‘People who should be held are being held’: Pretrial Fairness Act marks first year this week

DuPage County State's Attorney Bob Berlin

One year after Illinois eliminated cash bail as part of the Pretrial Fairness Act, proponents are hailing its success, insisting the criminal justice reform measure accomplished its goal of making communities safer and the system more equitable.

However, critics remain. They say the law has led to more people in custody and overwhelmed the judicial system with additional court proceedings.

Supporters include Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart, who said cashless bail has not resulted in the release of accused murderers and rapists, as opponents predicted.

“We are holding more sex offenders and all murderers under the new system,” Rinehart said, adding “crime is down in Lake County at a steeper rate of decline than the national average.”

People are “safer in a system that prevents drug dealers, gang members, murderers, wealthy sex offenders and rich domestic batterers from using their cash to avoid jail,” he said.

Among the cases backers could cite is that of DuPage County neurologist Dr. Abdussalam Choudry, who was charged with misdemeanor domestic battery and interfering with a report of domestic battery.

Authorities said Choudry punched, hit and kicked the accuser and threatened to cut her up and set her on fire.

Previously, defendants in such misdemeanor cases were released after posting as little as $100 bond. DuPage County Judge Joshua Dieden ordered Choudry detained, citing “homicidal ideation” and finding there were no conditions guaranteeing the woman’s safety.

Some remain unconvinced of cashless bail’s merit. Describing the law as “failed and flawed,” Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain said it puts more people into custody and strains the court system by increasing caseloads.

Initially a critic, DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin pushed for modifications to cashless bail provisions before the law took effect. As far as violent crime is concerned, the new system is working well, he said.

“Almost all our petitions in violent cases have been granted,” said Berlin, adding the law needs further tweaking.

Referring to changes made after the legislation first passed, Kane County State’s Attorney Jamie Mosser deemed the new system mostly a success.

“People who should be held are being held because they can’t pay to get out,” she said.

Cook County Public Defender Sharone R. Mitchell Jr. agreed.

“For the first time, the decision about whether to jail someone who is presumed innocent is being made intentionally instead of letting their access to wealth decide,” Mitchell said. “People who are merely accused are entitled to robust, individualized hearings before being jailed. That is what we would all want if we were accused and it is what we are now doing.”

Safer communities?

Violent crime, including shootings, murders, sexual assault, home invasion, armed violence and armed robberies, has decreased significantly in the wake of bail reform, Rinehart said.

Before the Pretrial Fairness Act, three out of 10 people charged with child pornography in Lake County were held in custody, Rinehart said. Today, 100% of those Lake County defendants are jailed, he said.

Mosser recalls a serial domestic abuser who got released on bond and influenced his wife not to testify against him, forcing prosecutors to drop the case. Under the new system, a judge granted prosecutors’ petition to detain. Prosecutors worked to “stabilize” the wife’s situation. She agreed to testify against him and he pleaded guilty, Mosser said.

Lake County’s first case under the new system involved defendant Richard Sasin, who previously posted 10% of $350,000 bail after being accused of battering a peace officer and violating an order of protection, Rinehart said.

After posting the cash, Sasin was charged with committing a residential burglary in September 2023. He was ordered held while his cases were pending.

“Because of the SAFE-T Act, the judge could and did hold him in jail,” Rinehart noted.

Some critics feared defendants released without having to post any cash might not return for court proceedings. That has not been the case, said Mitchell, citing Circuit Court of Cook County data showing 88% of defendants released under the new system showed up for court.

That’s an improvement from three years ago, when about 80.4% of those charged with felonies and released on bond attended their scheduled court hearings, according to a report from the Civic Federation.

The Office of Statewide Pretrial Services reports similar results. According to the OSPS, in the 78 downstate Illinois counties it serves, judges issued warrants when defendants failed to appear in court in only 5% of cases, Rinehart said, citing a June report.

Changing minds

Challenges remain. One involves changing some judges’ “decades-old mindset that a cash system is somehow safer,” Rinehart said.

“But a cash system allows release,” he said. “With this new detention system, we have certainty: an offender remains detained until further order of the judge.”

Funding also poses a challenge. Both Rinehart and Mitchell said they need more money for attorneys and support personnel to conduct detention hearings.

“Accused people have had a right to a public defender at initial appearances (formerly bond hearings) since 2018, but that wasn’t happening in every county until the Pretrial Fairness Act went into effect,” Mitchell said. “Even now, there is not enough state support for public defenders who do these hearings.”

Berlin believes the law needs to be changed to give judges discretion to detain defendants charged with burglary, organized retail crime and retail theft.

He cites the cases of Renaeshia McDowell, 31, and Shania Jacobs, 28, both of Chicago. They were charged with burglary and retail theft after authorities said they stole $499.98 in merchandise Aug. 9 from JCPenney at the Yorktown Shopping Center, Berlin said.

Released with conditions, they were charged 20 days later with taking $1,168 in merchandise from an Ulta Beauty store.

“Because burglary and retail theft are not detainable unless the defendant is a willful risk of flight, the judge was required to release the defendants with conditions on the new charges,” Berlin said. “To me, that doesn’t make sense.”

Mosser agrees it’s difficult when repeat offenders are charged with nondetainable offenses such as criminal trespassing.

“Law enforcement has to deal with them (over and over),” she said.

She also called for changes, noting detention is not possible for a person charged for the first time with aggravated battery to a peace officer.

“We have to wait until it’s two officers (a second incident),” Mosser said. “That should not happen.”