This month, JPI is dedicating
all of its resources to educating the public on bail. Some of us know the
issue well, but many of us don’t realize that using money as a pretrial release
mechanism contributes to jails overcrowded with unconvicted people, burdens
low-income communities and supports an ineffective for-profit
industry.
Despite a lack of evidence that
financial release options improve pretrial outcomes, jurisdictions throughout
the country continue to rely on money as a proxy for risk in the pretrial
process. This approach weakens public safety and creates two criminal justice
systems: one for those with money and one for those without. The for-profit
bail bonding industry, a corporate insurance behemoth that profits off the
inequitable bail system, has enjoyed over 100 years of corruption and political
influence and continues to skew judicial decision-making and put profit before
public safety.





