Ol' Janeese wants cashless bail, so I thought we'd see how Russia handles it.
Today
Does Russia have a system for bail for criminals
Yes — Russia does have a bail system, but it works very differently from the U.S. model and is used far less often.
🧾 Core takeaway
Russia’s Criminal Procedure Code does allow bail (залóг) as a preventive measure, but it is rarely applied, tightly controlled, and generally not a primary alternative to pretrial detention.
🇷🇺 How bail works in Russia
Legal basis: Article 106 of the Criminal Procedure Code of the Russian Federation defines bail as transferring money or property to investigators or the court as a guarantee that the accused will appear and behave properly.
Purpose:
Ensure appearance at court
Prevent interference with the investigation
Prevent continuation or repetition of criminal activity
Who decides: Investigators, prosecutors, or courts can set bail, but courts typically approve it.
📉 How often is bail used?
Bail is “negligibly small” compared to other preventive measures in Russia. Over the past five years, the number of bail decisions has remained extremely low and even decreased.
Russia overwhelmingly relies on:
Pretrial detention
House arrest
Travel restrictions
Restrictions on certain actions (added in 2018 reforms)
💰 How bail amounts are determined
Bail is not tied to the damage caused or civil claims.
It is based on the expected punishment, often aligned with potential fines.
Setting bail higher than the maximum possible fine is considered inappropriate.
🔧 Recent reforms
A 2018 federal law (No. 72‑ФЗ) attempted to modernize bail and introduce new preventive measures, including restrictions on certain actions. However, the reforms have not significantly increased bail usage.
🧭 Why bail is rare in Russia
Several factors contribute to its limited use:
Strong preference for detention in serious or politically sensitive cases
Investigators’ broad discretion
Courts’ high approval rate of detention requests
Limited trust in bail as an effective guarantee
Institutional culture favoring restrictive measuresSummary
Russia does have a bail system, but it is legally narrow, rarely used, and far less central to criminal procedure than in many Western countries. It exists mostly on paper and is overshadowed by pretrial detention and other restrictive measures.
If you want, I can also explain:
How bail compares to U.S. or European systems
Typical bail amounts
Which types of crimes are eligible for bail
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So, they mostly don't use it, huh? They prefer to keep people locked up until trial? It would seem Janeese isn't too hep on the communism schtick.

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