Los Angeles Times

Bill to end money bail advances in Legislatur­e

Some groups who pushed for reform aren’t happy about amendments granting more local control.

- By Jazmine Ulloa

SACRAMENTO — California could soon end money bail, but some of the criminal justice groups who worked toward that goal aren’t celebratin­g.

A closely watched bill to overhaul the state’s bail system advanced out of a key fiscal committee Thursday with broad changes that would virtually eliminate the payment of money as a condition for release from jail.

That should have been a roaring victory for legislator­s and supporters who have long decried a system that they say unfairly punishes the poor. But the amendments also hand over more control to local courts and probation offices to decide who should remain incarcerat­ed, a move former sponsors of the legislatio­n contend could lead to indefinite detention.

State Sen. Bob Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys), coauthor of Senate Bill 10, hailed the measure at a news conference Thursday, calling it a success years in the making. He pointed to support from Gov. Jerry Brown, state Supreme Court Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye and Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, the Democratic front-runner for governor.

“I have worked on a lot of issues over the decades and I don’t remember one taking more time than this,” Hertzberg said. “It has been really challengin­g making this fundamenta­l sea change in the criminal justice system in California.”

Hertzberg later pushed back against criticism of the bill, saying it would dramatical­ly transform a pretrial system that hurts poor defendants.

“We have a form of pretrial detention now; it is called bail,” he said. “And guess what pretrial detention is? If you don’t have any money, you don’t get out.”

Some bail reform advocates have continued to support the bill, hoping to play a major role in implementa­tion.

“The momentum behind SB 10 is strong, and we can’t miss the chance to move justice forward this year while continuing to press for further reforms,” said Laphonza Butler, president of the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union Local 2015.

But some sponsors dropped their support amid

negotiatio­ns in recent weeks, and others are working to the kill the legislatio­n. The American Civil Liberties Union, which has been working on the issue for years, moved on its position to neutral on Thursday.

The new version of the bill would “eliminate the exploitati­ve and abusive commercial bail industry that preys on low-income people, including a disproport­ionate number of black and brown people,” said Natasha Minsker, director for the ACLU of California Center for Advocacy and Policy. “On the other hand, SB 10 needs to go further to be the model for pretrial justice and racial equity that we are working towards.”

John Raphling, a senior researcher with Human Rights Watch, said the reason organizati­ons were opposing SB 10 is that “it replaces money bail with a system that is likely to incarcerat­e more people and uses racially biased risk assessment­s and gives judges nearly unlimited discretion to lock people up.”

Meanwhile, bail agents and lobbyists are gearing up to launch massive opposition of their own, saying the revised changes would decimate the industry.

Hertzberg and Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta (D-Alameda) combined efforts in late 2016 to unveil a pair of identical bills that would eliminate the use of bail fee systems and require counties to establish their own pretrial services agencies. Those agencies were to develop a “risk-assessment tool,” a type of analysis to evaluate people booked into jail to determine whether and under what conditions they should be released.

Only Hertzberg’s bill has made it through the legislativ­e process. Under the new version of his bill, pretrial services agencies would be overseen by county probation department­s. Only people charged with certain lowlevel, nonviolent misdemeano­rs would be eligible for automatic release within 12 hours of being booked into jail. The list of charges can be further narrowed by county.

All other people arrested would have to undergo risk analysis, which would sort offenders based on their criminal histories and other criteria into low-, mediumor high-risk categories. Courts would be required to release low-level defendants without assigning bail, pending a hearing. Pretrial services offices would decide whether to hold or release medium-risk offenders.

Judges would have greater discretion over all prisoners in a practice known as “preventive detention,” which would allow them to decide which people are dangers to the community and should be held without the possibilit­y of release.

If a judge chooses to impose pretrial supervisio­n requiremen­ts, such as ankle monitors, the Hertzberg bill would require they be covered free of charge to defendants.

On Thursday, Bonta said the new system would protect the poor and the public.

“It will replace a flawed, unsafe, money-based system with a fairer, safer system,” he said.

But the proposal is not yet in the clear, and it carries a hefty cost for counties.

Assemblyma­n Jim Cooper (D-Elk Grove) opposed a budget trailer bill in a hearing Tuesday that included $15 million for bail reform, noting that there was no guarantee the legislatio­n would pass, and saying that funding it was “putting the cart before the horse.”

“This is B.S., flat-out B.S. Why this is in here?” he said.

Gina Clayton, founder and director of the Essie Justice Center, which provides leadership training and services to women with incarcerat­ed loved ones, argued that Hertzberg’s bill would inf late budgets for law enforcemen­t, probation and correction­s.

“If the war on drugs has taught us anything at all, it is that we need more access to services,” Clayton said. “This is another bill that again makes a lot of the same mistakes.”

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? STATE SEN. Bob Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys), front, and Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta (D-Alameda) promote their bill to end money bail at a news conference Thursday.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press STATE SEN. Bob Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys), front, and Assemblyma­n Rob Bonta (D-Alameda) promote their bill to end money bail at a news conference Thursday.

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