legal assistance in civil cases. It is
within the recipient’s discretion to
determine what factors to consider and
the weight to be given to each factor
when deciding whether to accept a
criminal appointment.
§ 1613.2
Definition.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Criminal proceeding means the
adversary judicial process prosecuted by
a public officer and initiated by a formal
complaint, information, or indictment
charging a person with an offense
denominated ‘‘criminal’’ by applicable
law and punishable by death,
imprisonment, or a jail sentence.
■ 4. Revise § 1613.4(a) to read as
follows:
§ 1613.4
Authorized representation.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) Pursuant to a court appointment
made under a statute or a court rule of
equal applicability to all attorneys in the
jurisdiction, if authorized by the
recipient after a determination that
acceptance of the appointment would
not impair the recipient’s primary
responsibility to provide legal assistance
to eligible clients in civil matters.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. Add § 1613.5 to read as follows:
§ 1613.5 Criminal representation in Indian
tribal courts.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, and under the authority of 42
U.S.C. 2996g(e), the Legal Services
Corporation proposes to amend 45 CFR
Part 1613 as follows:
(a) Legal assistance may be provided
with Corporation funds to a person
charged with a criminal offense in an
Indian tribal court who is otherwise
eligible.
(b) Legal assistance may be provided
in a criminal proceeding in an Indian
tribal court pursuant to a court
appointment only if the appointment is
made under a statute or a court rule or
practice of equal applicability to all
attorneys in the jurisdiction, and is
authorized by the recipient after a
determination that acceptance of the
appointment would not impair the
recipient’s primary responsibility to
provide legal assistance to eligible
clients in civil matters.
PART 1613—RESTRICTIONS ON
LEGAL ASSISTANCE WITH RESPECT
TO CRIMINAL PROCEEDINGS
Dated: October 29, 2013.
Atitaya C. Rok,
Staff Attorney.
List of Subjects in 45 CFR Part 1613
Crime, Grant programs—law, Legal
services, Tribal.
1. The authority citation for Part 1613
is revised to read as follows:
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BILLING CODE 7050–01–P
Authority: Sec. 234(d), Pub. L. 111–211,
124. Stat. 2282; 42 U.S.C. 2996f(b)(2).
■
2. Revise § 1613.1 to read as follows:
§ 1613.1
Purpose.
This part is designed to ensure that
Corporation funds will not be used to
provide legal assistance with respect to
criminal proceedings unless such
assistance is authorized by this part.
■ 3. Revise § 1613.2 to read as follows:
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50 CFR Part 17
[Docket Nos. FWS–R6–ES–2011–0111;
FWS–R6–ES–2012–0108; 4500030114]
RIN 1018–AZ20; RIN 1018–AX71
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants; Proposed Endangered
Status for Gunnison Sage-Grouse and
Proposed Designation of Critical
Habitat for Gunnison Sage-Grouse
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule; reopening of
comment period; announcement of
public hearings.
AGENCY:
We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service), announce the
reopening of the public comment
periods on our January 11, 2013,
proposed rules to list the Gunnison
sage-grouse (Centrocercus minimus) as
endangered and to designate critical
habitat for the species under the
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
amended (Act). In addition, we
announce the rescheduling of two
public informational sessions and
public hearings for both the proposed
listing and proposed critical habitat
rules, and the addition of a third public
informational session and public
hearing. We are reopening the comment
periods to allow all interested parties an
additional opportunity to comment on
the proposed listing and the proposed
designation of critical habitat, and to
comment on the proposed critical
habitat’s associated draft economic
analysis (DEA), draft environmental
assessment (EA), and amended required
determinations section. Comments
previously submitted need not be
resubmitted, as they will be fully
considered in preparation of the final
rules.
SUMMARY:
Comment submission: We will
consider comments received or
postmarked on or before December 2,
2013. Comments submitted
electronically using the Federal
eRulemaking Portal (see ADDRESSES
section, below) must be received by
11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on the closing
date.
Public informational sessions and
public hearings: We will hold three
public informational sessions followed
by public hearings on the following
dates:
• November 19, 2013, from 4:00–9:00
p.m., including an information session
DATES:
[FR Doc. 2013–26102 Filed 11–1–13; 8:45 am]
■
Fish and Wildlife Service
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 213 (Monday, November 4, 2013)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 65933-65936]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-26102]
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LEGAL SERVICES CORPORATION
45 CFR Part 1613
Restrictions on Legal Assistance With Respect to Criminal
Proceedings
AGENCY: Legal Services Corporation.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
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SUMMARY: This proposed rule updates the Legal Services Corporation (LSC
or Corporation) regulation on legal assistance with respect to criminal
proceedings. The Tribal Law and Order Act of 2010 (TLOA) amended the
LSC Act to authorize LSC funds to be used for representation of persons
charged with criminal offenses in tribal courts. This proposed rule
will bring the regulations into alignment with the amended LSC Act. The
proposed rule will also revise the conditions under which LSC
recipients can accept or decline tribal court appointments to represent
defendants in criminal proceedings.
DATE: Comments must be submitted by December 4, 2013.
ADDRESSES: Written comments must be submitted to Stefanie K. Davis,
Assistant General Counsel, Legal Services Corporation, 3333 K Street
NW., Washington, DC 20007; (202) 337-6519 (fax) or
lscrulemaking@lsc.gov. Electronic submissions are preferred via email
with attachments in Acrobat PDF format. Written comments sent to any
other address or received after the end of the comment period may not
be considered by LSC.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stefanie K. Davis, Assistant General
Counsel, Legal Services Corporation, 3333 K Street NW., Washington, DC
20007, (202) 295-1563 (phone), (202) 337-6519 (fax),
lscrulemaking@lsc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Statutory and Regulatory Background.
The Corporation first issued 45 CFR part 1613 in 1976 to implement
a statutory prohibition on the use of LSC funds to provide legal
assistance in criminal cases. Section 1007 of the LSC Act prohibited
the use of LSC funds to provide legal assistance ``with respect to any
criminal proceeding.'' Public Law 93-355, Sec. 1007(b)(2), 88 Stat.
383 (Jul. 25, 1974) (42 U.S.C. 2996f(b)(2)). The original section
1613.2 defined ``criminal proceeding'' as ``the adversary judicial
proceeding prosecuted by a public officer and initiated by a formal
complaint, information, or indictment charging a person with an offense
denominated `criminal' by applicable law and punishable by death,
imprisonment, or a jail sentence. A misdemeanor or lesser offense tried
in an Indian tribal court is not a `criminal proceeding.' '' 41 FR
38506, Sept. 10, 1976. Neither the proposed rule nor the final rule
explained why the Corporation exempted minor criminal cases in tribal
courts from the general prohibition.
The following year, Congress amended the LSC Act to codify the
Corporation's exemption of minor crimes in tribal courts from the types
of criminal proceedings for which LSC funds could not be used. Public
Law 95-222, Sec. 10(b), 91 Stat. 1620-1623 (Dec. 28, 1977). According
to the House Report on H.R. 6666, which became Public Law 95-222, it
made this amendment at the Corporation's request. H.R. Rep. 95-310,
1977 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4503, 4515-16 (May 13, 1977). The Committee on the
Judiciary explained:
Section 7(b)(2) permits a legal services program to provide
representation in a very narrow category of technically criminal
cases that may be viewed as basically civil in nature to a person
charged with an offense involving hunting, fishing, trapping or
gathering fruits of the land when the principal defense asserted
involves rights arising from a treaty with Indians. A number of
legal services programs have developed expertise in the highly
specialized area of Indian treaty law. Prior to the passage of the
Legal Services Corporation Act they provided assistance to Indians
charged with criminal offenses when the defense arose out of an
asserted treaty right. Because an effective defense depends on
knowledge of treaty law, rather than of criminal law, state-
appointed private counsel and public defenders generally lack the
legal background required to provide an effective defense.
The provision of section 7(b)(2) authorizing representation of
an Indian charged with a misdemeanor or lesser offense in an Indian
tribal court is declaratory of existing law and codifies current
Corporation Regulations.
The committee approves the provisions of current Corporation
Regulations, that appropriately define the scope of the prohibition
against criminal representation and the narrow exceptions to the
prohibition that are required for fulfillment of a lawyer's
professional obligations and responsibilities.
In 2010, Congress enacted the TLOA. The TLOA had two major effects
on tribal criminal jurisdiction. First, it authorized tribal courts to
impose longer sentences, raising the maximum duration from up to one
year to a total of nine years for multiple charges. Public Law 111-211,
Tit. II, Subtitle C, Sec. 234(a), 124 Stat. 2280 (Jul. 29, 2010).
Second, it required tribes exercising the expanded sentencing authority
to, ``at the expense of the tribal government, provide an indigent
defendant the assistance of a defense attorney.'' Public Law 111-211,
Tit. II, Subtitle C, Sec. 234(c)(2), 124 Stat. 2280. Of most relevance
for LSC funding recipients, the TLOA amended section 1007(b)(2) of the
LSC Act to authorize the use of LSC funds to provide representation in
all criminal proceedings before tribal courts. Public Law 111-211, Tit.
II, Subtitle C, Sec. 235(d), 124 Stat. 2282.
Congress further expanded tribal court jurisdiction in 2013.
Through the Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act of 2013 (2013
VAWA), Congress amended the Indian Civil Rights Act of 1968 to
authorize tribal courts to exercise special criminal jurisdiction over
domestic violence cases. Public Law 113-4, Sec. 904(b)(1), 127 Stat.
120-121 (Mar. 7, 2013) (25 U.S.C. 1304(a)). This ``special domestic
violence criminal jurisdiction'' is exercised concurrently with state
or Federal jurisdictions, or both, as applicable. Public Law 113-4,
Sec. 904(b)(2), 127 Stat. 121 (25 U.S.C. 1304(b)(2)). Unlike prior
congressional enactments, the 2013 VAWA explicitly authorizes tribes to
exercise jurisdiction over both Indian and non-Indian defendants in
certain circumstances.
In order for the tribe to assert special domestic violence criminal
jurisdiction, the alleged act must have occurred within Indian country.
Public Law 113-4, Sec. 904(c), 127 Stat. 122. ``Indian country'' is a
term of art defined in 8 U.S.C. 1151. If neither the victim nor the
accused is Indian, the court may not exercise jurisdiction. Public Law
113-4, Sec. 904(b)(4)(A)(i), 127 Stat. 121. If only the accused is a
non-Indian, the court may exercise jurisdiction only if the accused
resides in the Indian country over which the tribe has jurisdiction; is
employed in the Indian country of the tribe; or is a spouse, intimate
partner, or dating partner of a member of the tribe or an Indian who
resides in the Indian country of the tribe. Public Law 113-4, Sec.
904(b)(4)(B), 127 Stat. 122.
The 2013 VAWA also introduced another set of crimes in Indian
country for which defendants are entitled to counsel at the tribal
government's expense. Section 904(d)(2) states that if a sentence of
any length of time may be imposed, the defendant is entitled to all of
the rights laid out in Section 202(c) of the Indian Civil Rights Act.
Public Law 113-4, Sec. 904(d)(2), 127 Stat. 122.
[[Page 65934]]
The TLOA previously amended section 202(c) to require tribes exercising
expanded criminal sentencing authority to provide counsel only to
defendants facing total terms of imprisonment that would exceed one
year. Public Law 111-211, Sec. 234(a), 124 Stat. 2280.
In summary, the TLOA and the 2013 VAWA amended the Indian Civil
Rights Act to expand both the sentencing authority and the jurisdiction
of tribal criminal courts. The TLOA also amended the LSC Act to allow
the use of LSC funds for representation of criminal defendants in
tribal courts facing sentences of more than a year. LSC grant
recipients now have the option of using their LSC funds to provide
criminal representation. Additionally, because tribes must provide
defendants with counsel at tribal government expense in certain
circumstances, LSC recipients may be faced with increasing numbers of
appointments to represent criminal defendants.
II. LSC Consideration of the Statutory Changes
On January 25, 2013, the Operations and Regulations Committee (the
Committee) of the LSC Board of Directors (the Board) voted to recommend
that the Board authorize rulemaking to conform Part 1613 to the
amendments to the LSC Act and to address recipients' concerns regarding
criminal appointments. On January 26, 2013, the Board authorized the
initiation of rulemaking.
In response to the statutory changes described above, LSC sought
input from experts in tribal law, including tribal court officials and
practitioners, and the public to determine whether the Corporation
needed to amend its regulations. LSC published a Request for
Information (RFI) regarding the restrictions on legal assistance with
respect to criminal proceedings in tribal courts. 78 FR 27341, May 10,
2013. Additionally, during its July 22, 2013 meeting of the Board of
Directors, the Committee heard from a panel of five experts in tribal
law representing a variety of perspectives.
During the July 22, 2013 panel presentation, the panelists'
commentary focused on two main issues: the limited availability of
resources to provide representation in criminal cases, and the
political and cultural difficulties of representing defendants charged
with domestic violence, particularly non-Indian defendants. One
commentator noted that at the current time, LSC's Native American
grants are too small to meet the existing needs of tribal communities.
The clients tend to live far from the grantees' offices and from each
other, requiring attorneys to travel long distances and incur expenses
for gas and lodging. The costs associated with this travel and the
limited funding available to cover them make it difficult to attend
frequent court hearings. For this reason, the commentator did not
anticipate LSC Native American grant recipients undertaking widespread
representation under the TLOA. He recommended that any potential
amendments to the regulations allow flexibility for recipients of LSC
Native American grants to take on this type of representation if they
determine it is a priority, but not to require grantees to do it.
In a similar vein, a member of the Board raised a concern he had
heard from recipients: that tribal courts would execute their
responsibility to provide representation at tribal expense by simply
appointing LSC-funded attorneys. One commentator concurred with the
concern and recommended that any amendments to the rule provide the
flexibility that the previous panelist preferred, but at the same time
protect grantees from having to accept compulsory appointments. A third
commentator followed up on a related question by opining that LSC-
funded grantees, as the attorneys working in tribal communities and
conversant with tribal cultures, are better positioned to undertake
expanded criminal representation than attorneys with expertise in
criminal law, but with no background in Indian law or tribal
communities.
With respect to the policy of representing defendants in domestic
violence cases, panelists generally agreed that doing so would raise
thorny issues of parity among victims and defendants, as well as Indian
and non-Indian defendants. Two panelists noted that their organizations
approach domestic violence representation from the victim's perspective
and would be reluctant to represent the defendant in a domestic
violence case. One panelist also identified the possibility that
representation of a defendant would prevent an LSC-funded organization
from representing the alleged victim in the case, thereby reducing the
amount of assistance available to victims. Similarly, the two panelists
also stated opposition to using LSC Native American funds to represent
non-Indian defendants in cases involving Indian victims. Their
opposition arose out of both the potential use of Native American grant
funding to represent non-Indian defendants, thereby reducing the amount
of funding available to assist Indian victims, and to the need to
ensure that if non-Indian defendants had access to counsel, Indian
victims would have access to counsel as well.
The RFI, published on May 10, 2013, asked commenters to answer
questions about the impact of the TLOA and VAWA on criminal laws in
tribal jurisdictions and on tribal appointments of defense counsel. 78
FR 27341, May 10, 2013. The comment period closed on August 23, 2013.
LSC received comments from three tribes, one tribal prosecutor, and one
organization representing attorneys practicing in front of tribal
courts. Of the four responding tribal entities, one does not exercise
criminal jurisdiction, one indicated that it was not aware of any
changes that the tribe would be making to its authority to hear and
hand down sentences in criminal cases, one was in the process of
reviewing its criminal laws to determine whether they needed amending
to be consistent with the TLOA and VAWA, and one had received a grant
to begin drafting a criminal code that would comply with TLOA and VAWA.
Both of the tribes that are working on their criminal codes welcomed
the ability of grantees to use LSC funds to represent defendants in all
criminal matters, including domestic violence cases. One tribe invited
LSC's involvement as it develops its domestic violence case policies
and identified direct contracts between itself and LSC grantees as a
way to ensure that it can fulfill its responsibility under TLOA to
provide counsel to defendants in criminal cases. Another stated its
opinion that representation of indigent defendants is hindered by a
lack of funding, and that LSC funds could help provide proper
representation for indigent defendants facing criminal charges in its
tribal court.
The representative organization's comments were substantially
similar to some of the comments made by panelists at the July 22, 2013
Committee meeting. For example, the organization reiterated that LSC's
Native American grant funding is limited and inadequate to meet
existing needs, such that requiring grantees to provide counsel in
criminal proceedings would exacerbate financial pressures. It stated
that the primary mission of LSC Native American grant recipients is to
provide high-quality civil legal services in matters that uniquely
affect tribes, such as ensuring that the rights of tribes and tribal
members guaranteed by the Indian Child Welfare Act are protected. The
organization also reiterated two additional concerns stated by
panelists at the July 22, 2013 Committee meeting. The first was that a
provider's
[[Page 65935]]
representation of a defendant in a domestic violence case would create
a conflict of interest that would prevent the provider from providing
legal assistance to the victim. The second was that requiring
representation of criminal defendants could mean using the limited LSC
Native American funding to represent non-Indian defendants in tribal
criminal proceedings. Finally, the commenter recommended that LSC amend
Part 1613 to be consistent with the TLOA and allow grantees the option
of representing defendants in tribal criminal proceedings, but not
require such representation.
Pursuant to the LSC Rulemaking Protocol, LSC staff prepared a
proposed rule amending Part 1613 with an explanatory rulemaking options
paper. On October 22, 2013, the Board approved the proposed rule for
publication in the Federal Register for notice and comment. A section
by section discussion of the proposed rule is provided below.
III. Authority
The authority is revised to update the provision of the LSC Act
governing representation in criminal proceedings and reflect the change
in authorization made by the Tribal Law and Order Act of 2010.
IV. Proposed Changes
1613.1 Purpose
The Corporation proposes to revise this section to state that LSC
grant recipients may not represent individuals in criminal proceedings
unless authorized by Part 1613. Previously, this section only
recognized that recipients were authorized to provide assistance in
criminal proceedings if the attorney's responsibilities as a member of
the bar required him to provide such assistance. The LSC Act has been
amended twice to authorize criminal representation in tribal
proceedings since the regulation was originally enacted in 1976, and
the Corporation now proposes to amend Part 1613 to be consistent with
those statutory amendments. For these reasons, the Corporation believes
it is necessary to amend this section to recognize that, in addition to
an attorney's professional responsibilities, Federal statutes and
regulations may also authorize an LSC-funded attorney to undertake
criminal representation.
1613.2 Definition
The Corporation proposes to amend the definition of ``criminal
proceeding'' to remove the exclusion of misdemeanors or lesser offenses
in Indian tribal courts from the definition. This change is proposed
for two reasons. First, removing the exclusion of misdemeanors or
lesser offenses within tribal court jurisdiction would bring the rule
into alignment with section 1007(b)(2) of the LSC Act, which authorizes
LSC funds to be used for representation in criminal proceedings before
Indian tribal courts. Second, removing the exclusion makes clear that
criminal proceedings in Indian tribal courts are ``criminal
proceedings'' subject to the provisions in proposed 1613.5.
1613.4 Authorized Representation
The Corporation proposes to revise section 1613.4(a) to allow
recipients to undertake criminal appointments after a determination
that such appointment ``will not impair the recipient's primary
responsibility to provide civil legal services.'' Under the current
rule, recipients must determine that accepting a criminal appointment
will be ``consistent with'' its primary responsibility to provide civil
legal services. The Corporation believes that changing the standard to
impairment of the recipient's primary responsibility to provide civil
legal services will allow recipients to consider the impact a criminal
appointment will have at a more meaningful level because it
contemplates that such appointments may have a measurable impact on a
recipient's financial and human resources.
The existing language in section 1613.4(a) has been the subject of
litigation in several jurisdictions in which trial courts appointed
attorneys at LSC recipients in criminal cases over the Part 1613
objection of the recipients. Courts have overwhelmingly upheld
recipients' declinations of criminal appointments under section
1613.4(a). See, e.g., Rehmann v. Maynard, 376 S.E.2d 169, 172 (W.Va.
Dec. 21, 1988); Central Florida Legal Servs v. Perry, 406 So. 2d 111,
113 (Fla. App. 1981). Courts considering this issue placed considerable
weight on the recipients' determinations that an appointment was not
consistent with their duty to provide civil legal services. See, e.g.,
Rehmann, 376 S.E.2d at 173 (``We conclude . . . that a circuit judge is
prohibited by 42 U.S.C.S. 2996f(b)(2) (1974) and 45 CFR 1613.4 (1978)
from appointing an attorney employed by a local legal services program
that receives funds from the federal Legal Services Corporation to
represent an indigent criminal defendant, where the local legal
services program has made a formal policy determination that such
criminal representation is inconsistent with its primary responsibility
to provide legal assistance to eligible clients in civil matters.'');
Central Florida Legal Servs, 406 So. 2d at 113; Central Florida Legal
Servs. v. Eastmoore, 517 F.Supp. 497, 500 (M.D. Fla. 1981) (``[T]he
CFLS attorneys may not represent criminal defendants in light of the
CFLS determination that it does not have sufficient resources to devote
to a criminal proceeding.''). Because the proposed change to section
1613.4(a) does not affect a recipient's discretion to determine whether
a particular court appointment will impair its ability to provide
quality civil legal services, the Corporation believes that the
precedents discussed above should continue to apply.
1613.5 Criminal Representation in Indian Tribal Courts
The Corporation proposes to add a new section 1613.5 to address
representation in criminal cases before Indian tribal courts and the
circumstances under which recipients may accept a tribal court
appointment to represent a criminal defendant. Subsection (a)
reiterates the statutory authorization for LSC funds to be used for
representation of a person charged with an offense in an Indian tribal
court. Subsection (b) is similar to section 1613.4(a) in that it allows
recipients to accept court appointments when the recipient determines
that the appointment will not impair the recipient's primary
responsibility to provide legal assistance to eligible clients in civil
matters. The Corporation has incorporated the revised language from
section 1613.4(a) into section 1613.5(b) to make clear that, consistent
with the discussion of this language and related court precedents in
section 1613.4 above, the recipient remains the final arbiter of
whether accepting a criminal appointment from a tribal court will
impair the recipient's responsibility to provide legal assistance to
eligible clients in civil proceedings.
Section 234 of the TLOA requires tribal courts exercising the
expanded sentencing authority to provide indigent defendants with the
assistance of a licensed attorney ``at the expense of the tribal
government.'' In conjunction with the TLOA's amendment to the LSC Act
authorizing the use of LSC funds for representation in any criminal
proceeding in tribal court, this provision may lead to increased
interest on the part of tribal courts to appoint recipient attorneys to
serve as defense counsel. Indeed, in response to the RFI, two tribes
commented that they welcome the increased ability of LSC recipients to
use LSC funds to serve as defense counsel. Because the provision
[[Page 65936]]
requiring that tribes provide defense counsel at the tribes' expense
and the provision authorizing LSC recipients to use LSC funds to
provide criminal representation are not linked in the TLOA, it is
unclear whether tribal courts will reimburse LSC recipients for
providing representation pursuant to a tribal court appointment.
Proposed section 1613.5(b) allows a recipient to consider whether
accepting an appointment from an Indian tribal court will impair the
recipient's responsibility to provide civil legal assistance. A
recipient may evaluate many factors in determining whether impairment
will occur, including but not limited to the recipient's civil legal
workload, the recipient's program priorities, the recipient's existing
expertise in tribal criminal law, the recipient's capacity to
investigate and defend a criminal case competently, the frequency and
number of proceedings in the case, and the distance to the court where
the proceedings will take place. A recipient may also consider whether,
and to what extent, the tribal court will compensate the recipient for
accepting the appointment. The fact that a tribal court will or will
not compensate the recipient may or may not be dispositive of whether
the appointment will impair the recipient's responsibility to provide
legal assistance in civil cases. It is within the recipient's
discretion to determine what factors to consider and the weight to be
given to each factor when deciding whether to accept a criminal
appointment.
List of Subjects in 45 CFR Part 1613
Crime, Grant programs--law, Legal services, Tribal.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, and under the authority of
42 U.S.C. 2996g(e), the Legal Services Corporation proposes to amend 45
CFR Part 1613 as follows:
PART 1613--RESTRICTIONS ON LEGAL ASSISTANCE WITH RESPECT TO
CRIMINAL PROCEEDINGS
0
1. The authority citation for Part 1613 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 234(d), Pub. L. 111-211, 124. Stat. 2282; 42
U.S.C. 2996f(b)(2).
0
2. Revise Sec. 1613.1 to read as follows:
Sec. 1613.1 Purpose.
This part is designed to ensure that Corporation funds will not be
used to provide legal assistance with respect to criminal proceedings
unless such assistance is authorized by this part.
0
3. Revise Sec. 1613.2 to read as follows:
Sec. 1613.2 Definition.
Criminal proceeding means the adversary judicial process prosecuted
by a public officer and initiated by a formal complaint, information,
or indictment charging a person with an offense denominated
``criminal'' by applicable law and punishable by death, imprisonment,
or a jail sentence.
0
4. Revise Sec. 1613.4(a) to read as follows:
Sec. 1613.4 Authorized representation.
* * * * *
(a) Pursuant to a court appointment made under a statute or a court
rule of equal applicability to all attorneys in the jurisdiction, if
authorized by the recipient after a determination that acceptance of
the appointment would not impair the recipient's primary responsibility
to provide legal assistance to eligible clients in civil matters.
* * * * *
0
5. Add Sec. 1613.5 to read as follows:
Sec. 1613.5 Criminal representation in Indian tribal courts.
(a) Legal assistance may be provided with Corporation funds to a
person charged with a criminal offense in an Indian tribal court who is
otherwise eligible.
(b) Legal assistance may be provided in a criminal proceeding in an
Indian tribal court pursuant to a court appointment only if the
appointment is made under a statute or a court rule or practice of
equal applicability to all attorneys in the jurisdiction, and is
authorized by the recipient after a determination that acceptance of
the appointment would not impair the recipient's primary responsibility
to provide legal assistance to eligible clients in civil matters.
Dated: October 29, 2013.
Atitaya C. Rok,
Staff Attorney.
[FR Doc. 2013-26102 Filed 11-1-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7050-01-P