Giving Compass' Take:
- Tiana Herring argues that pretrial releases do not endanger the public or affect public safety as some people think.
- How can we harness the energy of grassroots movements to help develop better pretrial justice policies? Which states are making the most progress?
- Learn how pretrial detention disproportionately impacts people of color.
What is Giving Compass?
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As COVID-19 makes jails more dangerous than ever, people are looking closer at policies and programs that keep people out of jail and in their homes pretrial. Criminal justice reformers have long supported such measures, but opponents — including district attorneys, police departments, and the commercial bail industry — often claim pretrial reform puts community safety at risk. We put these claims to the test.
We found four states, as well as nine cities and counties, where there is existing data on public safety from before and after the adoption of pretrial reforms. All but one of these jurisdictions saw decreases or negligible increases in crime after implementing reforms. The one exception is New York State, where the reform law existed for just a few months before it was largely rolled back.
Below, we describe the reforms implemented in each of the 13 jurisdictions we studied, the effect these reforms had on the pretrial population (if available), and the effect on public safety. We find that whether the jurisdictions eliminated money bail for some or all charges, began using a validated risk assessment tool, introduced services to remind people of upcoming court dates, or implemented some combination of these policies, the results were the same: Releasing people pretrial did not negatively impact public safety.
Read the full article about pretrial releases by Tiana Herring at Prison Policy Initiative.