Nationwide Bail Bonds
Directory Bail laws in the
United States grew out of a long history of English statutes
and policies. During the colonial period,
Americans relied on the bail structure that had developed in
England hundreds of years earlier. When the colonists
declared independence in 1776, they no longer relied on
English law, but formulated their own policies which closely
paralleled the English tradition. The ties between the
institution of bail in the United States is also based on the
old English system. In attempting to understand
the meaning of the American constitutional bail provisions and
how they were intended to supplement a larger statutory bail
structure, knowledge of the English system and how it
developed until the time of American independence is
essential.
In medieval England, methods to
insure the accused would appear for trial began as early as
criminal trials themselves. Until the 13th century,
however, the conditions under which a defendant could be
detained before trial or released with guarantees that he
would return were dictated by the local Sheriffs.x As the regional representative of the crown, the sheriff
possessed sovereign authority to release or hold suspects.
The sheriffs, in other words, could use any standard and weigh
any factor in determining whether to admit a suspect to bail.
This broad authority was not always judiciously administered.
Some sheriffs exploited the bail system for their own gain.
Accordingly, the absence of limits on the power of the
sheriffs was stated as a major grievance leading to the
Statute of Westminster.xi
The Statute of Westminster in
1275 eliminated the discretion of sheriffs with respect to
which crimes would be bailable. Under the Statute, the
bailable and non-bailable offenses were specifically
listed.xii The sheriffs retained the authority to decide
the amount of bail and to weigh all relevant factors to arrive
at that amount. The Statute, however, was far from a
universal right to bail. Not only were some offenses
explicitly excluded from bail, but the statutes' restrictions
were confined to the abuses of the sheriffs. The
justices of the realm were exempt from its provisions.
Applicability of the statute to
the judges was the key issue several centuries later when bail
law underwent its next major change. In the early seventeenth
century, King Charles I received no funds from the Parliament.
Therefore, he forced some noblemen to issue him loans.
Those who refused to lend the sovereign money were imprisoned
without bail. Five incarcerated knights filed a habeas
corpus petition arguing that they could not be held
indefinitely without trial or bail. The King would neither
bail the prisoners nor inform them of any charges against
them. The King's reason for keeping the charges secret were
evident: the charges were illegal; the knights had no
obligation to lend to the King. When the case was
brought before the court, counsel for the knights argued that
without a trial or conviction, the petitioners were being
detained solely on the basis of an
unsubstantiated and unstated accusation. Attorney
General Heath contended that the King could best balance the
interests of individual liberty against the interests of state
security when exercising his sovereign authority to imprison.
The court upheld this sovereign prerogative argument.xiii
Parliament responded to the
King's action and the court's ruling with the Petition of
Right of 1628. The Petition protested that contrary to
the Magna Carta and other laws guaranteeing that no man be
imprisoned without due process of law, the King had recently
imprisoned people before trial "without any cause
showed." The Petition concluded that "no freeman, in
any manner as before mentioned, be imprisoned or
detained..." The act guaranteed, therefore, that
man could not be held before trial on the basis of an
unspecific accusation. This did not, however, provide an
absolute right to bail. The offenses enumerated in the
Statute of Westminster remained bailable and non-bailable.
Therefore, an individual charged with a non-bailable offense
could not contend that he had a legal entitlement to bail.
The King, the courts and the
sheriffs were able to frustrate the intent of the Petition of
Right through procedural delays in granting the writs of
habeas corpus. In 1676, for example, when Francis Jenkes
sought a writ of habeas corpus concerning his
imprisonment for the vague charge of "sedition," it
was denied at first because the court was "outside
term," and later because the case was not calendared;
furthermore, when the court was requested to calendar the case
it refused to do so. In response to the rampant procedural
delays in providing habeas corpus as evidenced by Jenkes
Case,xv Parliament passed the Habeas Corpus Act of 1677.
The act strengthened the guarantee of habeas corpus by
specifying that a magistrate: shall discharge the said
Prisoner from his Imprisonment taking his or their Recognizance,
with one or more Surety or Sureties, in any Sum according to
their discretion, having regard to the Quality of the
Prisoner and
Nature of the offense, for his or their Appearance in
the Court of the King's bench...unless it shall
appear...that the Party (is)...committed...for such Matter or
offenses for which by law the Prisoner is not
bailable.xvi By requiring early designation of the cause for
arrest, the Habeas Corpus Act provided a suspect with
knowledge that the alleged offense was either bailable or not.
The Statute of Westminster remained the primary definition of
what offenses would be eligible for bail.
Although the Habeas Corpus Act
improved administration of bail laws, it provided no
protection against excessive bail requirements. Even if
a suspect was accused of a bailable offense and therefore was
entitled to some bail, he could still be detained if the
financial condition of release was exorbitantly high. As
evidence of this abuse reached Parliament, it responded with
the English bill of Rights of 1689. In the Preamble, the
bill accused the King of attempting "to subvert...the
laws and liberties of the kingdom: in the "excessive bail
hath been required of persons committed in criminal cases, to
elude the benefit of the laws made for the liberty of the
subjects."xvii The Bill of Rights
proposed to remedy the situation by declaring "that
excessive bail ought not to be required."xviii
Thus, the precursor of the Eighth Amendment in the U.S.
Constitution was drafted to prevent those accused of bailable
offenses from unreasonable bail requirements. It did not
alter the categories of bailable crimes found in the separate
Statute of Westminster and certainly did not guarantee a right
to bail.
The language of the English
Bill of Rights was only one part of the bail system developed
through many years of English law. As Caleb Foote has
explained and this analysis recounts, English protection
against unjustifiable detention contained three essential
elements: first, offenses were categorized as bailable or not
bailable by statutes beginning with Westminster I which also
placed limits on which judges and officials could effect the
statue; second, habeas corpus procedures were developed as an
effective curb on imprisonment without specific changes; and
third, the excessive bail clause of the 1689 Bill of Rights
protected against judicial officers who might abuse bail
policy by setting excessive financial conditions for release.
English law never contained an absolute right to bail.
Bail could always be denied when the legislature determined
certain offenses were unbailable. Most of the history of
bail law after Westminster I was an attempt to improve the
efficiency of existing law and especially to grant the suspect
a meaningful chance to satisfy bail conditions when he had
committed those offenses that the legislature had declared
bailable.
In colonial America, bail law
was patterned after the English law. While some colonies
initiated their own laws which were very similar to English
statutes, others simply guaranteed their subjects the same
protections guaranteed to British citizens. When the colonies
became independent in 1776, however, they could no longer
simply insure the protections of English law.
Accordingly, the colonies enacted specific bail laws.
Typical of the early American bail laws were those enacted in
Virginia perpetuating the bail system as it had evolved in
England. Section 9 of Virginia's Constitution in 1776 declared
simply that "excessive bail ought not to be
required..."xix This constitutional provision was
supplemented in 1785 with a statute which eliminated judges;
discretion to grant bail by specifying that: those shall be
let to bail who are apprehended for any crime not punishable
in life or limb...But if a crime be punishable by life or
limb, or if it be manslaughter and there be good cause to
believe the party guilty thereof, he shall not be
admitted to bail."xx Thus the Virginia laws closely
paralleled the English system. Statutes defined which
offenses were bailable while the Constitution protected
against
abuses of those definitions. In fact, the clause in the
Virginia Constitution was identical to the one in the English
Bill of Rights which had been included to prevent judges from
unreasonable holding those accused of bailable offenses by
setting bail so high as to
be unobtainable. Other State constitutions similarly
proscribed excessive bail for bailable offenses in order to
prevent this method of thwarting the bail laws passed by the
legislatures: for example, section 29 of the Pennsylvania
Constitution of 1776 provided that "Excessive bail shall
not be exacted for bailable offenses."xxi
With James Madison designated
to prepare an initial draft for Bill of Rights n 1789, the
Virginia constitution, often referred to as the Virginia Bill
of Rights, became the model for the first ten amendments that
passed congress in 1789 and were ratified in 1791. The
Eighth Amendment in this Bill of Rights was taken virtually
verbatim from Section 9 of the Virginia Constitution and
provided that "Excessive bail shall not be
required..." The only comment on the clause during
the congressional debates was made by the perplexed Mr.
Livermore: "The clause seems to have no meaning to
it, I do not think it necessary. What is meant by
the term excessive bail...!"xxii
Indeed, it seems the drafters
thought relatively little about the meaning of the bail
clause; the clause was so rooted in American and English
history that to most, the meaning was obvious. Like the
identical clause in the English Bill of Rights and the
Virginia Constitution, the Eighth Amendment bail provision was
intended to prohibit excessive bail as a means of holding
suspects accused of offenses deemed bailable by Congress.
The bail clause in the Eighth
Amendment was only one part of the American bail
structure.xxiii As in England, the American system also
includes guarantees against imprisonment without informing the
suspect of his crime. The Sixth Amendment to the
Constitution, like the English Habeas Corpus Act of 1678,
insures that when arrested, a man "be informed of the
nature and cause of the accusation" thereby enabling him
to demand bail if he has committed a bailable offense.
The final part of the American bail structure and the element
upon which the Constitution provisions are based is the
statutory codification of justice officials' power concerning
bail and the categorization of crimes into bailable and
nonbailable offenses. The Constitution merely guarantees
that excessive bail may not be employed to hold suspects who
by law are entitled to bail; similarly the Sixth Amendment
enables prisoners to know if they are in fact entitled to bail
under the law; it does not give them any right to bail already
existing in the law. Thus, the legislature and not the
constitution is the real framer of bail law; the constitution
upholds and protects against abuse of the system which the
legislature creates. This principle was well understood
by the Framers of the Bill of rights. In fact, the same
Congress that proposed the Eighth Amendment also formulated
the fundamental bail statute that remained in force until
1966. This was accomplished in 1789, the same year that
the Bill of rights was introduced, when Congress passed the
Judiciary Act. The Act specified which types of crime
were bailable and set bounds on the judges' discretion in
setting bail. Following the tradition of State laws
developed during the colonial period which in turn were based
on English law,xxiv the Judiciary Act stated that all
noncapital offenses were bailable and that in capital
offenses, the decision to detain a suspect before trial was
left up to the judge:
{U}pon all arrests in
criminal cases, bail shall be admitted, except where punishment
may be by death, in which cases it shall not be admitted but
by the supreme or a circuit court, or by a justice of
the supreme court, or a judge of a district court, who
shall exercise their discretion therein, regarding the nature
and circumstance of the offense, and of the evidence, the
usages of law.xxv
The sequence of events in the
First Congress pertaining to American bail policy is critical
to an understanding of the Framers of the Eighth Amendment and
the Judiciary Act of 1789. Only a few days after
final passage of the Bill of Rights in Congress on September
21, 1789, and before its final adoption, the First Congress
passed the Judiciary Act of 1789 on September 29, 1789.
In fact, these two legislative measures were debated almost
concurrently. Considerable debate time was consumed in
the House of Representatives over the issue of which should be
enacted first, the bill creating a federal judiciary and
federal judicial procedures or the amendments to the
Constitution. Eventually Madison's point of view
that the Bill of Rights should take precedence so that
"the independent tribunals of justice will consider
themselves...the guardians of those rights"xxvi
prevailed. But the same day the House completed the Bill
of Rights it proceeded to perfect the Judiciary Act of 1789
which was already approved by the Senate. The two legislative
proposals passed each other going and coming between the House
and the Senate. This historical footnote illuminated
significantly the context in which these measures were
debated. They were almost considered simultaneously.
Often representatives argued that changes in one measure were
unnecessary because the other provided ample protection for
vital rights.xxviii
This context suggests strongly
that the First Congress acted very purposefully in
substantially adopting the English system of tripartite
protection against bail abuses. The Eighth Amendment
prohibition against excessive bail meant that bail may not be
excessive in those cases where Congress has deemed it proper
to permit bail. The Congress then enacted the Judiciary Act
defining what offenses would be bailable. Habeas corpus
protection was afforded by Article I of the Constitution. The
argument that the excessive bail clause guarantees a right to
bail by necessary implication and that the provision
forbidding excessive bail would be meaningless if judges could
deny bail altogether in some cases is clearly not valid in
this historical context. The same Congress which drafted
the Eighth Amendment enacted the Judiciary Act which
specifically denied a right to bail to individuals charged
with capital offense.
In the context of its
legislative history, the Eighth Amendment is illuminated by
reading it in conjunction with the Judiciary Act of 1789.
The First Congress adopted the Amendment to prevent judges
from setting excessive bail in cases prescribed as bailable by
Congress. The same legislators then enacted a bill
prescribing which offenses would be bailable. The Eighth
Amendment, therefore, is not self-executing. It requires
legislation creating legal entitlements to bail to give it
effect. Recognizing this, the First Congress provided
almost simultaneously the legislation that gave the Amendment
effect. The First Congress did not choose a strange
legal arrangement; it chose precisely the system most familiar
to these former English citizens. The First Congress
recognized that the Amendment was not intended to limit
congressional discretion to determine the cases for which bail
would be allowed, but was designed to circumscribe the
authority of courts to ignore or circumvent that congressional
policy with excessive bail requirements.
The Judiciary Act of 1789 did
not differentiate between bail before and after conviction.
Not until 1946 in the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure was
this distinction clearly made. Rule 46 made the 1789
Act's language the standard for release, but left release
after conviction pending an appeal or application for
certiorari to the judge's discretion regardless of the crime.
In 1966 Congress enacted the
first major substantive change in federal bail law since 1789.
The Bail Reform Act of 1966 provides that a non-capital
defendant "shall...be ordered released pending trial on
his personal recognizance" or on personal bond unless the
judicial officer determines that these incentives will not
adequately assure his appearance at trial.xxviii In that
case, the judge must select the least restrictive alternative
from a list of conditions designed to guarantee appearance.
That list includes restrictions on travel, execution of an
appearance bond (refundable when the defendant appears), and
execution of a bail bond with a sufficient number of solvent
sureties. Individuals charged with a capital offense or
who have been convicted and are awaiting sentencing or appeal
are subject to a different standard. They are to be
released unless the judicial officer has "reason to
believe" that no conditions "will reasonably assure
that the person will not flee or pose danger to any other
person or to the community."
The 1966 Act thus created a
presumption for releasing a suspect with as little burden as
necessary in order to insure his appearance at trial.
Appearance of the defendant for trial is the sole standard for
weighing bail decision. In noncapital cases, the Act
does not permit a judge to consider a suspect's dangerousness
to the community. Only in capital cases or after
conviction is the judge authorized to weigh threats to
community safety.
This aspect of the 1966 Act
drew criticism particularly in the District of Columbia where
all crimes formerly fell under the regulation of Federal bail
law. In a considerable number of instances, persons
accused of violent crimes committed additional crimes while
released on their own personal recognizance. Furthermore,
these individuals were often released again on nominal bail.
The problems associated with
the 1966 Bail Reform Act were considered by the Judicial
Council committee to study the Operation of the Bail Reform
Act in the Distract of Columbia in May 1969. The
committee was particularly bothered by the release of
potentially dangerous noncapital suspects permitted by the
1966 law and recommended that even in noncapital cases, a
person's dangerousness be considered in determining conditions
for release. Congress went along with the ideas put
forth in the committee's proposals and changed the 1966 Bail
Reform Act as it applied to persons charged with crimes in the
District of Columbia. The District of Columbia Court
Reform and Criminal Procedure Act of 1970 allowed judges to
consider dangerousness to the community as well as risk of
flight when setting bail in noncapital cases. The 1970
Act contained numerous safeguards against irrational
application of the dangerousness provisions. For
instance, an individual could not be detained before trial
under the act unless the court finds that (1) there is clear
and convincing evidence that he falls into one of the
categories subject to detention under the act, (2) no other
pretrial release conditions will reasonably
assure community safety, and (3) there is substantial
probability that the suspect committed the crime for which he
has been arrested. This last finding was an
overzealous exercise of legislative precaution. The
Justice Department testified that the burden of meeting this
"substantial probability" requirement was the
principal reason cited by prosecutors for the failure over the
last 10 years to request pretrial detention
hearings under the statute. Such a standard also
had the effect of making the pretrial detention hearing a
vehicle for pretrial discovery of the Government's case and
harassment of witnesses. Moreover, the District of
Columbia Court of Appeals in its Edwardsxxix decision strongly
suggests that the probable cause standard consistently
sustained by the Supreme Court as a basis for imposing
"significant restraints on liberty" would be
constitutionally sufficient in the context of pretrial
detention.
x
xi
xii Edw. 1. C. 15 In additional to capital offenses, the list
included "Thieves openly defamed and known" those
"taken for House-burning feloniously done," or those
taken for counterfeiting and many other non-capital offenses.
xiii "Five Knights Case" or "Proceedings on the
Habeas Corpus" brought by Sir Thomas Darnel. 3 St. Fr. 1
(1627).
xiv William Duker, "The Right to Bail: An Historical
Inquiry" 64, 42, Albany L. Rev. 33 (1977).
xv
xvi 81 Car. 2 c. 2.
xvii W. & M. st 2 c. 2 preamble clause 10.
xviii 1 W. & M. st. 2 c. 2. Rights clause 10.
xix 7 American Charters 3813 (F. Thorpe ed.. 1909)
xx 12 Va. Stat. 185-86 (W. Hening ed.. 1823)
xxi 7 American Charters 3813 (F. Thorpe ed..1909)
xxii 1 "Annals of Congress" 754 (1789).
xxiii Caleb Foote, "The Coming Constitutional Crisis in
Bail." 113 Pennsylvania L. Rev. 959. At 968 (1965).
Hermine Herta Meyer, "The Constitutionality of Pretrial
Detention,: 60 Georgetown L. Rev. 1139 (1972).
xxiv Duker. Supra note 14 at 77-83
xxv The Judiciary Act of 1789, 1 Stat. 73, 91.
xxvi 1 "Annals of Congress" 428, 462 (1789)
xxvii Id. At 448.
xviii the Bail Reform Act of 1966, 18 U.S.C. 3146 et seq.
xxix United States v. Edwards, No. 80-294 (D.C. App. May 8,
1981) (slip opinion). petition.... |
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