Lodi News-Sentinel

Judicial group urges an end to cash bail

- By Maura Dolan

SAN FRANCISCO — California’s judiciary recommende­d Tuesday that money bail for criminal defendants be replaced with risk assessment and supervisio­n.

A group of 11 judges and one court executive appointed to study the issue last year by Chief Justice Tani CantilSaka­uye said the current system of requiring suspects to post bail to obtain their freedom prior to trial compromise­s public safety.

Release should depend on an individual’s likelihood to commit new crimes, not on his or her financial resources, the group’s report said.

“If adopted, the reforms envisioned in these recommenda­tions will make major and dramatic changes to California’s criminal justice system,” the report said.

Pretrial assessment would gather informatio­n about each defendant’s potential risk to the public and give judges more tools to supervise released defendants, including drug testing, home confinemen­t and text reminders about future court dates, the report said.

Cantil-Sakauye, who previously called for bail reform, said she endorsed the recommenda­tions. They are likely to serve as a framework for a new law expected to be passed and signed next year.

Ventura County Superior Court Judge Brian J. Back, a co-chair of the group, said requiring defendants to post money bail unfairly punishes the poor.

“Thousands of California­ns who pose no risk to the public are held in jail before trial, while others charged with serious or violent offenses may pose a high risk and can buy their freedom simply by bailing out,” Back said.

The report said judges should have the final say on whether to release a defendant and the authority to require dangerous suspects to remain in jail prior to trial.

About two-thirds of California’s jail population — or nearly 48,000 people — has not yet been sentenced, according to the Board of State and Community Correction­s’ annual Jail Profile Survey.

That number includes both people who are eligible for release but have not posted bail and those who are ineligible for release.

California’s 58 counties use different bail schedules, and bail amounts can differ widely from county to county.

Bail for defendants accused of residentia­l burglary ranges from $30,000 in Fresno County to $100,000 in San Francisco.

Cantil-Sakauye will present the report to the Judicial Council, the policymaki­ng body for the court system, next month.

Democratic state Sen. Bob Hertzberg of Van Nuys and Democratic Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta of Oakland, who have authored legislatio­n to end money bail, praised Tuesday’s report.

Their bill, which reflects the views of judicial leaders, was passed by the Senate in May and will be considered by the Assembly in January.

Bonta noted Tuesday’s report endorsed “the overwhelmi­ng belief that wealth-based justice is not justice at all.”

“For too long,” Bonta said, “California has linked liberty with personal wealth.”

 ?? WALLY SKALIJ/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? An inmate peaks through the bars at the restrictiv­e housing unit, formerly known as solitary confinemen­t, at the Men’s Central Jail in Los Angeles, on June 2, 2016.
WALLY SKALIJ/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH An inmate peaks through the bars at the restrictiv­e housing unit, formerly known as solitary confinemen­t, at the Men’s Central Jail in Los Angeles, on June 2, 2016.

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