Chicago Sun-Times

Politician­s and others who opposed ending cash bail now have a duty to help make the law work

- BY BENJAMIN RUDDELL Benjamin Ruddell is a lawyer and the director of criminal justice policy at the ACLU of Illinois.

On Sept. 18, 2023, Illinois will take a historic step by becoming the first state to end the archaic system of cash bail. The moment is cause for celebratio­n and deep appreciati­on for the communitie­s, advocates and legislator­s who long toiled to make the law a reality. But this moment also requires cooperatio­n and dedication to making the law work — even from those who previously opposed the new law.

Ending cash bail will improve the lives of many in our state. Under the cash bail system, a person’s access to wealth — not public safety — is the primary factor that determines who is released and who is jailed while awaiting trial.

The new law restores the critical principle of presumptio­n of innocence by ensuring that an accused person can only be jailed pretrial if a judge finds they pose a threat to someone else or a high risk of willful flight — not because they can’t afford to pay an arbitrary sum of money. Reliance on cash bail negatively impacts Illinois’ most marginaliz­ed families, unfairly extracting millions of dollars from our poorest communitie­s each year, as a 2021 report from the Civic Federation and the Illinois Supreme Court found. Under the new law, those resources will remain in communitie­s where they belong.

It has been a long road to Illinois’ moment in history, but it has never been a straight line. Indeed, the final outcome of the matter was not clear until the Illinois Supreme Court rejected constituti­onal challenges brought by dozens of sheriffs and prosecutor­s from many parts of the state.

But now these politician­s have a new role — they must implement the new law. And lest there be any confusion, every stakeholde­r in the criminal legal system has an obligation to follow the law and work to ensure that it fulfills the stated goal: to improve fairness and justice in criminal courthouse­s across Illinois.

Passage of the Pretrial Fairness Act, part of a comprehens­ive effort to reform the criminal legal system and policing in Illinois known as the SAFE-T Act, in January 2021 was the culminatio­n of years of organizing by Illinois residents, extensive work by a bipartisan Illinois Supreme Court Commission between 2017 and 2020, and more than five years of debate and discussion in the Legislatur­e.

During the last election cycle, political operatives spent tens of millions of dollars attempting to convince voters that the end of cash bail would undermine community safety. The candidates who embraced reform and were subject to these attacks won re-election. Those political arguments should remain in our rearview mirror. The responsibi­lity of every public official across the state is to make this law work in the most effective and efficient fashion.

Public officials must be held accountabl­e for their actions — not for challengin­g the law, as that was their constituti­onal right. But now, they must be held accountabl­e by their constituen­ts for working to assiduousl­y follow the law and make it work for the people in their jurisdicti­ons. Those tasked with faithfully implementi­ng the provisions of the new law every day in our communitie­s include the very same prosecutor­s and sheriffs who have pursued nowfailed lawsuits seeking to invalidate the act.

These officehold­ers cannot ignore or deliberate­ly undermine the new policy and then claim that it is a failure. They made vigorous legal arguments that were not sustained. But it is now incumbent upon these officials to set aside their grievances and faithfully carry out their duties to implement the new law.

Further attempts to sabotage the Pretrial Fairness Act would disregard the will of many Illinoisan­s and jeopardize public safety. Sadly, we can expect that efforts by some dishonest political opportunis­ts to continue underminin­g this hard-won reform for their own selfish ends will continue.

But we have a right to expect a higher standard of conduct from our public officials. That is why, as the Pretrial Fairness Act is implemente­d in the months and years ahead, the American Civil Liberties Union and our partners in the Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice will work to monitor the courts in communitie­s across the state to ensure that the new law is being implemente­d for the good of all Illinoisan­s.

The views and opinions expressed by contributo­rs are their own and do not necessaril­y reflect those of the Chicago Sun-Times or any of its affiliates.

 ?? STOCK.ADOBE.COM ?? Even after cash bail is eliminated in Illinois, it will still be up to a judge to decide whether someone is held in custody or released.
STOCK.ADOBE.COM Even after cash bail is eliminated in Illinois, it will still be up to a judge to decide whether someone is held in custody or released.

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