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What the Public Defender does
Florida Statute 27.51
defines the duties of public defender as:
The public defender shall represent, without additional
compensation, any person who is determined by the court to be indigent as provided in s.
27.52 and who is:
- Under arrest for, or is charged with, a felony;
- Under arrest for, or is charged with, a misdemeanor, a
violation of chapter 316 which is punishable by imprisonment, criminal contempt, or a
violation of a municipal or county ordinance in the county court, unless the court, prior
to trial, files in the cause an order of no imprisonment which states that the defendant
will not be imprisoned if he or she is convicted;
- Alleged to be a delinquent child pursuant to a petition
filed before a circuit court; or
- Sought by petition filed in such court to be involuntarily
placed as a mentally ill person or sexually violent predator or involuntarily admitted to
residential services as a person with developmental disabilities. However, a public
defender does not have the authority to represent any person who is a plaintiff in a civil
action brought under the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure, the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure, or the federal statutes, or who is a petitioner in an administrative proceeding
challenging a rule under chapter 120, unless specifically authorized by statute.
The court may not appoint the public defender to represent,
even on a temporary basis, any person who is not indigent. The court, however, may appoint
private counsel in capital cases as provided in s. 925.035.
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Volusia County, Florida.
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