The unexpected death of San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi in February focused attention on a unique aspect of his office: Among the 58 counties in California, only San Francisco's public defender is elected. The rest are appointed.
The question is: What difference, if any, does it make whether a public defender is elected or not?
At Adachi's memorial service at City Hall, San Francisco Mayor London Breed remembered how hard the 59-year-old public defender advocated for more fairness in the criminal justice system.
"Jeff led the way on so many progressive policy reforms, from reducing recidivism, ending cash bail to standing up for undocumented and unrepresented children," Breed said.
All those things — advocating for policy reform, lobbying for more city funding, strongly challenging police misconduct, even running for mayor — are not things most public defenders do.
Years before Adachi died, he told KQED that being independently elected gave him the freedom to do things appointed public defenders can't.
"I think it puts public defenders at a disadvantage when you're at-will and you have to answer to the Board of Supervisors rather than the electorate," Adachi said.
San Francisco attorney Alicia Gamez thinks all public defenders in California should have that kind of independence to give clients the robust legal defense the U.S. Constitution guarantees. So she is promoting the idea that public defenders in every county should be elected, just as district attorneys are now.


