Cash Bail Abandoned: Illinois Becomes First State in America to Implement New System

Cash Bail Abandoned: Illinois Becomes First State in America to Implement New System



Illinois is the first state in⁢ America to abandon cash bail

At ⁢the ‍back of⁢ room 100 in the Cook County criminal court, in south-west Chicago, a conversation is taking place‌ before proceedings start.⁤ The room is packed, and two young men awaiting a decision on the ‍fate of a friend, arrested the night before, chat with a woman who explains why the place is so busy. As of this morning, she explains, nobody arrested or charged in the state will⁤ be asked to put up⁤ money to be set free‌ before trial. “You⁤ mean you don’t even need to put up property?” asked one of⁣ the men in reply, surprised. No, she explains. “Nah,” says the other man, sceptically. “This⁢ is a business.” ‌If the judges cannot charge⁣ people money, they will lock⁢ everybody up, he opines. “It is gonna be back to three men in a cell.”

On September 18th, Illinois became ‍the first state to completely ‍scrap cash bail, when it implemented a law passed⁣ more than two-and-a-half ⁢years ago. In the 1950s Nelson Algren, a ⁢poet, wrote that Chicago was “still the easiest joint in the country in which to get a jump bond”, with “the price commonly being whatever you ‍have in your wallet.” Now, the price will be less even⁢ than that. The idea, ‍in the ⁣words of ‌Kim Foxx, the chief prosecutor in Cook County, which covers Chicago⁢ and ⁢its⁣ inner suburbs, is that people should not be ⁤held in jail “by some arbitrary monetary ‌amount”. Advocates hope it will‌ set a precedent that other states might follow. But the ‍men in the courtroom are not the only sceptics about‌ how it will play out.

The case‍ for the reform is ⁤simple. “The money-bond system is fundamentally irrational,”‌ says Sarah Staudt of the Prison Policy Initiative, a criminal-justice-reform ‍charity. Domestic‍ abusers were often freed on bond, whereas homeless ‌shoplifters ended up ‍in jail, she says. And pre-trial⁤ imprisonment imposes ​huge costs on people who are⁣ still legally innocent. They ‍can ‍lose jobs, see relationships collapse or become…

2023-09-21 07:51:46
Article from www.economist.com
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