PSJD News Digest – March 27, 2026
Sam Halpert, NALP Director of Public Service Initiatives

Hi Interested Public,
Welcome to the end of another week. Big stories related to student loans and access to justice this week–particularly a noteworthy contempt order against San Francisco’s Public Defender as he refuses to represent more defendants than he believes his office is equipped to competently assist. Solidarity,
Sam
Editor’s Choice(s)
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Public Interest Stipends Open Latest Front in Law Firms’ Competition for Summer Associates (Law.com; 25 Mar 2026)
Federal Restructuring & Funding
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Judiciary Office Buyouts Lead to ‘Critical’ Staffing Shortages (Bloomberg Law; 25 Mar 2026)
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DOJ guts program helping immigrants receive affordable legal representation (ABA Journal; 25 Mar 2026)
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Judge appoints new US attorney for New Jersey after Habba, other officials were disqualified (The Canadian Press; 23 Mar 2026)
Civil Society
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Attorneys, activists seek special prosecutor to investigate ICE conduct (NBC 5 Chicago; 24 Mar 2026)
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‘All Hands on Deck’: Lawyers Mobilize to Help Free Detainees (Bloomberg Law; 24 Mar 2026)
“Jenkins is among scores of attorneys answering the call. Organizations have sprung up to train lawyers in immigration habeas claims—an uncommon practice until recently—and public defenders are increasingly taking on cases that would have been rare for them only 12 months ago. There are more than 22,000 active habeas cases pending nationwide, according to habeasdockets.org, a volunteer-run tracking group. And organizations working to file these petitions have been overwhelmingly successful.”
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U of A[Z] won’t stop ICE recruitment at law college as students complain (Tucson.com; 20 Mar 2026)
“University of Arizona students and organizations are urging the law school to stop ICE recruitment, contending the agency’s actions in Minneapolis and elsewhere show disregard for the rule of law and constitutional provisions that law students are taught to uphold. But university officials responded that to bar ICE recruitment would be a political decision that violates free speech. The UA also says it doesn’t limit employment opportunities for students.”
Student Debt & Other Student Concerns
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‘Frustration, anger, confusion’: Trump administration leaves millions without clear path to paying off student loans (The Guardian; 21 Mar 2026)
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What happens to your student loans now that the SAVE plan is dead? (Fast Company; 21 Mar 2026)
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Kansas hopes to lure law students to rural areas by offering to pay part of their tuition (Kansas Reflector; 25 Mar 2026)
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WashU Law launches private supplemental loan program for J.D. students (National Jurist; 20 Mar 2026)
“Washington University School of Law is the latest law school to introduce a private supplemental loan program aimed at helping students bridge gaps after exhausting federal aid. The private, supplemental loan program available to incoming J.D. students who are U.S. citizens and have exhausted all federal loan options. Eligible students may borrow up to $25,000 per year, subject to the cost of attendance.”
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Cancel student debt in exchange for first time buyer equity, housebuilders urge government (MSN; 24 Mar 2026)
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Is the Department of Education closer to shutting down after latest move? (Baltimore Sun; 25 Mar 2026)
“Called the “Federal Student Assistance Partnership,” the agreement will address what officials call “mismanagement” and collect defaulted federal loan debt. It involves three phases: * The first phase is focused on collecting defaulted student loans that total roughly $180 million. * The second phase will service non-defaulted student loans. * The third phase potentially has the Treasury Department manage federal student aid.”
Conflicts Over Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility
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[Ed Note: I also refer readers out to NALP’s Weekly Industry News Digest, which has separate coverage of this topic]
Access to Justice
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State Prosecutors Sue for Evidence in Shootings by Immigration Agents (New York Times; 24 Mar 2026)
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Nebraska cases highlight legal morass from ICE detention (Nebraska Examiner; 25 Mar 2026)
“[A] panel on the appeals court decided 2-1 that federal law doesn’t require a shot at bond for undocumented immigrants, even if they have lived inside the country for years without a criminal record….At issue is a federal policy issued last summer, and backed by the Board of Immigration Appeals, which called for mandatory detention of nearly all undocumented immigrants. It was a pivot from the longstanding practice allowing migrants who had lived years in the country a chance for bond. The mass detention policy fueled a legal morass, including a historic number of legal challenges nationwide and dozens filed on behalf of migrants in Nebraska.”
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Minnesota judge blasts Trump admin in order protecting detainees' right to counsel (Courthouse News; 26 Mar 2026)
“Brasel mandates all detainees held at the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in Hennepin County, Minnesota, to be provided a signed order outlining their rights, including unlimited and free phone calls and attorney visits — and for the government to uphold those rights to a tee.”
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National Groups Condemn $26,000 Fine Against San Francisco Public Defender Mano Raju (Davis Vanguard; 27 Mar 2026)
“National public defense organizations are condemning a $26,000 contempt fine imposed on San Francisco Public Defender Mano Raju, warning the penalty underscores a broader crisis of excessive caseloads and chronic underfunding in public defense systems nationwide.”
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Funding push for public defenders follows contempt ruling in San Francisco (Cal Lawyer; 26 Mar 2026)
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‘Our attorneys are drowning’: Public defender’s office disappointed after court personnel bill dies (Wisconsin Public Radio; 23 Mar 2026)
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[NY] Public defenders say $100M boost needed to prevent attorney shortage (Queens Daily Eagle; 24 Mar 2026)
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[NY] Unions back increased funding for immigrant legal services (City & State NY; 24 Mar 2026)
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Task Force Formed to Strengthen Hawaiʻi’s Legal Services and Address Attorney Workforce Trends (Hawai’i State Judiciary; 23 Mar 2026)
“Acting Chief Justice Sabrina S. McKenna established a Task Force on Hawaiʻi Legal Services to examine emerging trends affecting the state’s attorney workforce and to develop recommendations that support continued access to justice in the years ahead.”
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Study taking shape on next phase of indigent defense [in SD] (Kelolan; 25 Mar 2026)
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Idaho Gov. Little signs budget cutting $2.2M from State Public Defender Office (KTVB7; 21 Mar 2026)
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Lawrence [KS] Tenants rally support for tenant right to counsel before county commission meeting (The Lawrence Times; 21 Mar 2026)
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[Trumbull County OH] Commissioners approve public defender contract (WKBN Youngstown; 25 Mar 2026)
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East Baton Rouge [LA] Public Defender still underfunded despite new money from parish (WRKF Baton Rouge; 24 Mar 2026)

