
Retired California Superior Court judge Brett Alldredge argues that cash bail remains entrenched despite the 2021 California Supreme Court decision in *In Re Humphrey* deeming monetary bail unconstitutional. He highlights ongoing reliance on default bail schedules across the state, noting inconsistent amounts and a lack of evidence that they protect public safety. Alldredge contends judges avoid individualized pre‑trial hearings because of time pressures and fear of criticism, allowing a for‑profit bail industry to dominate decisions. He calls for a return to judge‑driven, risk‑based release decisions to ensure fairness and safety.
The cash‑bail system, once intended as a modest guarantee of court appearance, has morphed into a profit‑driven mechanism that disproportionately detains low‑income defendants. Landmark rulings such as *In Re Humphrey* and subsequent district court decisions affirmed that conditioning liberty solely on a defendant’s ability to pay violates equal protection and due‑process rights. Yet the legal framework still permits counties to maintain disparate bail schedules, creating a patchwork where a $10,000 bond in one jurisdiction may be $35,000 in another, with no empirical link to public safety.
Judicial reluctance to conduct individualized risk assessments fuels this disparity. Alldredge points out that judges face overloaded dockets, political scrutiny, and the specter of media backlash if a released individual reoffends. Consequently, many opt for the expedient default bail schedule, sidestepping the rigorous analysis required by constitutional standards. This avoidance not only perpetuates unnecessary pretrial incarceration but also empowers bail‑bond agents who profit from the system, further entrenching economic inequities within the criminal justice process.
True reform hinges on reinstating the judge’s central role in evaluating flight risk and public‑safety concerns on a case‑by‑case basis. By mandating transparent, evidence‑based hearings and limiting the use of monetary bail to a narrow, ancillary function, courts can align practice with the constitutional intent of *Humphrey*. Such a shift promises to reduce jail overcrowding, lower fiscal burdens on taxpayers, and restore public confidence that liberty decisions are grounded in fairness rather than financial capacity. The transition will require legislative support, judicial training, and robust oversight to ensure that risk assessments are consistent, unbiased, and focused on genuine safety outcomes.
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