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Punishing Poverty: How Bail and Pretrial Detention Fuel Inequalities in the Criminal Justice System. By Christine S. Scott-Hayward and Henry F. Fradella Oakland: University of California Press, 2019. 312 pp. $29.95 paperback

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Punishing Poverty: How Bail and Pretrial Detention Fuel Inequalities in the Criminal Justice System. By Christine S. Scott-Hayward and Henry F. Fradella Oakland: University of California Press, 2019. 312 pp. $29.95 paperback

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

Sandra G. Mayson*
Affiliation:
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA
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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
© 2021 Law and Society Association.

Bail reform is at a crossroads. Two years ago, it was a solidly bipartisan issue gaining momentum in both courts and legislatures. But a lot has happened in two years. The country has been riven by a pandemic and the public murder of George Floyd. Gun violence is spiking. Bail reform efforts in Alaska, New York, and California have been rolled back. In a recent oral argument, the federal Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals seemed poised to abdicate any duty to enforce constitutional rules in state bail systems. The future of the bail reform movement is uncertain.

Punishing Poverty provides a clear, compelling, and well-grounded case for bail reform at this critical time. It is not the only recent book about bail; Shima Baradaran Baughman published The Bail Book in 2018. But Punishing Poverty is a welcome and valuable addition. Whereas Baughman's book takes an encyclopedic approach, Scott-Hayward and Fredella offer a more focused argument about contemporary money bail in America.

The book's thesis is that our current pretrial system, with its careless reliance on money bail, punishes poverty, exacerbates inequality in the criminal legal system, and violates the Constitution. The authors build their case in four careful chapters that weave together social science, constitutional doctrine, and individual stories. The first, The Origins and History of Bail in the Common Law Tradition, presents an introduction to bail and then a surprisingly nuanced history of American bail from the fall of the Roman Empire to the present day. The second chapter, Pretrial Release Decisions and Outcomes, chronicles current pretrial release and detention practices. It describes how money bail schedules and commercial sureties, in particular, result in the routine and unnecessary detention of those without resources. Chapter 3, The Problems with Risk-Assessment-Based Bail Determinations, takes on the fraught debate about the use of actuarial risk assessment in pretrial custody decisions. It concludes that actuarial tools may have a useful role to play, but only with certain safeguards and assurances that do not currently exist. Chapter 4, The Impact of Pretrial Detention, marshals the social science literature to explain the adverse effects of pretrial detention on case outcomes and on detainees and their communities. Having made the case for changes to current practice, the authors lay out a set of recommendations in Chapter 5, The Path Forward.

The strength of this book lies in synthesis. For those steeped in the field, the content and arguments will be familiar. But for anyone new to the field, the book provides an extremely helpful and focused introduction. Even for those already involved in bail reform efforts, Punishing Poverty brings the relevant material together in effective and sometimes novel ways. The text is measured and rigorously cited throughout.

Certain parts of the book are especially valuable. As already noted, the brief history in the opening chapter is remarkably nuanced for its length. Few other pieces about modern bail discuss the Statute of Westminster of 1275 at length; even fewer discuss its relationship to the Supreme Court's 1954 analysis in Stack v. Boyle. The chapter on risk assessment also brings additional perspective to the current debate. By describing the evolution of risk assessment practices outside the pretrial arena, the authors demonstrate that, relative to other domains, pretrial risk assessment is in its infancy. This is cause for both skepticism of current practices and optimism about the potential for improvement.

For this reader, the most interesting part of the book is the final chapter, in which the authors quickly endorse reform measures that already benefit from broad support, like the elimination of rigid money bail schedules, and then hone in on structural strategies to reduce the number of people funneled into pretrial detention: (1) restricting arrests, (2) disciplining prosecutorial case charging, and (3) providing defense counsel at or before initial appearance. The authors also, briefly, recommend the adoption of careful detention procedures (and the elimination of money bail to ensure that courts do not use high bail to detain); and the collection and analysis of basic data about pretrial custody decisions and outcomes.

The authors' treatment of arrest practice, case charging, and provision of counsel is sophisticated and compelling. For instance, the authors would like to prohibit arrest for nonjailable traffic offenses and nonviolent misdemeanors—hardly a radical proposition! But the Supreme Court has held the Fourth Amendment to permit such arrests. The authors explore various options. The Court could overrule its precedent. State courts could interpret their constitutions to set a higher bar for arrest. Or states could use statutes and policy to limit arrest discretion, but would have to provide an effective enforcement mechanism. The authors address each possibility with thoughtfulness and pragmatism, integrating a deep understanding of Fourth Amendment caselaw, the role of state constitutional interpretation, opportunities and challenges for statutory and policy reform, and practical realities on the ground. The discussions of case charging and provision-of-counsel are similarly nuanced. (Why not provide defense counsel at police stations? Other countries do it!)

Like any book, this one has limitations. It does not tackle the hardest questions confronting the bail reform moment. Those include theoretical questions, like when preventive detention is justified in moral and political terms, how we should handle people who are creating a public disturbance or hazard, and whether the criminal legal system must find other ways of ensuring swift-and-certain accountability if pretrial detention ceases to serve that function. They also include doctrinal questions, like what constraints the Constitution places on pretrial detention, and practical questions, like how to limit pretrial detention in the face of rising violence and fear. But these simply are not questions the book sets out to answer.

The book's other major limitation is that it is already somewhat outdated, because both the field of pretrial justice and conditions on the ground are evolving rapidly. It does not account for recent landmark decisions of the Nevada and California Supreme Courts, Ohio's new bail legislation, the Uniform Law Commission's Pretrial Release and Detention Act, the Fifth Circuit's en banc rehearing of Daves v. Dallas County (which will likely set the course for bail litigation in the federal courts), the impact of the pandemic, or the epidemic of urban gun violence.

As an argument for structural changes to our pretrial system, though, Punishing Poverty is masterful. Not least among its virtues is that it clocks in at only 199 pages (excluding notes). Scott-Hayward and Fredella have written a thorough, subtle, moving, and fair-minded introduction to the contemporary bail reform movement. It is a valuable resource for anyone who cares about fairness and rationality in the administration of justice. Here is hoping that it finds the broad audience that it deserves.