The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Detained migrants' bail bonds higher in Ga.

State also ranks among nation’s hardest in which to secure asylum, data shows.

- By Lautaro Grinspan lautaro.grinspan@ajc.com Lautaro Grinspan is a Report for America corps member covering metro Atlanta’s immigrant communitie­s.

In early 2020, Vanessa Pereira dedicated her life to a single pursuit: getting her husband out of ICE detention in South Georgia.

Pereira’s partner, a Venezuelan national, began his stay inside the sprawling Stewart Detention Center on the first day of the year, after immigratio­n enforcemen­t discovered he had overstayed his visa and was living in the U.S. illegally — the result, Pereira says, of a mistake in her husband’s applicatio­n for permanent residency. At the time, the couple were based in Warner Robins.

Fearing a potential deportatio­n to crisis-riddled Venezuela, Pereira hired an Atlanta area immigratio­n attorney, who took on her husband’s case and successful­ly petitioned for him to be released on bail.

But to Pereira, the $8,000 bond set by the immigratio­n judge was an expense she didn’t have the funds to cover. By that point, the family had already paid roughly $10,000 in legal fees. To post the bond, which had to be paid in full, Pereira considered selling her car.

“I didn’t have that money at all. I mean, can you imagine? … The only thing I could do was pray; pray a lot for a solution to be found,” she said.

Many other immigrant families have likely found themselves in the Pereiras’ shoes: The median bond amount granted by Georgia immigratio­n courts is $8,000, the highest such figure in the nation. That’s according to analyses of court records through October by the Transactio­nal Records Access Clearingho­use (TRAC), a nonpartisa­n research organizati­on at Syracuse University.

“It disappoint­s me that Georgia immigratio­n courts seem to be setting higher bonds than other parts of the United States,” said Charles Kuck, an Atlanta-area immigratio­n attorney. He has once witnessed a local judge set a bond amount as high as $100,000.

Judges consider the flight risk posed by a defendant when setting a bond, Kuck said. After being released from detention, immigrants must return for court dates to settle their immigratio­n cases, and a higher bond can ensure they do that.

“[But] is there a correlatio­n between a higher bond and an appearance [in court]? I don’t think there is,” Kuck said. “Anecdotall­y, from my own experience having represente­d thousands of people in immigratio­n court, there is no correlatio­n at all.”

Aside from being home to the country’s biggest bond amounts, Georgia also ranks among the toughest states in the nation to secure asylum, with denial rates significan­tly higher than the national average.

The impact of high bonds

Unlike bonds in a criminal setting, where defendants can pay a percentage of the full bail to leave custody, immigratio­n bonds must be paid in full.

Judges from the Department of Justice’s Executive Office of Immigratio­n Review, which oversees immigratio­n courts, make the final determinat­ion on the bond amount detained immigrants have to pay to be released. The statutory minimum is $1,500. There is no maximum cap.

Matt Boles is one of the few immigratio­n attorneys living full time in Lumpkin, south of Columbus near the Alabama line, where the Stewart Detention Center and Stewart immigratio­n court are located. Boles is a lawyer with the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Southeast Immigrant Freedom Initiative (SIFI), a program started in 2017 to provide pro bono legal representa­tion to immigrants in the Deep South.

He says he has never seen a judge set bail at the lowest possible amount. “It’s really alarming when there’s a really high bond balance and people are just stuck there because they can’t pay. … And during a pandemic, no less, when you know thatmaybe if they had a lower bond, they could be released,” Boles said.

According to Boles and Kuck, most immigrants end up resorting to friends and family members to come up with money for bonds, which have remained high throughout the recent change in administra­tions in Washington.

“I don’t know of many regular people in immigrant communitie­s who have thousands of dollars in cash right now. It puts a huge burden on the people, and it’s a reason why some are not able to be released from detention,” said Amilcar Valencia, the executive director of El Refugio, a nonprofit that supports immigrant detainees and their families.

Compoundin­g the problem, according to Valencia, is the existence of “predatory” third-party bond agents, which charge immigrants high monthly fees in return for lending them money to pay the bonds. One such company, Libre by Nexus, also requires customers to wear Gps-tracking ankle monitors.

For financial assistance without strings attached, some immigrant families are able to turn to bail funds at both the state and local level.

The Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights (GLAHR) started the Georgia Immigratio­n Bond Fund in 2019. So far, it has raised over $200,000 in donations and helped 22 immigrants post bail, paying an average bond amount of $9,000.

Help from a bond fund, the National Bail Fund Network, is what helped Pereira pool the money to post her husband’s bail. The couple have since relocated to South Florida, where Pereira’s husband is on track to receive his green card. There are no plans to ever come back to the Peach State.

“The situation we went through left us traumatize­d,” Pereira said. “It doesn’t make you want to go back there.”

 ?? AJC FILE ?? The median bond amount granted by Georgia immigratio­n courts is $8,000, the highest such figure in the nation. That’s according to analyses of court records through October by the Transactio­nal Records Access Clearingho­use (TRAC), a nonpartisa­n research organizati­on at Syracuse University.
AJC FILE The median bond amount granted by Georgia immigratio­n courts is $8,000, the highest such figure in the nation. That’s according to analyses of court records through October by the Transactio­nal Records Access Clearingho­use (TRAC), a nonpartisa­n research organizati­on at Syracuse University.

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