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Price of incarceration

6/30/2017, 7:44 a.m.
Hip-hop legend Jay Z celebrated Father’s Day this year by allowing incarcerated fathers to spend the day with their families. …
Marc H. Morial

Marc H. Morial

Hip-hop legend Jay Z celebrated Father’s Day this year by allowing incarcerated fathers to spend the day with their families.

Pick any day of the week in America and an estimated 700,000 people are populating our nation’s local city and county jails. Of those behind bars, 60 percent — nearly half a million people, many of whom are African-American and Hispanic — will remain in jail, not because they have been convicted of any crime, but because they are guilty of the unpardonable crime of poverty and cannot afford the court-stipulated price tag placed on their freedom.

Pretrial incarceration can look very different based on race and socioeconomic status. A federal Bureau of Justice study found that African-Americans are 66 percent more likely to remain incarcerated before trial, and Hispanic defendants were 91 percent more likely to remain trapped behind bars, in comparison to white defendants.

If a defendant cannot afford bail — nationally, 61 percent of defendants are required to post bail for pretrial release — he or she will stay behind bars until trial.

It is in that purgatory of being presumed legally innocent but locked away from your family, your job and support networks that African-American and Hispanic communities are further traumatized and shattered.

For decades, activists and social justice groups have fought against this destructive facet of mass criminalization and incarceration. This year, the movement to reform our criminal justice system’s current application of pretrial incarceration added the platform, power and philanthropy of a high-profile ally to its unceasing work — Jay Z. The rapper, entrepreneur and now proud father of three donated to Southerners on New Ground and Color of Change to free and reunite incarcerated fathers with their families on Father’s Day. It was a continuation of an earlier campaign to bail out mothers of color for Mother’s Day.

To put the impact of incarceration on communities of color in context, it is important to note that today, one in nine African-American children has a parent in jail.

In a Father’s Day essay for Time magazine explaining why he was taking on the “exploitative” bail industry, Jay Z was personal and poignant: “If you’re from neighborhoods like the Brooklyn one I grew up in, if you’re unable to afford a private attorney, then you can be disappeared into our jail system simply because you can’t afford bail. Millions of people are separated from their families for months at a time — not because they are convicted of committing a crime, but because they are accused of committing a crime.”

When black and brown people are over-policed and arrested and accused of crimes at higher rates than others, and then forced to pay for their freedom before they ever see trial, big bail companies prosper. This pre-incarceration conundrum is devastating to families.

The cost of being imprisoned as if you are guilty while you are legally innocent is high and the damage extends well beyond jailhouse bars. From the separation of family members to jeopardizing current and future housing, benefits and work, studies also have consistently found that in comparison to defendants who were released before trial, defendants who remained incarcerated were three times more likely to be sentenced to prison, tended to receive longer sentences, and were more likely to re-offend the longer they were incarcerated.

Because the inability to pay bail is both an impediment to freedom and a major cause of pretrial incarceration, people essentially are being punished for being poor. Like so many other misguided criminal justice actions, pretrial incarceration makes us less safe and poorer. As a nation, we are collectively footing a monstrous $9 billion annual bill to incarcerate people who have not been convicted of a crime, while the ballooning bail bond industry continues to profit from the poverty and desperation of vulnerable communities.

Many solutions have been proposed, from limiting the use of pretrial incarceration to individuals who pose a threat to society to implementing alternative forms of bail besides cash bail — or forcing defendants to use bail bond companies that put profits before people and engage in predatory lending practices. We must reform this two-tiered system of injustice to save lives, families, communities and restore our faith in our badly damaged criminal justice system.

The writer is president of the National Urban League.