Plea deals have unbalanced Oklahoma’s justice system

Anna Rouw is an OK Policy summer intern. She recently graduated from the University of Tulsa.

One of the most basic rights for Americans accused of a crime is the right to a fair trial before a jury. However, the vast majority of criminal convictions – 90 to 95 percent – don’t happen at trial. Instead, they’re the result of a guilty plea, a deal negotiated by prosecutors and defense attorneys absent a trial. Plea deals allow defendants to avoid the uncertainty of a months-long trial, and in exchange for a guilty plea, prosecutors generally agree to reduced charges or more lenient sentences. Plea deals are the norm for a number of reasons, but the justice system’s dependence on them is a serious problem. When nearly all criminal cases are resolved outside of the courtroom, the dangers include racially biased sentences, convicting innocent defendants, and a criminal justice system with little transparency or accountability.

What are plea deals?

Plea deals are agreements between prosecutors and defense attorneys. In a plea deal, the defendant pleads guilty to a crime in exchange for a more lenient sentence than what the prosecutor would seek if the case went to trial. For defendants, plea deals offer the chance for a speedy resolution to their case. Going to trial takes a huge amount of time and resources that most defendants don’t have. At a jury trial, a defendant has the chance to be acquitted, but if he or she is convicted, the punishment is often severe. For example, a defendant could be charged with first degree burglary and facing 7-20 years imprisonment. A plea deal could offer the chance to reduce the charge to second degree burglary with only 5 years imprisonment.

And while they offer advantages to defendants, plea deals are also necessary for our overburdened criminal justice system. Due to underfunding, the Oklahoma Indigent Defense System has been on the brink of a constitutional crisis in recent years, and attorneys have caseloads that are over two and a half times higher than national standards. District Attorneys have struggled to keep their offices afloat as state revenues have dried up. Bringing more cases to trial simply isn’t feasible in this type of environment.

Plea deals tip the scales in favor of prosecutors

The reliance of the justice system on plea deals gives prosecutors a great deal of power in negotiating the resolution of criminal cases. Many defendants cannot afford bail or pay a bondsman to be released before their case is resolved, so many defendants see plea deals as a way to get out of jail as soon as possible. With this leverage, prosecutors can press for incarceration or supervision with little resistance from defendants. Desperate to get back to their families, many defendants take the deal. This power imbalance may even influence an innocent defendant to plead guilty merely because they lack the resources to undergo a lengthy trial process.

Nearly 80 percent of jail inmates are held in custody, not because they have been convicted, but because they are waiting to resolve their case. This is despite the fact that only about 9 in 10 are neither a threat to public safety nor a flight risk. In Tulsa County, the pretrial detention rate has exceeded the growth in its overall incarceration rate for the past three decades. With more people stuck in jail before their trials, prosecutors have more leverage: plea deals offer the chance to return to normal life.

Relying on plea deals also reinforces inequalities throughout the justice system by favoring well-off and well-connected defendants. One study found that white defendants had a significantly higher chance of receiving a reduced charge in a plea deal than black defendants. Another found more favorable plea deals for white and Asian-American defendants than for Latino and African-American defendants.

These trends reflect larger problems of power imbalance within the justice system. Unsurprisingly, plea deals are influenced not only by evidence and seriousness of offense, but also by contextual factors. Personal relationships with judges, for instance, tip the scales further for people with money and connections.

Judges and lawmakers can take steps to reduce the harms of plea deals

Judges could put plea negotiations on more even ground by releasing more people who can’t afford bail through nonmonetary release, such as recognizance bonds, taking away the pressure for defendants to take the first deal they’re offered. Some Oklahoma counties have already begun to widen the use of nonmonetary release resulting in fewer people in jail. In one study, pretrial releases were found to reduce defendants’ probability of pleading guilty by 12 percent.

Another way to reduce plea deals is to make trials more common. Because jury trials are extremely resource-intensive, judges in other states have increased the use of a less onerous alternative called bench trials. Bench trials allow both prosecutors and defenders to make their cases before a judge without a jury. This practice has reduced the number of defendants pleading guilty and allowed them to present evidence that may avoid a conviction or reduce their sentence. North Carolina approved bench trials in 2014, and in 2016, nearly two in three felony cases were resolved at a bench trial.

Increasing funding to the Oklahoma Indigent Defense System would also give defendants more power. The Indigent Defense System provides public defenders to poor defendants in all counties except Tulsa and Oklahoma Counties, and has received less funding despite growing caseloads over the last two decades. Similarly, divestment from Oklahoma’s district courts has reduced the capacity of courts to hear more trials. Increasing funding for both of these critical institutions would allow public defenders to prepare more cases for trial and give courts the resources to accommodate them.

There are other steps lawmakers can take to reduce the impact of plea deals. These include reducing mandatory minimum sentencing and reducing felony charges to misdemeanors. Oklahoma has already begun to reduce sentences for many crimes, such as reducing minimum sentencing for drug offenders and reclassifying simple drug possession as a misdemeanor. However, there is still a long way to go. Oklahoma’s criminal statutes contain numerous mandatory minimum sentences, such as a minimum of 7 years for first-degree forgery and a minimum of 3 years for automobile theft.

Justice requires a fair hearing for everyone accused of a crime

Scarce resources and large caseloads mean that plea deals will continue to be the norm in Oklahoma’s criminal justice system for the foreseeable future. However, district judges and state legislators have options to curb the most problematic elements of plea deals. Increasing pretrial release through bail reform, expanding the use of bench trials, investing more resources in our justice institutions, and reducing sentencing laws could help to level the playing field between prosecutors and defense attorneys. It’s true that these measures would require increased effort and innovation. But judges and lawmakers should embrace them as steps to prioritize justice over convenience.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Anna Rouw was a criminal justice policy intern with OK Policy. She graduated from the University of Tulsa and is now a research analyst with the Oklahoma House of Representatives.

6 thoughts on “Plea deals have unbalanced Oklahoma’s justice system

  1. I just spoke to my son and reading this article justifies what he experienced. He says he was taken to court his public defender came and told him what they are offering him for his case. He never stepped foot in the courtroom,Which I see as unconstitutional as defendants are not aware of anything being discussed or presented who’s to say they are discussing his case I feel this is so wrong and this article justifies it all. Come on public defenders I know you’re not getting paid enough but you took an oath please do your job and defend your client.

  2. Well my son’s court appointed lawyer tried to scare him with LIFE in prison if he went to Trial. So he would take their so called Plea Deal. I talked him into Trial.Simply because they had no evidence that put him at the atual crime. And The Plea’s only include testifying against another. Still was denied a Fair Trial. And simply because his lawyer didn’t object to anything. He lost his Appeal also. Now has a Class A write up for something he didn’t do, but not given a chance to defend himself on that either. And being denied proper medical treatment. Simply because his injury happened before he went to prison. So they are telling him there’s nothing they can do. He has to wait til he gets home to fix his shoulders that are hanging by a thread.Is any of this Justice?

  3. My brother was offered a 5 year plea deal. Because he was innocent, he chose to go to trial. He wasn’t even in the house where a supposedly attempted robbery happened. He was found guilty by the jury in Cleveland County and sentenced to 25 years! Many innocent people are found guilty by a jury. This is why so many accept a plea deal. Winning a jury trial is slim to none! The DAs are dirty. How can you go from being offered 5 years to 25? That should be against the law.

  4. Please don’t ever try to get a good deal on legal representation. Find the best and you’ll get what you pay for. The court appointed attorneys have no time and too many cases. They aren’t physically capable.

  5. My husband has a public defender here in Wagoner co..
    The first time he met,the public defender, he asked her is there any way I can prove I am innocent, she looked at him and then at the paper and said not with these changes. A total of 4 mins. Our previous lawyer said that the public defender and the DA have a agreement, so she don’t have to go to trial. He gives her the good deals, and she will not go to trial. I sat in court one day waiting on my husband’s case called and all the lawyer’s in this court room was all jokes and what are you doing this weekend?, And not one person wanted to go to trial, all took a plea deal.

  6. If you do have resources for a good attorney and you plan on proving your innocence then make sure you get a good attorney. Never go with a court appointed attorney. They are part of the injustice court system and will never fight in what you believe in. Always go with the jury trial. Judges are part of the problem.
    The DA hates to loose at jury trial so if you can endure the pressure and you feel you have proof to your innocence and along with their lack of evidence then fight the good fight. I’ve been dealing with 8 charges against both my wife and I. We have won 7 of them with the state dismissing the case with court cost going to state. We have one more and we will fight to the end. People should support people for this cause. Never turn a blind eye from someone in need.

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