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Where is Bail Reform Now? Drive for Reform and Push Back

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Manage episode 334806897 series 3144837
Content provided by Peter C. Kiefer. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Peter C. Kiefer or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

July 19th 2022 Court Leader’s Advantage Podcast Episode

Bail Reform has been praised as an effective way to correct a societal wrong. The movement's byword has been “bail does not keep the most dangerous in jail: it keeps the poorest.” Despite this argument, Bail Reform is receiving increasing pushback.

Bail Reform aims to curb or eliminate cash bail for people who are in jail awaiting trial and charged with either misdemeanors or nonviolent offenses. Bail Reform releases many of these vulnerable low-income defendants from pretrial incarceration. It allows them to return to their homes, to go back to their to families, and to keep their jobs. It also saves taxes by managing jail populations. Jail is by far the most expensive way to deal with defendants. A national average puts keeping a defendant in jail at $391 a day; in contrast probation on average costs $121 a day.

Here are just a few recent examples of the pushback:

· Progressive San Francisco prosecutor Chesa Boudin, who supported Bail Reform has been recalled

· Progressive Los Angeles prosecutor George Gascon is facing a recall.

· Judges in Chicago have been blamed for releasing defendants on electronic ankle monitors who then go out and commit violent crimes,

· New York City Mayor Eric Adams blames rising crime in his city partially on judges who are not keeping dangerous criminals in jail.

Some pundits believe that voters are tired of being afraid: afraid of rising crime, afraid of the homeless, and afraid that courts, under Bail Reform, let dangerous criminals out to threaten their communities.

Some of the topics we will explore today include:

· What is the current situation on Bail Reform?

· What should be the courts’ position regarding Bail Reform?

· What should courts be doing right now?

Today’s Panel

· The Honorable Edward Spillane is the Presiding Judge of the Municipal Court in College Station, Texas. He has served in this position since May 2002. Prior to this, he served as an Assistant District Attorney for Brazos County for eight years and as an associate for the law firm Fulbright & Jaworski for two years. Judge Spillane received his undergraduate degree from Harvard University, and his law degree from the University of Chicago.

· The Honorable Paul C. Farr is the Judge with the Herriman and Alta Municipal Courts in Salt Lake County, Utah. Judge Farr graduated from the J. Reuben Clark Law School at BYU in 1999 and has been a member of the Utah State Bar for 21 years. He has been a municipal court judge for the past 11 years. He is also a member of the Utah Judicial Council and has been serving in that capacity for the past 5 years.

  continue reading

93 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 334806897 series 3144837
Content provided by Peter C. Kiefer. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Peter C. Kiefer or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

July 19th 2022 Court Leader’s Advantage Podcast Episode

Bail Reform has been praised as an effective way to correct a societal wrong. The movement's byword has been “bail does not keep the most dangerous in jail: it keeps the poorest.” Despite this argument, Bail Reform is receiving increasing pushback.

Bail Reform aims to curb or eliminate cash bail for people who are in jail awaiting trial and charged with either misdemeanors or nonviolent offenses. Bail Reform releases many of these vulnerable low-income defendants from pretrial incarceration. It allows them to return to their homes, to go back to their to families, and to keep their jobs. It also saves taxes by managing jail populations. Jail is by far the most expensive way to deal with defendants. A national average puts keeping a defendant in jail at $391 a day; in contrast probation on average costs $121 a day.

Here are just a few recent examples of the pushback:

· Progressive San Francisco prosecutor Chesa Boudin, who supported Bail Reform has been recalled

· Progressive Los Angeles prosecutor George Gascon is facing a recall.

· Judges in Chicago have been blamed for releasing defendants on electronic ankle monitors who then go out and commit violent crimes,

· New York City Mayor Eric Adams blames rising crime in his city partially on judges who are not keeping dangerous criminals in jail.

Some pundits believe that voters are tired of being afraid: afraid of rising crime, afraid of the homeless, and afraid that courts, under Bail Reform, let dangerous criminals out to threaten their communities.

Some of the topics we will explore today include:

· What is the current situation on Bail Reform?

· What should be the courts’ position regarding Bail Reform?

· What should courts be doing right now?

Today’s Panel

· The Honorable Edward Spillane is the Presiding Judge of the Municipal Court in College Station, Texas. He has served in this position since May 2002. Prior to this, he served as an Assistant District Attorney for Brazos County for eight years and as an associate for the law firm Fulbright & Jaworski for two years. Judge Spillane received his undergraduate degree from Harvard University, and his law degree from the University of Chicago.

· The Honorable Paul C. Farr is the Judge with the Herriman and Alta Municipal Courts in Salt Lake County, Utah. Judge Farr graduated from the J. Reuben Clark Law School at BYU in 1999 and has been a member of the Utah State Bar for 21 years. He has been a municipal court judge for the past 11 years. He is also a member of the Utah Judicial Council and has been serving in that capacity for the past 5 years.

  continue reading

93 episodes

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