Definitions
Money bail is an amount of cash a person must pay to be released before trial. Here is a brief explainer of the bail system and a brief overviewof bail reform.
Pretrial jailing means that a person is jailed before their guilt or innocence is determined, either by a trial or a plea agreement. Most people in jails have not been convicted of a crime—they are awaiting a trial.
Trials: the word “pretrial” is misleading because 94% of people charged with a crime never get a trial. People (including innocent people) face pressure to plead guilty. Guilty pleas are 30% more frequent when people are jailed pretrial because they are desperate to get back home. Pretrial jailing is a leading cause of wrongful convictions.
Pre-arraignment jailing means that a person is jailed before they have been charged with a crime, seen a lawyer, or had their first appearance before a judge.
Presumed innocent? When a person is arrested, under the law they are presumed innocent until proven guilty. 1 in 3 California arrests never leads to a conviction. But even if a person is innocent, they will be jailed after arrest if they can’t pay cash bail.
Does money bail actually promote court appearance?
- Proponents of money bail say it is necessary to ensure that people appear in court.
- However, study after study shows that money bail does not increase court appearances.
- This makes sense, because the fees most people pay to bail bond companies are non-refundable, even if they make all their court appearances. More importantly: almost no one intentionally flees in the US.
- Even these companies rarely actually lose (“forfeit”) bail if someone doesn’t show, so they also have little reason to encourage the arrested individual to show up.
- Money bail has been shown to actually increase future nonappearance because it destabilizes people’s lives by costing them their housing, jobs, and mental health care.
What About Public Safety?
- The current system jails based on poverty, not safety.
- Pretrial jailing destabilizes people’s lives and increases future arrests for new crimes.
- Money has nothing to do with public safety: under California law, money bail is not even forfeited if a person is re-arrested for an alleged new crime while out on bail.
- Separate from money bail, California law allows people charged with a list of violent felonies to be detained if the police and prosecutors have clear evidence and there are no other reasonable ways to protect the community. Money bail circumvents this legal process by jailing based on money, not safety.
- Jailing people just because they can’t pay makes us all less safe.
