In a 5-2 ruling Tuesday morning, the state’s highest court overturned a ruling by a Kankakee County judge that the law ending cash bail was unconstitutional. The end to cash bail will now go into effect across the entire state on Sept. 18, according to the Illinois Supreme Court ruling.

  • @chakan2
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    -11 year ago

    I’m in… Uh… Not Chicago…ill say that. Crime downstate is running pretty rampant right now. There’s a lot of gang violence, and we are at a record clip for gun violence.

    What kept a lot of that in check in the early 00s was the people committing the harder crimes were getting picked off by lower level stuff.

    However, after being pretty intimately involved in our justice system as of late, that’s stopped. The cops just aren’t interested in dealing with the fallout of picking up people for petty / low level felonies. It both political and resources keeping them from getting involved.

    The result is, unless there’s a gun involved, the cops aren’t coming.

    Combine that with the few times they do get someone, and said person is immediately released, we are in trouble.

    The really interesting case that’s going to happen… Trespassing. Let’s say I’m pissed and go sit on my ex’s porch. The cops pick me up for Tresspassing, I get released and go sit right back on her porch. If I’m not threatening or being violent, that’s a completely plausible situation.

    In short, the people who want cashless bail have never been around criminals. For those of us that actually need protected, we are fucked.

    • @SheeEttin
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      21 year ago

      The cops just aren’t interested in dealing with the fallout of picking up people for petty / low level felonies. It both political and resources keeping them from getting involved.

      That sounds like a police oversight problem, not a bail problem.

      Let’s say I’m pissed and go sit on my ex’s porch. The cops pick me up for Tresspassing, I get released and go sit right back on her porch. If I’m not threatening or being violent, that’s a completely plausible situation.

      If you’re not threatening anyone but you do it again, that’s a violation of your bail conditions (presumably they would have told you to stay away from her and her house/work/whatever), and you’d sit in jail until your hearing.

    • @QHC
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      21 year ago

      Sounds like the police where you live kinda suck at their job.

      • @chakan2
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        11 year ago

        If you mean the State of Illinois, then yea, I’d agree with you. It’s not good times here after dark.