People are hurt by for-profit cash bail.

We believe people are innocent until proven guilty, and most Americans agree with this principle. Locking innocent people up for days, weeks, months and even years while they await trial is contrary to the principles on which our country was founded. Punishment should follow a guilty verdict, not precede it.

Judge gavel and scales of justice representing the cash bail legal system
Person behind jail bars representing the impact of pretrial detention on families

Family impact

  • Do you lose your job because you don’t show up for work?

  • Are you evicted because you stopped paying rent? What happens to all your belongings?

  • Do you lose your car after missing car payments?

  • What happens to your children if you are not there to care for them or provide for them? What happens to your pets?

  • Do you require medication? It is likely not available in jail.

  • Jails limit the amount of time you can communicate with family and friends, often to 30 minutes per week. You feel isolated, alone and depressed. You're treated as if you had been convicted of a crime.

  • Jails can be overcrowded and under staffed, which means an increased use of “lockdown” procedures where even in a dormitory setting, you are required to stay at your bunk or pallet bed for most of the day. This can lead to many frustrated people in a small, enclosed space and is dangerous for the inmates and the staff.

If you are accused of a minor crime and stuck in jail because you can’t afford bail. How does this affect you and your family?

Explore the harms

Community solutions in action

Across North Carolina, communities are already working to reduce the harm of cash bail.

New bail fund in Greensboro (from the Greensboro News)

GREENSBORO, N.C. (WGHP) — A young man who sat inside the Guilford County Detention Center (GCDC) for nine days was surprised to learn a local nonprofit paid his bail so he could go home while he waits on his court date. The man, who didn’t want to be identified, faces only minor charges but could not afford the $500 to get out. That’s where the Almond Connection comes in. It’s a local group focused on helping formerly incarcerated people regain control of their lives. The local nonprofit, in conjunction with the public defender’s office, worked together to identify the young man who agreed to participate in a two-year program to help him get his life on track. He was able to leave the GCDC and walk into a better future. Unable to afford the $500 bail bond fee, he had spent the past week and a half incarcerated, awaiting a court date.

The state's bail system is a "scam," "immoral," and in need of "massive change."

VETERAN NC JUDGES

“I personally think the bail bondsmen are leeches on the criminal justice system in terms of taking advantage of poor, disadvantaged people who find themselves in some situation with the law. It is almost to the point of being immoral, especially as it deals with the relatively minor, nonviolent offenses.”

— Former Wake County Superior Court Judge Donald W. Stevens’ Assessment of Cash Bail

A rolled-up stack of US dollar bills secured with a green rubber band, placed inside a pair of metal handcuffs on a concrete surface.

"The system was never designed to operate as it presently does, but the bail industry has such influence with the North Carolina General Assembly that it has allowed a corrupt system to develop that is dangerous to both the accused and the justice system itself." From 2002 to 2016 the NC Bail Bond Association made over $350,000 in political contributions.