Bail overhaul plan wins NAACP delegates’ backing
BALTIMORE — Sen. Kamala Harris’ pitch to revamp the nation’s bail system so lower income people don’t get stuck in jail got a rousing reaction Monday at the NAACP’s annual convention.
But her effort faces tough opposition from law and order groups.
Harris, D-Calif., unveiled her bail overhaul plan last week, legislation she’s co-sponsoring with Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky. On Monday, she took her campaign to Baltimore, where the influential civil rights organization was an eager audience.
“In a system that is supposed to have blind justice, is it not an injustice that the person who can pay to get out of jail gets out for the same offense but the person who can’t pay to get out of jail sits in jail with all these other residual consequences?” Harris asked.
“That is wrong,” she told approving delegates.
The Harris-Paul plan would create a three-year $10 million grant for states to replace the practice of money bail. States would be able to apply for funds from the grant pool.
“I’m completely in agreement with (Harris’) position on this bail legislation,” George Mintz, president of the Greater Bridgeport, Conn., branch of the NAACP, said.
New Jersey and the District of Columbia have already implemented policies to move away from bail. Instead, each has procedures to determine the likelihood of a defendant not appearing in court or endangering the community. Harris’ and Paul’s bill would encourage other states to replicate the model.
“To keep communities safe, we need to have a bail system that is focused on risk assessment, not on ability to pay,” Harris told McClatchy.
Bail industry groups argue that bail is the best way to get people to show up for trial.
“A broad stroke policy which allows the free release of millions of defendants puts law abiding citizens at great risk and does nothing to ensure the return of those defendants to court,” Beth Chapman, president of the Professional Bail Agents of the United States and co-star of the A&E television show “Dog the Bounty Hunter,” said in an email.
Victor Stephens, 61, attending the NAACP gathering from Oak Ridge, Tenn., took issue with the bail industry’s profits. “I think people will like the idea, except the ones who make money,” he said.