Cashless Bail Explained: How Trump’s Push to End It Collides with State Law Podcast Por  arte de portada

Cashless Bail Explained: How Trump’s Push to End It Collides with State Law

Cashless Bail Explained: How Trump’s Push to End It Collides with State Law

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President Donald Trump recently signed an executive order trying to eliminate cashless bail in Washington D.C. and in other parts of the country with alleged high crime rates.
However, many states have had a cashless bail option that has worked well over decades. States set their own criteria for what judges may consider in ordering a bond and what kind of bail may be set by a court.
There are significant questions of whether Trump has the power to do so since bonds are determined by individual judges based on individual defendants and set criteria that must be considered.
The concept of bail and bond for people arrested for a criminal charge is often controversial and many people do not understand how judges decide what form of bond to use and the total costs of being released from custody prior to trial.
It is predominant in both federal and state jurisdictions that bond should not be a pretrial punishment because defendants, under the U.S. Constitution, are presumed innocent until they may be proven guilty in court.
Instead, bond is designed to protect the public and to assure the defendant’s presence at each stage of the judicial proceeding.
Both state and federal judges must consider certain guidelines in determining the kind and amount of bond to set.
Several of the considerations include the past record of the defendant, the defendant’s propensity for violence and whether the defendant is a flight risk.
Notably some defendants have been held in jail either without bond or with high bonds because it is feared that they would flee the jurisdiction of the court. Such is the case with music mogul Sean Diddy Combs on his sex trafficking and prostitution charges.
Defendants may also be held if the court fears that they might intimidate possible witnesses prior to trial.
In this episode of Next Witness…Please, retired judges Gayle Williams-Byers and Thomas Hodson examine considerations a judge must consider in setting a pretrial bond.
They also outline some of the various forms of bond from cash bond to cashless bail. They also discuss property bonds, bonding companies, and the concept of house arrest as a form of bond.

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