Sens. Kamala Harris, a Democrat from California, and Sen. Rand Paul, a Republican from Kentucky, are working together to address an important national problem: monetary bail that can keep defendants in jail because they’re too poor to pay. ADVERTISING Sens.
Sens. Kamala Harris, a Democrat from California, and Sen. Rand Paul, a Republican from Kentucky, are working together to address an important national problem: monetary bail that can keep defendants in jail because they’re too poor to pay.
The senators jointly introduced, and jointly promoting, a bill that would give grants to states to reform their bail systems.
“Whether someone stays in jail or not is far too often determined by wealth or social connections, even though just a few days behind bars can cost people their job, home, custody of their children — or their life,” the pair said in a New York Times op-ed.
The bill would require grant recipients to try to move away from money-bail systems to “individualized, pretrial assessments” that estimate the likelihood a defendant will flee or commit crimes while released. And these assessments would use “objective, research-based and locally validated” tools.
In deciding whether to hold or release a defendant pending trial, a court considers the freedom of a person who has not been proved to be anything other than innocent. Taking that freedom away takes a lot to justify. It can sometimes be necessary to ensure the defendant does not flee before justice can be done, but innocent people deserve an individualized risk assessment if they are to be kept in jail for such a reason.
And such assessments are certainly to be preferred to monetary bail, and especially to monetary bail set without regard to ability to pay. It is unequal justice to hold people in jail because they are poor when they would get out if they were better off. Monetary bail can have exactly that result.
Before becoming a senator this year, Harris served as the attorney general of California and the district attorney of San Francisco. While Paul’s pre-Senate career was largely spent as an ophthalmologist in Bowling Green, Ky., he has demonstrated commitment to his libertarian ideals, much to the annoyance of some colleagues — but at least people can see where he stands.
In this hyperpartisan time, it is heartening to see senators from the two major parties working together on a matter of justice.
— Pittsburgh Post-Gazette