Paragraph: (Society_Law_and_Justice/oanc-defend_yourself-0.txt)
Sent 1: Representing yourself in court can be a tricky endeavor.
Sent 2: There are confusing legal terms to learn, strict procedures to follow and volumes of case law that often need to be understood to prepare a case.
Sent 3: Lake County officials and a private agency that assists indigent litigants in Illinois want to make the practice easier by creating a self-help center for people who choose to represent themselves in legal matters.
Sent 4: The center, which will be housed in the law library at the main courthouse in Waukegan, could open later this summer.
Sent 5: "I think it's going to be extremely helpful," Court Administrator Bob Zastany said.
Sent 6: "There is a population out there that will take advantage of this resource."
Sent 7: The self-help center will be the only one of its kind in the county.
Sent 8: Only a few operate nationwide, officials said.
Sent 9: The project is the work of Lake County circuit court officials and Prairie State Legal Services, a statewide agency with an office in Waukegan that provides information and legal assistance to poor and elderly Illinois residents.
Sent 10: The organization has received a $25,000 grant from the Illinois Equal Justice Foundation, a nonprofit group that funds programs designed to increase access to legal information and assistance, to help pay for the effort.
Sent 11: Prairie State will share the money with the county.
Sent 12: The county's law library is on the first floor of the governmental center at 18 N. County St. The new self-help center will be designed to help litigants find the information they need to properly represent themselves in court, an undertaking that can be complicated and confusing.
Sent 13: "Some people can do OK on their own, and some people can do OK with some help," said Linda Rothnagel, the managing attorney for Prairie State Legal Services.
Sent 14: "But other people can't do it.
Sent 15: It's not always easy."
Sent 16: Self-representation is a right affirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Sent 17: The practice is far more common in civil matters than in criminal cases.
Sent 18: In fact, self-represented litigants - formally called "pro se" in Latin, or "for oneself" - in criminal defenses are so rare that statistics about the practice generally are not kept, legal experts say.
Question: What practice is far more common in civil matters than in criminal cases? (false/0)
Question: What will be the purpose of the center that will be housed in the law library at the main courthouse in Waukegan? (false/1)
Question: Where is the self help center located? (false/2)
Question: Who is creating the self-help center which will be housed in the law library at 18 N. County Street? (false/3)
Question: What are some facts about self-representation? (true/4)
Question: What does Court Administrator Bob Zastany think is going to be extremely helpful? (true/5)
Question: Why can representing yourself in court be "a tricky endeavor"? (true/6)
Question: How is the center being created? (false/7)
Question: Which organization has received a $25,000 grant from the Illinois Equal Justice Foundation? (true/8)
Question: Is self representation more common in civil cases or criminal cases? (true/9)
Last updated: Mon Apr 16 04:55:33 EDT 2018
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