Judge fines San Francisco public defender after finding him in contempt
for refusing new cases
[March 25, 2026]
By OLGA R. RODRIGUEZ
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A judge has fined San Francisco’s public defender
$26,000 for ignoring a January order to stop rejecting cases — a pattern
that critics say is straining the city's justice system.
Public Defender Mano Raju began declining to represent some defendants
in new felony and misdemeanor cases last May, citing a crushing workload
driven by increased prosecutions and insufficient staffing. He wants
money for more attorneys or for the court to reject some of cases
brought by District Attorney Brooke Jenkins.
“Every member of my team could cut their workload in half, and they
would still have more than a full-time job,” Raju told The Associated
Press.
San Francisco Superior Court Judge Harry Dorfman ordered Raju in January
to stop declining cases, but Raju refused and Dorfman this month found
him in contempt. On Tuesday, he fined him $1,000 for each of the initial
26 cases he rejected since that order and set another hearing in April
to add more fines. Raju said he plans to appeal and keep declining some
new cases.
Public defenders and staff from across California packed into the
courtroom in support of Raju. He told the judge the heavy workload
affects the quality of representation his office can provide, which
violates the human rights of defendants and negatively impacts his
staff.
“People and their families get hurt when we can't provide the
representation we should and our staff suffers the residual trauma,” he
said.
The move puts Raju, a progressive and the only elected public defender
in California, at odds with Jenkins, who said his actions are disrupting
the justice system and could lead to violent defendants being released
due to lack of legal representation.
“Their objective is to disrupt the system, it’s to cause chaos, it is to
bottleneck the courthouse,” Jenkins said.

Too few public defenders amid public safety push
Courts from Oregon to Massachusetts have been struggling with too few
public defenders for years, with Oregon's Supreme Court issuing a
February ruling that will result in the dismissal of more than 1,400
cases due to a lack of timely representation. But the public spat
between Raju, the district attorney and a judge is unusually contentious
and political.
It follows years of debate in San Francisco over public safety. Mayor
Daniel Lurie was elected in 2024 on a promise to restore the city’s
battered image after years of negative national attention, and he's
pledged to clean up city streets. His election came after voters in 2022
recalled prosecutor Chesa Boudin over frustrations about what they saw
as his permissive approach to street crime. Jenkins replaced him and has
ramped up prosecutions — she filed 8,000 felony and misdemeanor cases
last year, compared to about 5,600 filed in 2021.
Raju is using disruption as leverage during a tough budget fight and not
presenting a genuine dispute over public safety policy, said Jason
McDaniel, a San Francisco State University political science professor
who is writing a book about San Francisco politics. Lurie is dealing
with a $400 million budget deficit.
“If this really were a policy fight rather than a fight for resources,
that would be something that I think voters would really get upset about
because more progressive positions on law enforcement have received a
lot of pushback from the majority of voters in San Francisco," McDaniel
said.
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San Francisco Public Defender Mano Raju speaks outside of a
courtroom in San Francisco, Tuesday, March 24, 2026. (AP Photo/Jeff
Chiu)

A surge in low-level crime prosecutions
San Francisco’s violent crime rates are among the lowest in recent
years, but drug-related crimes, petty theft and other low-level
offenses remain prevalent. Jenkins said prosecution rates have
returned to pre-pandemic levels because unlike her predecessor, she
is enforcing every law.
A surge in prosecutions of low-level crimes, coupled with the
growing volume of digital and video evidence to review, are driving
an unsustainable workload, Raju said. He accused Jenkins of
“clogging up the courts” and said his attorneys are working extreme
hours, skipping vacations and experiencing serious health impacts
due to overwhelming workloads.
Raju pointed to a 2023 national study on public defender workload
conducted by the RAND Corporation that found that excessive
workloads violate ethics rules and cause harm to defendants. He said
his attorneys average 60 felony cases and 135 misdemeanor cases at a
time, well above the up to 40 felony and 80 misdemeanor cases
recommended in a 2025 study by the Deason Criminal Justice Reform
Center at Southern Methodist University.
Heavy workloads among public defenders often lead to defendants
waiting longer than necessary to resolve their cases, he said. He
said that so far no one has been left without legal representation
in San Francisco because his office coordinates with city-contracted
private attorneys. The Bar Association of San Francisco, which has
stepped in to represent some defendants, told the judge its
attorneys are now at capacity and cannot accept new clients.
Judge rejects claims of heavy workload
Dorfman determined Raju's office has enough staff to handle the
workload and noted some supervising public defenders could take more
cases. He also said the Public Defender’s Office should stop
assigning two attorneys to some felony cases, which Raju said is
done sometimes for training purposes.
The studies suggesting limits to public defense caseload referenced
by Raju are worthy of consideration, but “they are not California
law,,” Dorfman wrote in his January ruling.
He said in court Tuesday that while he found Raju has acted in good
faith before the court, “that does not mean that I’m going to
retreat or stay a court order.”
“The court is not a bystander in this,” he said. “The law compels
the court to appoint a public defender when necessary.”
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