Author Topic: What If You Can't Afford Bail? A Few Large Companies Rake In Billions In Bond Business  (Read 579 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Online corbe

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 38,715

What If You Can't Afford Bail? A Few Large Companies Rake In Billions In Bond Business

By Lydia O'Neal @LydsONeal   On 05/16/17 AT 9:42 AM


Long before a person arrested and charged is found guilty or innocent, they face a choice with myriad consequences: Find a way to post bail, the median of which the Justice Department pegs at $10,000, until they show up to court to get their money back, or wait in jail, making a post-trial sentence an estimated three or four times likelier. There is another option for the generally low-income and disproportionately African American or Hispanic people who make up the 467,000 pre-trial detainees in the U.S., and a few global corporations are raking in billions from it.

Detainees awaiting their court dates can pay a non-refundable fee — usually worth 10 percent of the required bail but varying by state — to a bail bond agent or insurance company that will post the bail but leave the arrested person’s family to pick up the tab if the individual doesn’t show up to court. Just nine of the biggest bail insurers backed the majority of around $14 billion worth of bail bonds issued in the U.S. in 2016, according to a study released last week by the American Civil Liberties Union and the advocacy group Color Of Change.

The use of for-profit bail bonds has escalated over the past several decades, to 49 percent from just under a quarter of bail releases in 1990, according to the report. Defenders of the practice, which is only used in the U.S. and the Philippines, point to saved taxpayer dollars and research indicating that defendants released on bail bonds are 28 percent less likely to avoid appearing in court and 53 percent less likely “to remain at large for extended periods of time.” But plenty of other research takes into account the exorbitant costs of housing those detainees, many of whom are completely innocent in the first place.

“In reality, taxes do pay for it — we spend billions of dollars to incarcerate people,” said Chiraag Bains, a senior fellow at Harvard Law School’s Criminal Justice Policy Program. Either way, he added, “we should have a justice system that we are morally comfortable with paying for.”

The way state and local courts determine bail, Bains added, is flawed in itself, and contributes to a vicious cycle in which already-impoverished and relatively higher-crime communities are drained of resources and pushed toward criminal behavior and incarceration.

“Bail is supposed to be about release, but in reality it keeps people locked in because they can’t afford to pay,” he said. “The expectation is, ‘Make some calls, find someone who can pay for you.’ But that’s not the point. They’re supposed to assess your ability to pay, not your extended family’s ability to pay for you.”

Such disconnect between the assessed ability to pay and the detainees’ actual financial resources, he added, may even violate the 14th Amendment.

<..snip..>

http://www.ibtimes.com/political-capital/what-if-you-cant-afford-bail-few-large-companies-rake-billions-bond-business
No government in the 12,000 years of modern mankind history has led its people into anything but the history books with a simple lesson, don't let this happen to you.

Offline Frank Cannon

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 26,097
  • Gender: Male
The Dog disagrees.