Just Policy Blog Guest Post as part of Pretrial Justice Institute and Justice Policy Institute Bail Month 2013.
By Jean Chung
Say you’re arrested in Baltimore City. At your initial bail hearing, the bail commissioner will examine your current charge and your criminal record, if you have one. Based on this information, the bail commissioner will determine your bail amount—or whether you will be offered bail at all. If you are denied bail, you’ll be sitting in jail until your court date, which might be weeks or even months from now. If you are offered bail but can’t afford to pay, too bad. You’ll be sitting, too.
Here’s the problem: if two people with identical offense
histories are arrested for the same crime and offered the same bail amount, a
difference as arbitrary as the size of their wallets may keep one person in jail
while the other walks free. When a bail system relies almost exclusively on
financial terms of release, it inevitably results in the release of wealthier
people while poorer individuals stay locked up for no reason other than their
inability to pay. Since the criminal justice system has a disproportionate
impact on low-income communities, bail amounts as low as $100 can keep people
behind bars. On February 13, 2012, there were 40 people in the Baltimore City
jail who had been detained because they could not afford bail amounts between
$100 and $500.
A bail system that penalizes folks for being poor isn’t just discriminatory—it yields grave consequences for individuals and families. At 52 years old, Ed Spence was arrested and charged with fraud and a probation violation. He never even met with a bail commissioner; a correctional officer at Central Booking simply informed him that he would not receive bail. After that, he spent 40 days in jail awaiting trial. When he got out, the job he’d held at Safeway for 10 years was gone. He had been replaced.



