The Trump Campaign Won't Stop Lying About a Minnesota Man Acquitted of Shooting at Police
Jaleel Stallings became an attack ad for Republicans. What they don't mention is that he was acquitted, and a police officer pleaded guilty to assaulting him.
Jaleel Stallings became an attack ad for Republicans. What they don't mention is that he was acquitted, and a police officer pleaded guilty to assaulting him.
By definition, people assigned bail have been judged safe to release into the general population. Requiring them to post cash bail is needlessly punitive.
As with other cases in recent months, Georgia law enforcement has used specious classifications to charge nonviolent protesters with domestic terrorism.
"They had a duty to protect her," says Ta'Neasha Chappell's sister. "She was not attended to because she was a Black woman and they didn't feel like she was worth getting any attention."
The governor and attorney general say they’ll appeal to the state Supreme Court.
Somehow deaths have climbed even though the prison population has dropped.
The debate over bail has become a polarizing flash point. But as usual, the answer is more nuanced than either Republicans or Democrats would have their bases believe.
In Criminal (In)Justice, the Manhattan Institute scholar argues that most reforms favored by social justice activists—and many libertarians—make life worse for communities of color.
In Criminal (In)Justice, the Manhattan Institute scholar argues that most reforms favored by social justice activists—and many libertarians—make life worse for communities of color.
Plus: The editors unpack a philosophical question from a listener concerning foreign policy.
Alvin Bragg campaigned on Tracy McCarter’s innocence. Once in office, that was apparently less politically expedient.
Let’s perhaps stop trying to tease national trends out of the complexities of local public safety issues.
One of the candidate’s own supporters is responsible for the defendant’s release. And it may have been the right decision.
The claims come in a lawsuit against Prince George's County (Md.).
The initial decision to pursue prosecution runs contrary to the campaign promises of Alvin Bragg, who claims to understand that, so often, the process is the punishment.
Alvin Bragg campaigned on "ending mass incarceration." But that promise apparently does not apply to Jose Alba.
Bail reforms did not lead to higher crime, and in fact should be applied more uniformly, report finds.
A new report emphasizes that the U.S. would still have a very high incarceration rate even if all drug war prisoners were released.
The D.A.'s office has said that Darrell Brooks bail was set "inappropriately low."
What happens when a community bail fund stops paying bail and starts trying to abolish it?
The bill would prohibit charitable organizations from paying bail for anyone who had committed "an offense involving violence" at any time in the past 10 years.
Around half a million Americans are stuck at any given time in pretrial detention, often because they can’t afford freedom.
Pretrial detention is supposed to be for people deemed dangerous, not people without money.
Unfortunately, qualified immunity remains intact.
Cash bail is as unjust as it is arbitrary.
Tax hikes? Drug wars? Racial Preferences? Not today.
The ex-cop charged with killing George Floyd should be allowed to await his trial in safety. That should be the standard for everybody.
A proposed bipartisan change in pretrial detention rules could free thousands annually.
Bail bond companies fight to protect their industry, while some civil rights groups worry the reforms won't actually reduce pretrial detentions.
The NYPD is still blaming jail releases, but the data simply doesn’t back that claim up.
Judge Anne Marie Coyle has rejected every emergency attempt to reduce prison populations.
New emergency rules attempt to slow down justice system to keep people apart.
If only everybody weren’t stuck in their homes.
Judges would be given additional leeway to order pretrial detentions.
Jail officials urge more and faster releases as the virus spreads between staff and inmates.
Did Cook County overdo it and let too many dangerous defendants free?
ACLU argues the practice violates the Eighth Amendment.
Police and prosecutors want to maintain a system that punishes poor people before they’re ever convicted.
Jewish criminal justice groups are not having it.
Less dependence on bail and stronger requirements for evidence sharing will help defendants fight charges.
Reformers worry that district attorneys will subvert new rules, but prosecutors worry about those who refuse to show up for court.
Two federal court rulings cite a significant conflict of interest.
People charged—but not convicted—of crimes often have to wait weeks to see a judge if they’re too poor to pay for their freedom.
Magistrates don’t care whether defendants can pay, leaving the indigent stuck in jail before they’re ever convicted.
New Jersey is detaining almost half as many people pretrial, and the state is not seeing a big crime wave.
Justices leave intact a ruling allowing detention for 48 hours of those who cannot immediately pay for their release.
Better evidence sharing and a dramatic drop in cash bail demands will help defendants challenge charges.