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eridani

(51,907 posts)
Wed Jun 24, 2015, 03:56 AM Jun 2015

Matt Taibbi: Jailed for Being Broke

http://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/30901-jailed-for-being-broke

A little over a week ago, a 23-year-old construction worker in the Bronx named Jeff Rivera got in an argument with his wife, from whom he is separated. During the argument, he struck her door, pushing in the screen.

Rivera was arrested and brought to court, where he was charged with criminal mischief, a misdemeanor, for pushing in the screen door. Though the sentence for being convicted of a misdemeanor offense like criminal mischief is hard to predict, the more immediate question for Rivera was whether or not he'd be jailed before trial.

Rivera had no reason to expect that he'd have to post bail to stay out of jail. Not only was the offense relatively minor, but he has no criminal history, is employed, and has a child and every reason in the world to show up for his trial. Judges are only supposed to set bail for two main reasons: if the defendant is a flight risk, or if he or she is a danger to the community.

"Bail is for guaranteeing that a person appears at trial. It's not a punishment," says Rivera's lawyer, Alexandra Bonacarti of New York County Defender Services. "There's absolutely no reason to set bail on someone like Jeff who has a job, a child, no criminal history, no history of missing a court date, and is not charged with a violent crime."

But Rivera was unlucky. He went to court and stood before a judge who decided to set bail of $500 in his case.

Rivera didn't have the money, which means he'd essentially committed two crimes, the second more serious than the first: he'd pushed in a screen door, and he didn't have $500.
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Matt Taibbi: Jailed for Being Broke (Original Post) eridani Jun 2015 OP
Inforfmational kick n/t eridani Jun 2015 #1
$500 bail would mean $25 bond usually Recursion Jun 2015 #2
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