Title 34 › Subtitle Subtitle VI— - Other Crime Control and Law Enforcement Matters › Chapter CHAPTER 603— - IMPROVING THE QUALITY OF REPRESENTATION IN STATE CAPITAL CASES › § 60301
The Attorney General must give grants to States to make legal help better for people who cannot afford a lawyer in death-penalty cases. "Legal representation" means lawyers and the investigative, expert, and other services needed for a proper defense. The money must help create or improve a system that provides competent help for: people charged with crimes that can carry the death penalty; people already sentenced to death who ask for appeals or other relief in State court; and people sentenced to death who ask the U.S. Supreme Court to review their case. The grants cannot pay for lawyers in specific individual cases. At least 75 percent of the grant money must go to help people charged with capital crimes, and no more than 25 percent may go to help those seeking State post-conviction relief. The Attorney General can waive that split for good cause. An effective system must let one of three kinds of groups appoint qualified lawyers: a public defender program (staff or private lawyers), a State entity created by law or the State’s highest criminal court made up of capital experts (not current prosecutors), or a judge-appointment process that was in place before October 30, 2004 and uses a roster. The system must set lawyer qualifications, keep a roster, provide two lawyers (or give the judge up to two pairs to choose from), offer specialized training, watch lawyer performance, and remove lawyers who give poor or unethical representation, fail required training, or who were sanctioned for ethics problems in the past 5 years. The system must also make sure defense teams and outside experts are paid: in States using the old judge-appointment law follow that law; otherwise public defenders get pay comparable to local prosecutors, appointed lawyers get paid for actual hours at a reasonable local rate, non-lawyer team members get pay that matches their special skills, and reasonable expenses are reimbursed.
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Citation
34 U.S.C. § 60301
Title 34 — Navy
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73