Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
America’s For-Profit Bail System: Only The Poor Pay
America’s For-Profit Bail System: Only The Poor Pay
Feb 11, 2026 10:13 AM

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
The Pope’s Economic ‘Prophecy’
Linked yesterday on the Drudge Report and picked up by news outlets all over the world is a brief Bloomberg report on a statement from the Italian Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti. Tremonti attributed to Pope Benedict XVI a “prophecy” dating from over twenty years ago concerning the current global financial meltdown. Again, the story is quite brief, and here’s the gist: “The prediction that an undisciplined economy would collapse by its own rules can be found” in an article written...
Bragging on an Undergrad
The latest issue of Religion & Liberty contains an essay I wrote for Acton about whether the relationship between social conservatives and libertarians can be saved. A student at my university (Houston Baptist University) read the essay and formulated a number of thoughts on his own. I was so affected by what this undergraduate sent me, I had to pass it along: I have strong beliefs about limited government, states rights, individual liberty, free-markets, etc. But these e under fire...
Pirate Morality
By now you’ve read one or more stories about the increasing levels of piracy on Africa’s east coast, brought into the spotlight by the recent capture of a Saudi oil tanker. Piracy is, of course, simply a specific form of theft, a vice that like all basic vices will be with us to the end of time. Sometimes there is a fine line between state military conflict and piracy, as the case of Sir Francis Drake attests (to the English,...
Holodomor
——————– Start of message from list: eni-summary ——– Ecumenical News International News Highlights 24 November 2008 Ukrainian church marks 20th century ‘genocide’ Russia disputes Warsaw (ENI). Ukraine’s largest Orthodox church has marked the anniversary of an early 1930s’ Soviet-engineered famine, in which millions died, by describing it for the first time as an “act of genocide”, a description rejected by the Russian government. “A crime like this could only happen in an environment hateful of God and man,” the holy...
IBD: Papal Bullishness
Following up on our coverage of Pope Benedict’s economic “prophecy,” here’s a snip from yesterday’s “Papal Bullishness” editorial in Investor’s Business Daily. Read then-Cardinal Ratzinger’s 1985 article “Market Economy and Ethics” here. The Pope gave a “prediction that an undisciplined economy would collapse by its own rules,” the ex-socialist lawyer and economics professor nonsensically claimed at Milan’s Cattolica University last week. Tremonti conveniently omitted that elsewhere in the Pontiff’s 2,300-word analysis he grumbled that Theodore Roosevelt and Nelson Rockefeller spread...
Religion and Liberty: An Interview with Mustafa Akyol
The Spring issue of Religion & Liberty is now available online. The feature is an interview with Turkish scholar Mustafa Akyol. Akyol was a faculty member at Acton University last summer. The title of the interview is “Turkey: Islam’s Bridge to Religious and Economic Liberty?” In the interview Akyol notes: So Turkey will not change the world in one day, but if it shows that a Muslim society can achieve democracy and lives in peace with the western world, that...
Rev. Sirico on National Review Online
National Review Online today published Rev. Robert Sirico’s “A House Built on Sand,” his mentary on the financial crisis. Wall Street has been skewered and denounced in almost every attempt to examine the moral dimension of this crisis. Yet, Wall Street is too often denounced for all the wrong reasons — as a surrogate for the free economy, for seeking and making a profit, as though the alternative was somehow a preferable moral result. No, if we are going to...
How Relevant are the Pilgrims?
For something to be deemed not relevant is the kiss of death in some evangelical Christian congregations across this country. As churches try to influence culture the Church at the same time is often swallowed up by it. The Pilgrims certainly would be categorized by many as severely irrelevant in lifestyle, separatist ways, and by their manner of worship in today’s culture. The pastor of the church I attend preached an excellent two part series sermon on the Pilgrims. He...
The Common Good as an Excuse to Override Human Dignity
I cannot tell you how many times Catholics have used mon good” as an excuse for more government involvement in peoples’ lives and the installing of socialistic, “spread the wealth” programs. This version of mon good is the foundation for some people’s idea of distributive justice, but actually it is based on the “Robin Hood fallacy” of robbing from the rich and giving to the poor. How did e to this conclusion? I did so merely by reading Aristotle and...
Review of Lawler on Boston Catholicism
Appearing in the next issue of Religion & Liberty will be my review of Philip F. Lawler’s The Faithful Departed: The Collapse of Boston’s Catholic Culture (Encounter Books, 2008). There is no point in dwelling on how well-written and insightful the book is, as it has already won plaudits from other, more significant reviewers, but I can give my own “Acton spin” to Lawler’s exceptional work. Here is the piece in full, an exclusive preview for PowerBlog readers: Lord Acton’s...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved