Court appoints dedicated legal aid boss

| 11/08/2017 | 15 Comments
Cayman News Service

Stacy Parke

(CNS): Decisions about who will receive legal aid for their court cases will now be decided by a new director. Formerly a senior associate with a local law firm and a legal aid attorney since 2004, Stacy Parke began her new job at Judicial Administration Monday. With a budget in excess of $2.6 million per year, most of which goes to defend criminal cases, Parke will be responsible for developing, administering and managing the new Legal Aid Office, which was established as a full-fledged unit under the Legal Aid Law, 2015, and means testing those seeking cash for their legal needs.

Parke beat out five local people who were shortlisted for the new position. Chief Justice Anthony Smellie welcomed her appointment and said she was an experienced practitioner, especially on the crucially important family side, and would “doubtless bring to bear a pragmatic but fair and balanced approached to the administration of legal aid, in keeping with the new regime of the 2015 law”.

He pointed to the importance of the decision making the director will face as she exercises an administrative and quasi-judicial role instead of judges of the Grand Court, as has been the case until now. Appeals against the director’s decisions may still be heard by judges but a new legal aid chief should streamline the functions and make the process more transparent, Smellie stated.

The chief justice urged legal aid practitioners “to support the director in the carrying out her important functions to ensure that our jurisdiction continues to provide a fair and effective legal aid programme”.

Judicial Administrator Suzanne Bothwell said she was pleased to have Parke join Judicial Administration as the first director of Legal Aid.

“As her former colleague at the Bar, I can say that Ms Parke has a very strong local litigation background and a solid reputation amongst her peers and the local community, which she has served for some 15 years as a legal practitioner,” Bothwell said. “Her existing familiarity with the Legal Aid system and wide scope of litigation expertise will allow her to apply the Legal Aid Law as intended.”

She said the job will require balancing genuine need for the dispensation of legal aid funds where it is in the public interest to do so, and that Parke will have to “carefully assess, monitor and safeguard expenditure of the fund”, which will include providing the Legal Aid Office with a real opportunity to implement the appropriate means testing provided in the 2015 law.

The new director will also work with local law students by starting the work on creating a Legal Aid Clinic. The aim is to provide greater access to justice for citizens as well as, through the provision of free advice through a volunteer clinic, allow law students to gain practical experience and the opportunity to shadow actual legal aid cases with local legal aid attorneys.

“We look forward to working with existing volunteer stakeholders, the Truman Bodden Law School and the local bar to achieve these goals,” Bothwell said. “The Legal Aid Office will now continue to operate out of the main court-house but in 2018 will move to its new home at Town Centre, adjacent to the court-house.”

Parke joins the courts from Brooks and Brooks and has been on the legal aid roster from 2004. She is a volunteer with Big Brothers Big Sisters, the Legal Befrienders Clinic and a member of Rotary Sunrise.

Excited by the new challenge, she said she was looking forward to working with law students to establish a full-fledged Legal Aid Clinic.

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Category: Courts, Crime

Comments (15)

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  1. Anonymous says:

    hopefully independent decisions and not just a yes person ?!??

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  2. Anonymous says:

    Another great hire in the civil service.

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  3. Anonymous says:

    she gotta be better than what we presently have? a step in right direction and independence from judiciary and politics…great going!☺?

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  4. Anonymous says:

    Now, can something be done to stop money being wasted on hopeless appeals for locals?

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    • Anonymous says:

      Look at tall those expatriates we give legal aid to and let the locals suffer. Your comment is typical of CNS to post without reading. Pure racist.

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      • Anonymous says:

        Agreed!!

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      • Anonymous says:

        No, the post has strong foundations in what happens. Every Court of Appeal sitting is crammed with locals filing criminal appeals when the vast majority of them are utterly hopeless.

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    • Anonymous says:

      Either you are truly ignorant, or the country and legal system you come from has no right to appeal. To address your hosts in this country we call the Cayman Islands “locals” is not only disrespectful, but is also clearly discrimination toward us. For your enlightment and future reference we are “Caymanians” a strong, resilient people, steeped in a rich history that others like you do not appreciate and now want to subsume into your own culture. Please take note that our Caymankind approach does not include tolerance for such abuse.

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  5. Barb Anley says:

    Congratulations Stacy, well deserved and you will be well suited to the new position.

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  6. Anonymous says:

    It pays to do the crime.

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  7. Anonymous says:

    And it will help free up the judges to try cases faster.

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  8. Anonymous says:

    Glad it wasn’t handed over to someone who can’t tell the difference between legal and political.

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