Kansas attorneys go five months unpaid

Kansas federal attorneys have gone five months without pay, sparking a constitutional crisis. Contractors such as expert witnesses, mental health providers and interpreters have also gone unpaid.

By

State News

November 20, 2025 - 2:35 PM

Melody Brannon, the public defender for the state of Kansas, warns of a worse 2026 if Congress continues to underfund her agency, which includes a group private attorneys who went without pay for five months. Photo by Thad Allton for Kansas Reflector

TOPEKA — For nearly 20 weeks, certain lawyers, paralegals, psychologists, interpreters, court reporters and investigators were not paid.

Federal funding for a group of criminal justice professionals expired in early July, and the government promised to reimburse them in October, but the longest shutdown in U.S. history delayed that promise.

As of Nov. 14, the government racked up a $682,598 bill owed to appointed federal defense attorneys, experts and service providers in Kansas alone. It is a fraction of the $70 million in unpaid vouchers across the country.

THE DELAYED payments are a symptom of years of inadequate funding, resulting in understaffed public defender offices, financially strained panel attorneys and apprehension at the integrity of constitutional rights for people charged with federal crimes.

It is a crisis that isn’t solely financial. It is constitutional, said Dionne Scherff, a criminal defense attorney and the Kansas representative on the Criminal Justice Act panel, which is made up of private attorneys who take on indigent defense cases when federal public defenders cannot.

Scherff is one of roughly 60 attorneys who are appointed to federal criminal cases in Topeka, Kansas City and Wichita if public defenders can’t take on additional caseloads or run into conflicts. Without funding, critical service providers such as interpreters and court reporters have continued to work without pay, as have attorneys.

ONE KANSAS attorney drew from a personal line of credit and retirement funds to keep a law office open and pay living expenses, according to a Sept. 10 letter to the Kansas congressional delegation.

“The smart economical and constitutional thing to do would be to fund it on the front end,” Scherff said.

In Congress’ legislation to end the shutdown, it carved out nearly $1.6 million for federal public defenders. That was about $200 million below defenders’ request, but it will make available the $70 million owed in back pay to panel attorneys. Payments are being processed and are expected to land in attorneys’ and service providers’ bank accounts this week.

However, the stopgap measure doesn’t carry public defenders and panel attorneys through the end of the fiscal year next October. It gets them to Jan. 30.

THE PAYMENT freeze is the longest since 2013, when panel attorneys and service providers went five weeks without pay. It caused constitutional violations and cracks in the criminal justice system.

In California, a federal judge tossed out a criminal case, finding that the defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel had been violated.

“The right to effective assistance of counsel is a bedrock principle of this country and is indisputably necessary for the operation of a fair criminal justice system,” said Judge John Mendez of the Eastern District of California in a Nov. 12 ruling.

The case’s defendant was indicted last year on one count of methamphetamine distribution. He argued the lack of funding created an “untenable conflict between counsel’s professional obligations and their basic economic survival.” A jury trial was scheduled for January.

The Sixth Amendment doesn’t just articulate assistance of counsel but “effective assistance of counsel,” Mendez wrote.

The appropriate way to remedy “this chronic constitutional violation,” he said, was to dismiss the defendant’s indictment.

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