Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
America’s For-Profit Bail System: Only The Poor Pay
America’s For-Profit Bail System: Only The Poor Pay
May 14, 2025 3:11 PM

You may think that if you’re a law-abiding citizen, the concept of “bail” may be irrelevant. Well, maybe you forgot to pay your car insurance. Or maybe your license lapsed. You get pulled over because your tail light is out. It’s not a violent crime – a lapse in judgement, or a lack of money, perhaps.

And suddenly you need bail. $1000, the judge tells you, or you have to go to Rikers Island, New York’s main plex. You and 140,000 criminals. And someone like Robert Durst, accused of murder in Texas, is able to cough up a quarter million and walk away free.

America’s for-profit bail system is a $14 million a year industry, and the U.S. is one of only two countries that allows a for-profit system. According to a 2012 Justice Policy Institute report:

For-profit bail bonding costs taxpayers through increased jail and other justice expenses. In addition, it impacts people from low munities – generally the loved ones of the accused person – who must pay nonrefundable fees for the bond regardless of case e and who, through contracts with the bondsmen, bear the real monetary risk of paying the full bail amount in the event of a court no-show.

In the early 20th century, bail bondsmen were primarily small business men. By mid-century, however, the for-profit business became dominated by “front-end sales agents for giant panies.” These are not criminal justice professionals. They do not have public safety in mind, nor are they concerned for the people they serve. It is a profit-driven business.

Of course, there is nothing wrong with a business that makes a profit. That’s what businesses are for, after all. However, a for-profit business that preys on the poor is a concern. It’s also clear that this is a business riddled with corruption.

A recent investigation showed that the for-profit bail industry engages in “multimillion dollar lobbying efforts” to increase their profitability and attack pretrial services operations. In California alone, the bail industry has spent almost a half million dollars on lobbying since 2000.

Campaign donations from the bail industry are also substantial. An analysis of state campaign donation records showed that bail agents, businesses and associations have contributed over $3.1 million to state-level political candidates from 2002 to 2011. Eighty-two percent of these donations ($2,600,070) were made with in ten states.

Bail agents have a financial interest in an accused person’s liberty, and that can lead to corruption and bribery. The report cited here suggests “pre-trial release programs:”

Effective pretrial release programs employ rigorous, validated risk assessments, offer pretrial release mendations and supervise and monitor released persons within a continuum of options. Successful models of pretrial services can be found in Multnomah County, Oregon; Kentucky; and the Federal pretrial system.

Read “For Better or For Profit” from the Justice Policy Institute here.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Finding ‘the lost tools of learning’
“If you were to read Dorothy Sayers’ The Lost Tools of Learning and thereafter read the curriculum of Veritas Classical Academy,” says Elizabeth Yeh in this week’s Acton Commentary, “you would find that the “lost tools” have been found in the small town of Marietta, Ohio.” The curriculum at Veritas is based on the Trivium. In her book, novelist and essayist Sayers explains that the genius of the Trivium is that it coincides with the natural stages of a child’s...
Populism is now more popular than liberty with European voters: Study
How popular is populism in Europe? A new study reveals that populist parties have displaced traditional advocates of liberty among European voters. It also reveals the nations where populism attracts the greatest support. The information is found in the 2017 “Authoritarian Populism Index,” released by the Swedish libertarian think tank Timbro, along with the European Policy Information Center. The report refers to the philosophy of limited government, free markets, and respect for individual rights as “Liberalism,” in the European sense....
Are you brave enough to tell a joke?
Ticking Giants (2017) tells how an edian found a way to fight against and call out abusive leaders with creative non-violence. This new documentary directed and produced by Sara Taksler follows Dr. Bassem Youssef, the “Jon Stewart of Egypt,” a heart surgeon turned edian who took on Egyptian authority. It opens on Tahrir Square in Cairo where protests have broken out against military control of the government. Youssef and a camera crew walk around talking to the fed up masses....
The one virtue personified by all good fathers and entrepreneurs
It has e passe to accuse defenders of the free market of selfishness and atomization. Even Pope Francis recently denounced “libertarian individualism.”But Mihail Neamtu, in a new essay for Religion & Liberty Transatlantic,argues that open markets rely on one specific virtue, best exemplified by fathers and entrepreneurs, which requires them to care for others: Over nearly half a century, secular academia, pop culture, and the managerial welfare State have undermined an important moral quality of the West: individual responsibility, rooted...
Access to the pond: The global poor already know how to fish
In assessing solutions to global poverty, it can be easy to counter the failures of foreign aid by focusing only on the problems with viewing handouts as a path to economic development (there are many). If only we’d “teach a man to fish,” as the saying goes, he’d eat for a lifetime. But what if most of the world’s poor already know how to fish? What if the problem has more to do with a lack of “access to the...
Radio Free Acton: Jim McGann on the world of think tanks; Upstream on Spiderman: Homecoming
This week on Radio Free Acton, we talk with Jim McGann (senior lecturer of International Studies at the Lauder Institute, director of the Think Tanks and Civil Societies Program and senior fellow, Fels Institute of Government at the University of Pennsylvania) about the world of think tanks – what they are, what they do well, and where they can improve their effectiveness. Then RFA Chief Cultural Correspondent Bruce Edward Walker joins the show to lead a discussion on the latest...
Why is socialism being promoted by conservative Christian outlets?
“Socialism,” said Richard John Neuhaus, “is the religion people get when they lose their religion.” While that might have been true in Neuhaus’s day, many young Christians are now attempting to have their faith and socialism too. I never got the opportunity to meet Fr. Neuhaus. He died in January 2009, two months before I started working as the web editor at the magazine he founded, First Things. I suspect, though, that the staunch advocate of democratic capitalism would be...
To rescue persecuted Christians, the West must be the West again
Images of persecuted Christians have not inflicted less emotional pain for the fact that they have e altogether monplace. Their fellow believers, and benevolent people of all backgrounds, have asked what they can do about it. A new book delves deeply into the topic ing to a surprising conclusion: The first step to aiding the tortured Body of Christ is for the West to mit itself to, and to reassert,Western values. The Persecution and Genocide of Christians in the Middle...
The greatest crony capitalist deal in Wisconsin history
There are still five months left in 2017, but it looks like we already have our list of contenders for the Cronies of the Year Award. Last night President Trump, Speaker Ryan, and Gov. Scott Walker announced Foxconn Technology Group would be building a display panel plant in Wisconsin. Gov. Walker said the deal is “the single largest economic development project in the history of Wisconsin.” It will also be the biggest crony deal in Wisconsin history. The Daily Tribune...
How Christian conservatives are breeding Bolsheviks
Earlier this week I asked why conservative Christian outlets are increasingly promoting socialist ideas and policies. Yesterday, my friend Jake Meador weighed in to help provide some perspective on this trend. Jake himself is the editor of an online Christian magazine—Mere Orthodoxy—that would be described as traditionalist conservative. While he is not a socialist, he admits he is somewhat sympathetic to the “emerging leftism” of young Christians, especially those within Catholic and evangelical circles. I appreciate how Jake has extended...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved