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Davis County prosecutors, defenders and courts say proposed budget cuts would strain statutory duties and slow cases
Summary
County justice officials told the Budget Committee that hypothetical cuts would force staff reductions, delay filings and could push many felony-level prosecutions back to city prosecutors, reducing penalties and stretching services for victims and defendants.
Davis County Attorney Troy, judges and court staff, public defenders and pretrial officials told the county Budget Committee that hypothetical midyear cuts would sharply reduce capacity across the criminal justice system and could force the county to decline many enhanced misdemeanor and felony cases and send them back to city prosecutors.
The warning came during a multi-hour budget 'stress test' in which department heads answered questions about hypothetical percentage reductions. County Attorney Troy said his office faces multiple statutory "shalls" and timeline mandates that require timely filings; he proposed personnel targets of roughly $264,000 for the attorney budget and noted a separate victim-services target of about $300,000, part of an aggregate ~$440,000 personnel target the office used in its analysis.
Why it matters: Troy told commissioners that the office lacks discretionary cuts large enough to meet those targets without eliminating staff, and that court-mandated deadlines (including a four-day filing rule he described as recurring) mean fewer, less-experienced…
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