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We Sued to End the Evils of Cash Bail in Michigan

Neon bail bonds sign outside building
Neon bail bonds sign outside building
Twyla Carter,
Former Senior Staff Attorney,
老澳门开奖结果 Criminal Law Reform Project
Philip Mayor,
Senior Staff Attorney,
老澳门开奖结果 of Michigan
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April 19, 2019

Imagine being poor and being arrested by the police in Detroit. You are supposed to be innocent until proven guilty, but with no money, you will remain in jail for up to 3 days before you can see a judge called a magistrate.

That鈥檚 just the beginning of the harm visited on one of our clients in the 36th District Court in Detroit, Davontae Ross. He spent days behind bars because he couldn鈥檛 afford to pay $200 of bail relating to a 5-year old ticket for allegedly staying in a park after dark. He missed a job interview and a critical meeting with a government caseworker. His life has been turned upside down.

This is not isolated to one client, or one court. Our named Plaintiffs are all Black鈥攁s is almost everyone who can鈥檛 afford bail in Detroit鈥攁nd they鈥檝e all spent days in jail simply because they can鈥檛 afford bail. When it comes to the criminal legal system in the State of Michigan, the problem is as pervasive as it is perverse.

The system requires explaining, because it is complex. It is a microcosm of the maze of the criminal legal system that traps people of color every day in our nation. In Michigan, even when you do get to meet the magistrate, it鈥檚 not in person. She appears via a video connection from a courtroom downtown. The guards tell you not to ask any questions, and then you step in front of the camera. The magistrate is not interested in you or your situation. She talks so fast that you cannot even understand your case number, what you are charged with, or the penalty you face. Then she sets a court date. If you are lucky, you hear the court date, but she鈥檚 talking so fast you can鈥檛 be sure. She asks if you understand, but you are scared about making her angry (you鈥檝e heard her snap at other people who tried to say something), so you say yes. Then she reads you your rights and asks if you understand. She said something about your having a right to a lawyer, but no one has provided a lawyer for you or any of the other dozens of people in jail with you who are being arraigned by video.

Then the magistrate sets bail. She doesn鈥檛 ask you any questions, and she doesn鈥檛 ask you how much you can afford. In fact, she doesn鈥檛 ask you anything at all. She just tells you what your bail amount is using dense legal jargon. If you don鈥檛 understand and ask how much you actually have to pay, she tells you that the guard will explain it. Then she commands you to step away from the camera. That鈥檚 it: you鈥檝e been arraigned in all of two minutes.

The judge didn鈥檛 ask you how much bail you could afford, so the bail is based on the allegations against you鈥攁llegations that have never been proven in a court of law. The guy next to you who got the same bail for the same alleged crime can afford his bail. So he鈥檒l be able to leave jail that day. He鈥檒l be able to meet with a lawyer, talk to witnesses, and go about his life while he prepares to defend his case. But you are too poor to pay that same bail. So you鈥檒l be stuck in jail for days, weeks, or months while awaiting trial or a plea bargain. After just a couple days, you鈥檒l probably lose your job. In a few more, you may miss rent and be evicted. You may miss medical appointments, school, and be unable to care for your kids. If you are lucky, there鈥檚 a family member who can upend their own life to care for those kids, but maybe not.

Another of our clients, Timothy Lucas, is 65-years old and suffers from epilepsy, hypertension, and asthma. He was accused of a minor (misdemeanor) assault, and spent over a week in jail because he could not afford the $350 bail that was imposed by another Magistrate who never asked how much he could afford. If the Magistrate had asked, she might have learned how ill our client was, or that his only source of income is a monthly $800 disability check and that he lives in a rooming house with thirteen other individuals and families. Our other clients have lost jobs, risk losing their children, and are having their educations ruined by their time in jail鈥攖o say nothing of the devastation their family members, who are distraught because they are too poor to help, are experiencing.

That鈥檚 why we, along with our co-lead counsel at Covington & Burling LLP, filed a class action against the Chief Judge of the 36th Court and the Magistrates who automatically and arbitrarily impose such devastating bail. Everyone being arraigned is innocent until proven guilty, and the court鈥檚 cavalier approach to 鈥渏ustice鈥 violates thousands of people鈥檚 constitutional rights to due process, equal protection, and their right to an attorney. We will not permit these injustices to stand.

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