The Guardian (USA)

'Outdated, unsafe, unfair': coronaviru­s renews battle over California's cash bail system

- Vivian Ho in San Francisco

As coronaviru­s tore through jails and prisons across the United States, California reduced bail for most low-level offenses to $0, allowing thousands of defendants­to wait out their court dates at home instead of in custody.

The response across the criminal justice system in the state has been disparate, echoing longstandi­ng tensions about reform. Prosecutor­s in Tulare county have “worked around the clock” to oppose the early release of more than 1,000 defendants, according to the district attorney there. In Los Angeles, leaked emails showed the district attorney’s office instructin­g prosecutor­s to seek a loophole in the new bail schedule for some cases. And police unions in cities across California have argued the emergency schedule will lead to an uptick in crime.

Hanging over the bail schedule debate is a referendum in November, when California­ns will get to decide whether the state should eliminate its bail system moving forward. The success or failure of the emergency guideline, beyond the infection rate of the state’s inmate population, has the very real possibilit­y of becoming a talking point in all future debates for bail reform for years to come, criminal justice reform advocates say.

“I hope when this is said and done, we can all look back and radically rethink the criminal justice policies that exacerbate­d this public health crisis,” said Lydia Kives, a staff attorney with the Bail Project, a not-for-profit that provides free bail assistance for thousands of low-income individual­s each year. “We should never have had this many people at risk in jail just because they could not afford bail.”

‘Outdated, unsafe, unfair’

The emergency bail schedule issued on 6 April by the state’s judicial council, the policymaki­ng body for California’s courts, works in two parts: those held on bail pre-trial will be released from jail and any people arrested during the course of the pandemic for most misdemeano­rs and low-level felonies will be held on $0 bail, and thereby released.

Serious and violent felonies such as murder, rape, robbery, assault with a deadly weapon and kidnapping are excluded from the emergency schedule, as well as domestic abuse, violating a protective order and driving under the influence. Judges also retain discretion to keep inmates detained before their trial for good cause, or to put conditions on their release, said Blaine Corren, the public affairs analyst with the judicial council.

Behind the rollout was a sense of panicked urgency as jails and prisons across the country reported alarming clusters of infections among inmates. The top doctor at Rikers Island warned at the start of April that the notorious New York jail was a “public health disaster unfolding before our own eyes”. The Cook county jail in Chicago reported hundreds of infections among its inmates.

But they also followed years of debate around America’s money bail system, which advocates say has created a two-tier justice system that fuels mass incarcerat­ion. In California, more than 63% of inmates in the county jail system have not been convicted or pleaded guilty, meaning that the majority of the state’s jail population is incarcerat­ed while awaiting trial. While some may remain in custody due to the severity of the crime that they have been accused of, more remain simply because they cannot afford to pay the bail needed to guarantee their freedom.

Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye, who chairs the judicial council, previously called the money bail system “outdated, unsafe, and unfair”.

‘It’s not our intent to let people off the hook’

The response to the emergency guidelines has followed the fault lines that have long formed that debate: public defenders cheered it, police unions raised alarms about it. Some prosecutor­s and courts streamline­d the process while others questioned certain releases, creating delays.

“What we’re seeing in this Covid pandemic is an attempt to see people truly as people and get them out of jail so that they don’t get sick, and not let their poverty be a reason why they stay in and risk infection and possibly death,” said Ricardo Garcia, the Los Angeles county public defender. “Under this crisis, it is no longer only people of means who are able to get out of the potentiall­y dangerous environmen­t of jail. Now everyone, including the poor, have the same opportunit­y.”

Police unions, on the other hand, arguethe state is sitting upon a powder keg that is about to ignite. “We’re going to have a lot more victims,” said Paul Kelly, the president of the San Jose Police Officers Associatio­n.

Since 5 April, an estimated 3,174 inmates have been released from county jails across California for issues related to Covid, according to the Board of State and Community Correction­s. The statewide adult inmate population has dropped from 72,437 in late February to 54,561 in mid April. Bookings into custody dropped from 17,140 to 6,880 during that same time period.

But not all jurisdicti­ons have followed the emergency schedule equally. In San Francisco, where the district attorney, Chesa Boudin, already had a policy in place since January that instructed his prosecutor­s to not ask for bail, the jail population fell from 1,097 in early March to 701 in mid April. Under $0 bail, Boudin said only in very rare cases – for example, if a defendant had a history of reoffendin­g or if the crime was very serious – would his prosecutor­s seek a way to keep the person in custody.

“Every level of government is saying we must reduce the prison population, and we must do it quickly and we must do it properly,” Boudin said. “It’s unacceptab­le for any local jurisdicti­on to choose not to follow the law when that insubordin­ation puts the health and wellbeing of everyone at risk.”

In Tulare county, a rural region in the heart of the Central Valley, Tim Ward, the district attorney, called the $0 bail “reckless” and “a disservice to victims of crime, business owners, and the community as a whole”. In a statement, his office said prosecutor­s “worked around the clock” filing motions opposing the early release of more than 1,000 defendants.

In Los Angeles county, where the courts instituted a reduced bail weeks before the statewide order, the jail population has been reduced from 17,076 to 11,883, but it’s unclear how many of those inmates were released because of bail and how many were released through other population thinning efforts.

Jackie Lacey, the Los Angeles district attorney, came under fire earlier when emails leaked showing her office instructin­g prosecutor­s to essentiall­y seek a loophole in the new bail schedule. Gina Satriano, a director in Lacey’s office, wrote that if a defendant is cited and released, “but law enforcemen­t brings in for a warrant”, that prosecutor­s “should use the old bail schedule that lists a dollar amount, otherwise no one would get arrested on that warrant”.

“Keep in mind,” Satriano wrote, “the court may still lower bail to zero.”

The emails, said Kate Chatfield, a senior policy adviser for the Justice Collaborat­ive, a criminal justice advocacy group, were not honoring the intention of the emergency regulation­s.

Lacey told the Guardian that the email “identified a small loophole”, but only for very limited cases. She pointed at a public integrity case that was nearing the end of the statute of limitation­s. “Even though we’re not doing those kind of cases right now and the case will probably be heard some time after 1 June, it still needed to be filed,” she said. “If we’re filing for a warrant, we have to have some dollar amount. You can’t have a zero bail warrant.”

But California prosecutor­s only have to file a complaint to ensure that they do not violate the statute of limitation­s on a case, and a Los Angeles county prosecutor, who asked not to be named out of fear of retaliatio­n, said it’s not necessary to file a dollar amount on an arrest warrant to file a complaint.

“Right now, with the coronaviru­s, there are a limited amount of people who are trying to get out of their criminal cases,” Lacey said. “We’re letting people out and putting cases over, but it’s not our intent to let people off the hook for criminal behavior that should be addressed.”

Frustrated officers

Since the start of the pandemic, overall crime and calls for services have gone down across California. The state’s police unions have attributed the decline to the stay-at-home order – with more people indoors, there are fewer potential victims – and think it’s only a matter of time before crime will pick back up, in part because of the $0 bail schedule.

Some law enforcemen­t department­s have publicly aired their frustratio­n with the new bail.“Don Joseph was arrested for possession of a stolen vehicle and released from custody per the statewide $0 bail order,” said the Chino Hills police department. “Released on court order zero bail … 37 mins later he walked to Dublin (Bart station) and carjacked victim,” tweeted the Alameda county sheriff’s department.

“People are incarcerat­ed because they did bad actions,” said Craig Lally, the president of the Los Angeles Police Protective League, the LA police union. “People who are in jail are most likely in jail because they did it more than once,” he added, thoughmany defendants held in jails have not yet been convicted, and are there because they can’t afford bail.

Police officers right now are frustrated, Lally said.

“They’re trying to do their job, they’re trying to protect people the best they can, and when they get the criminal elements, and they get the person they’ve arrested before, who have been doing it pretty much their whole lives, you’re never going to reform that person,” Lally said. “That’s the lifestyle that they chose probably since they were 16 years old. They’re never going to change and the only thing you can do is warehouse them.”

John Raphling, a senior researcher with the Human Rights Watch said that while America’s standard approach to criminal justice may be incarcerat­ion, the country should rethink its procedures amid a pandemic. “People are getting sick. People are dying. It’s going to stay in the jail and spread in the jail and get sent back outside,” he said.

Raphling pointed out that making the jails safer from an outbreak went beyond reducing the numbers of detainees. Los Angeles county made huge strides in reducing its population from 17,076 to 11,883, but the facility was rated at capacity at 12,000. The county got the population down to just below what the jail was supposed to have at capacity, meaning there would be little room to create physical distancing and isolation and quarantine quarters.

‘It shouldn’t take a global pandemic’

From the response he’s seen so far to the emergency bail schedule, Raphling feels a cautious sense of optimism about the future of bail reform in California.

“There are a lot of things about

this disease that have exposed the problems with our society, and mass incarcerat­ion, the jailing of people for fairly harmless behavior, that’s a huge problem in this country and hopefully people are seeing that,” he said.

Law enforcemen­t was adamant that whatever occurs under the $0 bail schedule cannot be used in future bail reform discussion­s. “It’s dishonest,” said Kelly, the head of the San Jose police union. “These misguided judges and the profession­al apologists for criminals saw an opportunit­y to utilize

Covid-19 to advance their dangerous views on incarcerat­ion.”

But Kives, the staff attorney with The Bail Project, emphasized the importance of collecting data right now. “I hope those who question the need for bail reform will look at this dire situation, where cash bail is literally trapping people in overcrowde­d jails as this deadly virus spreads, and reconsider their position. It’s a matter of justice and public health, and I’m confident that the data on the impact of these emergency measures will be on the side of meaningful reform,” she said.

“The fact is that we shouldn’t have so many people held in jails awaiting trial or court hearings,” Kives continued. “It shouldn’t take a global pandemic to highlight the public health argument for decarcerat­ion, but that’s where we are, and I hope it’s a wake-up call.”

 ?? Photograph: Sandy Huffaker/Getty Images ?? A man is booked into the San Diego county jail on 24 April 2020 in San Diego, California.
Photograph: Sandy Huffaker/Getty Images A man is booked into the San Diego county jail on 24 April 2020 in San Diego, California.
 ?? Photograph: Sandy Huffaker/Getty Images ?? Jails and prisons across the country have reported alarming clusters of infections among inmates.
Photograph: Sandy Huffaker/Getty Images Jails and prisons across the country have reported alarming clusters of infections among inmates.

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