Archive for the ‘Pretrial Release’ Category

Get Out of Jail Free: Taxpayer-Funded Grants Place Criminals on the Street Without Posting Bail

Tuesday, September 13th, 2011

For fiscal year 2012, the House Appropriations Committee recommended $357 million for the Edward Byrne Justice Assistance Grant (JAG) program (H.R. 2596). Byrne JAG grants, administered by the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), can be used by state and local governments for 29 broad criminal justice purposes, including funding pretrial release services.[1]

The original mission of pretrial release services during the 1960s was to assist in the release of the relatively few indigents who truly could not afford to post bail. However, the mission of too many pretrial services agencies has expanded beyond helping indigents to defendants who would normally secure release through private bond agents. These individuals are released on their own recognizance without offering anything of value to ensure that they return on their court dates. This, in turn, will most assuredly result in more criminals failing to appear in court and becoming fugitives from justice.

Philadelphia : A Case Study of Public Policy Disaster

About 40 years ago, Philadelphia assumed exclusive control over the city’s bail system by abolishing private bail services and implementing its own pretrial release service. The typical Philadelphia defendant is required to deposit only 10 percent of his total bail assigned by the judge and sign a statement agreeing that he will owe the remaining 90 percent for failure to appear on the court date.[2] According to a recent investigation by The Philadelphia Inquirer:

For decades, Philadelphia court officials have presided over an ineffective bail system that allowed accused criminals to skip court virtually without consequence. Defendants routinely failed to appear in court and just as routinely, failed to pay the forfeited bail that was supposed to come due as a result.[3]

Further, Philadelphia court officials admitted that no one made any effort to collect the money owed the city by those who had skipped their court dates.[4]

What is the result of the city’s pretrial release services? Today, fugitive defendants owe the city more than $1 billion for failing to appear for their trials.[5] Further, there are more than 47,000 defendants wanted on bench warrants for failing to appear for trial.[6]

The Private Sector Does it Better (Again)

Private bail bond insurers provide important services to defendants and society at no cost to taxpayers. In exchange for a fee, private bond agents secure the release of defendants from jail while the accused await trail. Compared to other types of pretrial release, research indicates that private bond agents are more effective at ensuring defendants make their court appearances.[7] Individuals who obtain their release through private bond agents are 28 percent less likely to fail to appear before court than when freed on their own recognizance.[8] When defendants fail to appear before the courts and remain at large for more than a year, private bond agents seem to be more effective at catching these fugitives than public law enforcement. Those released through the assistance of private bond agents have a fugitive rate that is 53 percent lower than the fugitive rates of those released on their own recognizance.[9]

Lack of Accountability

While the performance of private bail bonding is well known and documented, we know far less than we should about pretrial release services funded by the Byrne JAG program. This is important because under the Byrne JAG performance monitoring system, pretrial release services do not have to report how they are performing. Performance monitoring through the systematic and recurrent documentation of important features of program performance is crucial to assessing whether programs are operating as intended.[10] When appropriately applied, performance monitoring can provide timely information on program performance to local program administrators and grant-making bureaus.

While most Byrne JAG recipients, including police departments, are required to report annual performance measures to the BJA, pretrial release agencies are not required to report any performance measures. To correct this deficiency, The Citizens Right to Know Act of 2011 (H.R. 1885), sponsored by Representative Ted Poe (R–TX), would require pretrial release agencies receiving federal taxpayer funding to report information regarding:

  • The number and names of defendants assigned to pretrial services;
  • The number and names of indigent defendants accepted into pretrial release programs;
  • The current charges and all past criminal convictions of defendants accepted into pretrial release programs;
  • The instances of defendants failing to appear at scheduled court appearances; and
  • All warrants issued or arrests made of defendants accepted into pretrial release programs.

While Congress should not be in the business of funding pretrial release services through the Byrne JAG program, The Citizens Right to Know Act takes appropriate steps for gaining systematic information on the performance of federally funded pretrial release services.

Taxpayers Should Not Pay for Pretrial Release

Government should not provide a public good when the private sector offers identical services with a similar—or as is often the case, greater—level of competence. In this case, Byrne JAG grants are being used to displace the services of private bond agents. Given the nation’s dire financial straits, an even better idea would be for Congress to eliminate funding for the Byrne JAG program altogether.

David B. Muhlhausen, Ph.D., is Research Fellow in Empirical Policy Analysis in the Center for Data Analysis at The Heritage Foundation.

Source

Swipe and Go Bail Bonds; WHAT?

Monday, August 30th, 2010
A St. Petersburg Times editorial published on August 15, 2010 entitled, “Getting out of jail moves into the plastic age,” stated getting out of jail on credit was, “priceless.”  Click here to view the editorial.
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The editorial failed to mention that the new system might also be “dangerous” and “irresponsible.”
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For the Sheriff to hire an out-of-state online service to, in effect be responsible for making sure defendants show up for court, has obvious problems written all over it.  How will this software company ensure that defendants actually show up for their court appearance?  What will they do if defendants fail to show? 
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I believe I can answer those two questions.
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First, they will do nothing to ensure that those who swipe their way out of jail are present in court.
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Second, they will simply call the Sheriff’s office to retrieve the AWOL defendant, thereby incurring more costs on the citizens.  (When someone pays for bail it is the bail agent’s responsibility to find and retrieve the errant defendant – at no cost to taxpayers.)
From all appearances, these swipe-and-go methods are not only a cash cow for local governments and/or Sheriff’s; they completely ignore the reality of costs associated with no-show defendants, a large percentage of who are likely to commit another crime. 
The editorial stated that limiting these credit card systems appears to be an “unnecessary protection for the bail business” fails to recognize the fundamentals of what local bail agents actually do.
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When someone commits a crime, a judge determines (as he or she should) the flight risk and the potential danger the defendant may pose to the community.  In order to keep our jails from becoming over-crowded, the judge can either release the person on his/her own recognizance, which is a promise on their part to return for court, put them in a government-run and taxpayer-funded pretrial release program, or set an amount of bail to guarantee that the person will return on his or her court date.
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In the third scenario, a private and local bail bonds agent will accept responsibility for the defendant’s return and will charge the defendant and not the taxpayers to provide that service.  Once the responsibility is transferred to the bail agent, it is that agent’s job (with money on the line) to make sure the defendant returns to court.  By all accounts, including years of statistics compiled by the U.S. Department of Justice, this system works extremely well and costs taxpayers nothing.
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The swipe-and-go system run by an out-of state online system completely removes any transfer of responsibility to a licensed and bonded agent who lives and works in the local community.  It removes the economic interest that an agent has in making sure the defendant shows up for court.  By doing so, we will see a reduction in the “show up” rate, a likely rise in repeat crimes, and extra costs to taxpayers for requiring law enforcement to retrieve the missing defendant.
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Turning this part of our criminal justice system into a system akin to buying gas – commit a crime and be out of jail with no hassles and no inconvenience – will have long-term negative consequences, will cost taxpayers money in the long run and will do nothing to keep our streets safer.
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In closing, for the St. Petersburg Times to minimize or trivialize these so-called “Spring Break” crimes is misguided.  We are talking about dangerous drunk drivers, assaults on local residents, and other crimes that are more than simply mischievous.  A drunk driver or an assailant should be considered a very real criminal and a very real threat to our public safety.  The swipe-and-go methods simply make it easier – much easier – for those criminals to be back out on the street quicker and with virtually no oversight.
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Priceless!

Pretrial program is said to be a waste

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

SARASOTA COUNTY – Back when the jail was overcrowded and the economy was soaring, the Sarasota County Commission decided to spend $1.3 million a year on a program to keep arrested people from unnecessarily sitting in jail.
The idea was for inmates who could not afford bail to be released with conditions such as calling in twice a week and coming in for random drug and alcohol screenings.

The resulting empty jail beds would be a money-saver for the county and defer the need for a new jail.

But now that budgets are tight and the jail is under capacity, the County Commission is looking at whether the Pretrial Services program is worth the cost.

The commission doubled the program’s budget in 2005 so it could run 24 hours a day, part of a broader push to ease jail overcrowding.

In the pretrial program, new inmates are interviewed and undergo background checks so a judge can determine whether they should be released while awaiting trial with the conditions attached.

The program targets nonviolent inmates who cannot afford to pay bail to get out of jail. Manatee County started a similar program last year.

But the program has never been independently evaluated, and local defense attorneys say it is a waste of money.

Criminal justice officials have said pretrial services saved the county an average of $2.2 million per year since 2003 by reducing the jail population, since it costs $71 per day to detain an inmate.

Twelfth Circuit Chief Judge Lee Haworth says the program has reduced the number of repeat offenders by steering them into drug or mental health programs earlier than normal, though no statistics prove it.

“It’s a great tool for protecting the community, and allowing people who have not been convicted to stay out of jail,” Haworth said.

But some defense attorneys say many first-time defendants who used to be released without any supervision now find themselves on a program that many defendants, who have not been convicted, say is more onerous than probation.

“We’re spending money to employ someone to take their phone call once a week, or ask them to come urinate,” Sarasota defense attorney Derek Byrd said.

Attorneys say judges overuse the pretrial release program. Clients then face the demands of a pretrial release in addition to posting bail, said Varinia Van Ness, the president of the local chapter of the Florida Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.

“It’s like you’re on probation before you’re even sentenced,” Van Ness said.

A review team conducted a two-day site visit this month, meeting with court officials and defense lawyers.

The study proposal said county commissioners are uncertain whether the program is working.

When the program was expanded, the jail was over capacity. On average in 2008, there were 26 more inmates than the 1,026 beds at the jail.

The downturn in the economy and subsequent reduction in arrests has dramatically curbed the need. The jail has averaged fewer than 900 inmates in the past five months.

Court Administrator Walt Smith said the program still generates information judges use to help keep the public safe.

“We think we have a good program, but if there’s a better way to do it, a more efficient way to do it, a better outcome, we’re all for that,” Smith said.

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This article can be viewed here.

Mason-Dixon Poll Finds Voters Oppose Use of Tax Dollars for Bail

Monday, April 5th, 2010

ALEC Calls on Florida Lawmakers to Pass SB 782 and HB 445

Washington D.C. - The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) today released the findings of a recent Mason-Dixon poll showing that Florida voters strongly favor enacting a statewide law that would limit the use of their tax dollars to paying only for the release of indigent defendants who have been charged with a non-violent crime.  Statewide, 71% supported limiting the use of tax dollars, while 22% were opposed and 7% were undecided.

Currently, the Florida Legislature is considering Senate Bill 782 by Senator John Thrasher (R-St. Augustine) and House Bill 445 by Representative Chris Dorworth (R-Lake Mary), pertaining to changing Florida Statute, as it relates to the government-run pretrial release programs.  SB 782 and HB 445 requires that the defendant meet certain specified criteria in order to be eligible for pretrial release; narrows who is eligible for taxpayer-funded pretrial services/release programs; and moves more criminal offenders to a private, regulated and licensed bail system, while still allowing for the continued use of pretrial programs for non-violent, first-time, non-dangerous indigent offenders.

ALEC has made reforming government-run bail a priority and believes this legislation will benefit Floridians.

Support for the measure has widened to the Florida’s voters, as by the Mason-Dixon poll:

94% felt criminal defendants who have failed to appear in court on a previous offense should not be allowed to be released from jail using tax dollars.

·     87% felt that if a criminal defendant can afford to pay their own bail for release from jail, they should not be allowed to be released from jail using tax dollars. 

·     86% felt a criminal defendant that has been previously convicted of a violent crime should not be allowed to be released from jail using tax dollars, even if the court rules that they are indigent.

·     Only 15% of state voters were aware that 28 Florida counties allow criminals to be released from jail using taxpayer dollars instead of paying for their own release while they await trial.

  • Support for the measure cuts across party lines, with 65% of Democrats, 77% of Republicans and 72% of independentsfavoring such a law.

ALEC’s Public Safety Task Force Director Michael Hough said, “It is clear that taxpayers do not want to be left on the hook to pay the bill for releasing potentially dangerous criminals from jail. Pretrial release agencies should strictly serve the indigent, and commercial bail does a better job of protecting the public from dangerous criminals, while saving taxpayer dollars.”

The poll was conducted by Mason-Dixon Polling & Research, Inc. of Washington, D.C. from March 23, 2010, through March 25, 2010, with a total of 625 registered Florida voters.  The margin of error is no more than plus or minus 4 percentage points. The poll is available here http://www.alec.org/am/pdf/cied/Mason-Dixon_poll.pdf

Weekly Bail Bond Legislative Updates

Monday, March 29th, 2010
Indiana Passes SB 293 Into Law
Bill strengthens 36 month bond expiration and provides for an exoneration of bond should prosecutor elect not to extradite a defendant held in custody in another jurisdiction.

Idaho Governor Signs SB 1371

SB 1371 was signed by Idaho Governor Otter on March 25.  This bill, in part, grants authority to judges to direct clerks and sheriffs to not accept bail bonds from a surety company with outstanding unpaid judgments.

Georgia Public Safety Bill Passes Out of House

HB 889 passed out of the House on March 26 and is now in the Senate.  HB 889 would restrict offenders charged with certain aggravated offenses for being released through pretrial services.  This public safety measure would ensure violent offenders would be released only on a secured bail bond.

Colorado Ballot Initiative on Pretrial Services Filed

This initiative, if passed, would permit only those offenders charged with their first offense, non violent felony or misdemeanor to be released through a pretrial services agency. The first hearing on this initiative is set for April 9 at 9:00 A.M. in House Committee Room 01-12.

Colorado Ballot Initiative Procedure