Posts Tagged ‘Pretrial Release’

Advocates go head-to-head over public vs. private pretrial release options

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

RALEIGH – In a scuffle pitting tax dollars versus private funding and the public sector against the free market, the bail bonds industry in North Carolina says that government-funded pretrial release programs seek to run them out of business.

Advocates of the public pretrial release programs say the commercial bail industry discriminates against the poor and skews the system because it’s for a for-profit enterprise.

The conflict came to a head in September when the National Association of Pretrial Services Agencies held its annual conference in Charlotte. Supporters of the bail system claim that members of the association spread lies about the effectiveness of bail agents and advocated doing away with the industry altogether.

“They are using their conference to discredit the use of private bail and the benefits this system provides communities and the state,” wrote Mark Cartret and Larry Mackins, two advocates of commercial bail bonding, in a letter to the editor published Sept. 16 in The Charlotte Observer.

Since colonial times, judges have used commercial bail bonds as a way to release prisoners awaiting trial. Courts began resorting to the state-sponsored pretrial release method in the 1960s.

Traditionally, courts assess a defendant’s flight risk and set a corresponding bail amount. If the defendant is unable to pay, he or she can secure the services of an agent who will post bail in exchange for a service fee. The agent is then responsible for ensuring that the defendant shows up at the appointed court date.

Taxpayer-funded pretrial release programs, in contrast, remove profit from the equation by turning over the bail agent’s role to the government. Court officials interview defendants awaiting a bail hearing, assess their risk of flight or harming others, and recommend limitations on their release aimed at curbing those risks.

The bail bonds system has been around since biblical times, but today only the United States and the Philippines have it as the dominant industry, according to The New York Times. Four states – Illinois, Kentucky, Oregon, and Wisconsin – have banned private bail altogether.

In North Carolina, the industry is alive and flourishing. More than 1,300 licensed agents operate in the state, according to Cartret, who is president of the N.C. Bail Agents Association. The industry is regulated by the Department of Insurance.

Bail agents save North Carolina taxpayers $2 billion a year – funds that would otherwise pay for prison and court costs associated with pretrial release – the commercial bail system benefits students since bond forfeitures go to the public school system, Cartret said.

“It’s a major asset to our criminal justice system,” he said in a telephone interview.

But not everyone shares that view. “I don’t think money has a place, period, whether it’s private surety or whether it’s money that is returned to you,” said Tim Murray, executive director of the Pretrial Justice Institute. “I don’t think money does anything but separate those who have money from those who do not.”

Only about half of defendants make bail when it’s set, Murray said. Defendants sit in jail not because they are a danger or a flight risk, but because they “don’t have the stinkin’ money,” he said.

Supporters of bail agents disagree, saying that bail is effective and safe. They point to statistics from the U.S. Department of Justice showing that after one year, 3 percent of defendants released on a surety bond failed to appear in court, compared with 10 percent of those released on unsecured bonds.

PJI published a response arguing that the Justice Department’s study wasn’t designed to gauge the effectiveness of bonds versus taxpayer-funded pretrial release programs because it didn’t control for all factors involved. Still, supporters of commercial bail say the study shows that bonds help ensure defendants are processed through the system properly.

As to the question of eliminating private bail altogether, pushers of the government-funded pretrial release option wouldn’t tell Carolina Journal whether that was their goal. Instead, they said that bonds are appropriate in some situations.

“There may come a time when somebody might have to have bail, but it should be bail that they can afford – bail that would ensure their return, but money that’s returned upon disposition of the case to them,” said Peter Kiers, president of NAPSA.

Likewise, Cartret stopped short of backing an eradication of pretrial release programs in local governments.

“The main thing that our industry feels is that basically there is a place for everything,” he said. “Judges like options, without a doubt. Overcrowding has forced us to basically look for answers in all directions.”

David N. Bass is an associate editor of Carolina Journal.

Failing to Appear: Pretrial Release vs. Private Surety Bail

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

An Accredited North Carolina bail agent recently shared a story with us regarding a defendant he had bonded out and then who had failed to appear for court. This defendant was a well-known career criminal who this bail agent was very familiar with. As should always be the case, this agent did his job well by making sure he had detailed information on the defendant, his family, friends, place of employment, hobbies and popular hangout spots, just in the event he needed to find the defendant at any given time.

Turns out the defendant did fail to appear for a court proceeding and the bail agent was issued a forfeiture by the court, which meant he had to pay the full amount of the bond back to the court. He had 150 days to find the defendant before a final judgment was issued and the bail bond agent lost the opportunity to recover any amount of the bond already paid. An arrest warrant was issued for the defendant.

However, the bail agent wanted to prove a point regarding the different tools and methods bail agents use vs. law enforcement to find fugitive defendants who fail to appear. It is a well known fact among law enforcement agencies, which are already overtaxed fighting and/or preventing crime, that finding defendants who fail to appear is a low priority. Bail agents however are financially and physically responsible for defendants they release on bond and have an inherent interest to find a defendant and find them as quickly as possible.

In order to make a strong statement regarding the difference in fugitive recovery for a bail agent vs. law enforcement, the North Carolina bail agent let the forfeiture go into final judgement after having given law enforcement 150 days to find the defendant, arrest him and take him back to court. Law enforcement never did find the defendant during the full 150 days. The day after the forfeiture went into judgment, the bail agent, based on his detailed knowedge of the defendant, located, arrested and took the defendant back to jail. How long do you think this took? One hour.

The main message is this: a licensed bail agent was able to find the defendant in one hour vs. five months allotted for law enforcement and used no taxpayer funds whatsoever. Law enforcement should not be straddled with having to find defendants who fail to appear, but should be focused on keeping our communites safe. Law enforcement officials know the beneftis that bail agents provide and often work closely with them to find and secure dangerous criminals who are out on bond.

However, if this particular defendant had been released through a taxpayer-funded pretrial services/release program, he would probably still be roaming the streets free to commit additional crimes. Such programs offer limited face-to-face contact with defendants and supervision is often relegated to calling in to an automated telephone system. Pretrial services/release programs never have interaction with a defendant’s family or friends or step out of the office to do any field visits.

Yet in these tough economic times, county and state governments continue to allocate millions of taxpayer funds to run hugh bureaucratic pretrial services/release programs instead of relying on the private surety bail industry, which has been proven to be the most effective and efficient method of pretrial release. Such programs should focus on doing a thorough investigation into a defendant’s criminal and social background so that a judge can make a meaningful release decision at a first appearance session. If a judge chooses to release a defendant into a pretrial services/release program, such decisions should be limited to defendants charged with first-time, non-violent offenses.

A nationwide effort is underway by the private surety bail industry to expose pretrial services/release programs for what they really are: a taxpayer-funded criminal welfare release system! Public safety is not enhanced at all by such releases; but non-accountability for the actions of criminals is.