The Denver Post

Bail funders learn to “grind through this horrible process”

- By Nicholas Kulish

One afternoon in June, Elisabeth Epps hopped into her partner’s Jeep and rode from Denver to Boulder, carrying cashier’s checks worth nearly $16,000.

She wasn’t going on vacation or buying a car. She made the 30mile trip to sit in the reception area at the Boulder jail — or as she called it, the “Boulder County cage” — to bail out three men she had never met.

“I’m here to pay ransom,” Epps told her followers as she livestream­ed herself on Twitter.

Epps, 40, founded the Colorado Freedom Fund in 2018 — one of nearly 100 community bail funds that have started up across the country in the past decade. The organizati­ons use donor money to secure the release of individual­s who are awaiting trial behind bars because they cannot afford their bail. Minus certain fees and lost bonds for people who miss their court dates, the money comes back as clients meet their legal obligation­s and can be spent again on the next person’s bail.

The grassroots movement achieved a new level of mainstream attention after the May killing of George Floyd by police in Minneapoli­s, when demonstrat­ors took to the streets across the country.

During protests in Denver, volunteer medics handed out water bottles with the Colorado Freedom Fund’s phone number on the side. “I took a picture of it, thinking, ‘This is really smart,’ ” said Desiree Wines, who was arrested along with her husband for violating curfew. “In the paddy wagon, I told everyone the number for the Colorado Freedom Fund. I said, ‘Hey guys, repeat this number until you get to a phone,’ ” Wines said. The fund paid $500 bail each for her and her husband.

Bail funds have become an instant cause célèbre, with actors, models, singers and rappers posting screenshot­s of their donations.

On a recent Monday, Epps freed a woman with a single $50,000 cashier’s check — more than the $43,876 her group handed out in all of 2019 to pay 182 bonds.

A thousand miles east, the Chicago Community Bond Fund paid a $400,000 bond on behalf of Chrystul Kizer, 19. She had been held in a Wisconsin jail for two years, accused of killing Randall Volar, 34, in what her supporters say was an act of self-defense by a victim of sex traffickin­g.

Another group in the network, the Minnesota Freedom Fund, received more than $30 million in donations, nearly 300 times the amount it received in all of 2018, the year of its last public tax filing. Some donors have begun to criticize the group for not putting a large enough share of the money to work quickly enough.

“Nonprofits will get themselves into trouble with donors if they try to save funds or divert funds to other purposes. Witness the post-9/11 problems of the Red Cross,” said Alan Abramson, director at the Center for Nonprofit Management, Philanthro­py, and Policy at George Mason University. The Red Cross raised more than a half-billion dollars after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and was criticized after trying to repurpose some of the windfall for future disasters.

“It was very easy for people to make donations — click, click,” said Pilar Maria Weiss, director of the Community Justice Exchange, which runs the National Bail Fund Network. “They wanted the freedom part to go the same way.

“You can’t show up with $31 million and say, ‘Now everybody gets to go home,’ ” Weiss added. “You have to grind through this horrible process.”

In greater Denver, Epps has learned that grind over the past two years. Each jurisdicti­on has a different payment system — inperson, online, kiosk. Some take cash or debit cards, others only cashier’s checks. It’s a piecemeal system of buying freedom that runs the mileage up on her car and tries her patience daily.

Epps, who said she was teargassed and shot with rubber bullets during the recent demonstrat­ions, had an up-close view of the system last year, when she spent 16 days in the Arapahoe County Detention Center. She had been convicted of obstructin­g a police officer after intercedin­g when police tried to question a mentally unstable man. Under the terms of her work release, she typically spent nights in the jail before leaving with an ankle monitor to spend the day bailing other people out.

“Not one woman in my unit needed to be there,” Epps said. “It even deepened my commitment to abolition. The community was not safer with any of those women spending nights in jail.”

Bail funds have been around in different forms for decades, used by civil rights groups to prepare for arrests that follow protests and acts of civil disobedien­ce. Some scholars trace their roots to black communitie­s’ pooling money to buy the freedom of enslaved people. But the modern push for bail funds gained momentum with the start of the Black Lives Matter movement in 2013; the unrest after the killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., by police in 2014; and the death of Sandra Bland in a Texas jail in 2015 while her family tried to post $500 to bail her out.

Sharlyn Grace, the executive director, described the appeal: “It’s extremely concrete. There’s immediate impact. You go down to the jail and buy someone’s freedom.”

The organizati­on has raised $5 million since Floyd’s death. But not all of the funds may go to paying bail. Grace said she saw the money as belonging to the Black Lives Matter cause more broadly and that the donations were “a movement resource.” How the money is distribute­d to other groups could raise questions from donors, but Grace cautioned against too narrow a focus on bonds over broader problems in the criminal justice system.

Epps also works as an organizer in the policy department at the ACLU of Colorado. In 2018, the organizati­on sued the city of Denver on behalf of a Colorado Freedom Fund client. As a result, the city agreed to stop collecting a $30 booking fee and a $50 bond fee that were preventing the release of poor defendants.

While using donations to pay bail, Epps and her co-director, Eva Frickle, also advocate legislativ­e reforms, like a bill signed into law by the governor of Colorado last year eliminatin­g bail for petty crimes.

“Our mission is to work ourselves out of existence,” Epps said. “We are unapologet­ically working through an abolitioni­st lens.”

 ?? David Zalubowski, The Associated Press ?? Activist Elisabeth Epps, taking part in a rally for Elijah McClain in Aurora on July 3, started the Colorado Freedom Fund in 2018.
David Zalubowski, The Associated Press Activist Elisabeth Epps, taking part in a rally for Elijah McClain in Aurora on July 3, started the Colorado Freedom Fund in 2018.
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