2025 Session Last amended: 2012 session

§ 611.17 — Financial Inquiry; Statements; Co-payment; Standards for District Public Defense Eligibility

Plain-Language Summary

If you are charged with a crime and cannot afford a lawyer, you may qualify for a free public defender. You are eligible if you receive government benefits or if the court finds you cannot afford to hire a private attorney. There is a $75 co-payment after the case is finished, but it can be reduced or waived.

Practical Notes
When this applies: When a person is charged with a crime and requests a court-appointed public defender. Who this affects: Any criminal defendant in Minnesota who cannot afford to hire a private attorney. Key points: You qualify for a public defender if you receive means-tested government benefits or if the court determines you cannot afford private counsel. You must fill out a financial statement under oath and keep it updated throughout the case. Refusing to fill out the form means you give up the right to a public defender. The court, not the public defender, decides whether you qualify. After the case ends, there is a $75 co-payment, but the court can reduce or waive it. The co-payment cannot be made a condition of probation. The court cannot appoint a public defender as advisory or standby counsel.