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Report: Trial court funding system creates conflict of interest in Michigan courtrooms

Bill Ledbetter
/
Flickr - http://j.mp/1SPGCl0

Listen to Stateside's conversation.

A final report released Thursday by the Michigan Trial Court Funding Commission calls Michigan's court funding system "broken."

The report finds criminal defendants are charged more than 418 million dollars in fines and fees each year.

Ingham County District Judge Tom Boyd is with the commission. He says that courts relying on these fines and fees to operate may influence a judge's decision in the courtroom.

“Can the judge not only be fair, but appear to be fair when the decision is related to the amount of money that the court will have to operate?” Boyd said.

Boyd says having the state accept more responsibility for court funding, as well as having the state take over collection of debt to the courts, could be solutions to the problem.

“It would make our courts more fair, it would make our jails less overcrowded. It would be a much wiser way to spend local revenue,” he said.

The report finds that more than 26% of trial court budgets are generated by issuing fines and fees.

Listen to Boyd’s full conversation with Stateside above.

Copyright 2019 Michigan Radio

Paulette is a blogger for Michigan Radio's State of Opportunity project, which looks at kids from low-income families and what it takes to get them ahead. She previously interned as a reporter in the Michigan Radio newsroom.
Paulette Parker
Paulette is a junior at Eastern Michigan University, majoring in media studies and journalism. She holds an Associate degree in Journalism from Washtenaw Community College, where she served as news editor of the student publication, The Washtenaw Voice.