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Tell it to the Judge – NY's Top Jurist on a Mission

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Monday, October 4, 2010   

ALBANY, N.Y. - Giving new meaning to the term "judicial activism," the chief judge of New York state is heading an unprecedented effort to help those who can't afford to hire a lawyer in civil cases. Judge Jonathan Lippman is holding hearings around the state to gather support for a first-ever request that the legislature approve a judiciary budget including money specifically for legal services for families and individuals facing what are often critical courtroom challenges.

"I mean, what could be more important than the roof over people's heads? You look at all the foreclosures, the evictions, the debt-collection cases, all of the things fostered by this terrible economy we have today."

The judge says two million litigants appear in New York civil courts each year without a lawyer. After the remaining hearings - in Albany and Brooklyn - he'll submit a report to the legislature, along with the judiciary budget request.

Anne Erickson, who attended the initial hearing in Rochester, runs the Empire Justice Center, a public-interest law firm advocating social and economic justice. She says the testimony was often moving.

"One of the women that testified in Rochester, she and her husband are actually in the - I think it was the Army or the Reserves - and she said, 'Here I am, serving my country. I'm about to lose my home because of this predatory lending, and yet I don't have anyone to stand up for me.'"

Judge Lippman, whose effort is earning praise in judicial circles around the country, says he'll ready a report on the hearings for presentation to the legislature on December 1.

"I believe it will be the most comprehensive report in the country ever done on the unmet civil legal service needs in New York. And we will be putting a recommendation to the legislature and a request for the dollars necessary to close the gap in civil legal services."

Aside from being the right thing to do, he says, making civil legal services more widely available saves money in the long run because it can shorten litigation and reduce the social services needed when indigent defendants lose cases and wind up in shelters and foster homes.




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