So, how are we're doing...
In cases in which we’ve posted bail more than 80% of bail fund clients were spared the criminal records they would otherwise have been forced to accept had they been unable to make bail.
--In the past six months, Ninety-eight percent of bail fund clients have returned to all of their court appearances to date.
--61 out of 62 clients who have had court appearances so far have returned to court for all of them, for a total of 139 scheduled court dates (including several on the same day as serious snowstorms).
--No client is currently serving a sentence of incarceration on the case in which the Bronx Freedom Fund paid his or her bail.
--Thus far it costs an average of just $791 to bail someone out and thus fundamentally change the dynamics of the case.
--Eleven out of fourteen cases that have been resolved to date have resulted in a dismissal. One has resulted in a non-criminal disposition (a violation with a one-year conditional discharge).
Of course the Freedom Fund is interested not only in the outcomes of the criminal cases in which we intervene, but in the life outcomes of the clients we are able to help. In order to try to measure that, we also track collateral consequences of incarceration that the Bronx Freedom Fund has helped clients to avoid. In the last six months our clients have regained the chance to carry on their daily lives in countless ways while their cases are pending. A selection of these consequences include:
--Avoiding deportation. Because we posted bail one client avoided deportation to a country where he had not lived since he was a teenager and another avoided deportation to a country where she would not have been able to receive adequate medical treatment for her chronic condition.
Convinced? Feel free to donate at Bronx Freedom Fund...
1 comment:
Great program, but I’m surprised bail reform hasn’t moved farther along in NY? Why aren’t many of these individuals eligible for release on their own recognizance?
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