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Court Decisions After Strickland v. Washington: The Evolution of Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Requirements in Federal and State Courts
Morrison, Mackenzie
Morrison, Mackenzie
Abstract
Description
The landmark case of Gideon v. Wainwright (1963) established the right to assistance of counsel for all indigent defendants. However, this did not guarantee a right to effective assistance of counsel. An attorney must be more than a warm body standing next to a defendant. Strickland v. Washington (1984) established that not only do defendants have a right to assistance of counsel, but they must also have effective assistance. The Strickland decision established a two-part requirement in order for a defendant or petitioner to show ineffective assistance. After Strickland, the federal government continued to make decisions based off of these requirements, sometimes expanding and sometimes contracting the requirement, however, never steering too far from the Strickland test. States such as Wyoming and Colorado have continued to uphold the Strickland test. Though, states like New York and Hawaii viewed the requirement as too high, in turn these states lowered the bar for the ineffective assistance of counsel requirement. Few states have changed from Strickland indicating that the standards are fair, but states that have changed take a hard stance that the vindication of the 6th Amendment's right to counsel has not been vindicated because the standards to show ineffective assistance are too high, resulting in only extreme cases finding ineffective assistance of counsel.
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University of Wyoming. Libraries
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Keywords
ineffective assistance of counsel,Sixth Amendment,right to counsel,Law