Chicago Sun-Times

Raoul files brief with state Supreme Court over bail reform ruling

- BY MATTHEW HENDRICKSO­N, STAFF REPORTER mhendricks­on@suntimes.com | @MHendricks­onCST

The Illinois attorney general’s office on Thursday filed its opening argument with the state’s highest court as it seeks to overturn a judge’s ruling that found parts of the controvers­ial SAFE-T Act unconstitu­tional.

Among the goals of the landmark criminal justice bill was the eliminatio­n of cash bail in the state, which would have made Illinois the first state in the nation to do so.

The bail reform was to go into effect Jan. 1, but was halted at the last minute after Kankakee County Chief Judge Thomas Cunnington sided with a group of prosecutor’s and sheriff ’s offices opposed to the law.

The opponents filed 64 nearly identical lawsuits challengin­g the reform, known as the Pretrial Fairness Act, but they were consolidat­ed into a single case before Kankakee County Chief Judge Thomas W. Cunnington.

On Dec. 28, Cunnington ruled that part of the act violated a requiremen­t in the state Constituti­on that requires defendants be bailable “by sufficient sureties,” except for certain offenses. He also found that it violated the separation of powers between the judiciary and Legislatur­e.

“The appropriat­eness of bail rests with the authority of the court and may not be determined by legislativ­e fiat,” Cunnington wrote in his ruling.

In its filing Thursday, Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office argued that Cunnington’s decision was “flawed,” arguing that the state Constituti­on does not require Illinois “to maintain a system of monetary bail.”

“The circuit court’s contrary decision should be reversed,” the office contended.

The state’s constituti­onal language on bail seeks to generally assure that a defendant who is presumed innocent has the right to seek pretrial release while their case is pending, according to the attorney general’s office.

That language, it argued, doesn’t explicitly include monetary bail. The attorney general’s office also argued that history was on its side, stating “monetary bail was all but unknown at the time the 1818 Constituti­on was drafted.”

At that time, the attorney general’s office stated, the continued appearance of defendants was assured by promises by their friends and family to guarantee they would show for trial.

Raoul’s office also cited dictionary definition­s of bail going back to before the United States was a country that never connected bail with the act of putting down a cash deposit.

The filing also argues that significan­t case law gives the Legislatur­e the authority to set policy, and said Cunnington’s reasoning for finding that the act violated the separation of power “is badly flawed.”

Opponents of the act must file a response by Feb. 17. Oral arguments are expected in March, but a date has not been set.

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