Judge Rules Illinois' Elimination of Cash Bail Unconstitutional
The governor and attorney general say they’ll appeal to the state Supreme Court.

Just days before major bail reforms in Illinois were set to begin, a county judge has ruled the changes violate the state's constitution.
In early 2021, lawmakers passed a massive bill full of criminal justice reforms called the Safety, Accountability, Fairness, and Equity-Today Act, or SAFE-T Act. Among the many changes included in the bill was the elimination of cash bail. Rather than demanding money in exchange for pretrial freedom, the courts would have to evaluate each defendant to determine whether he may be a danger to others or a flight risk, and then determine nonfinancial release guidelines. Full pretrial detention could only be ordered if the court decided the danger or flight risk was just too high to justify someone's release.
There were a host of crimes for which judges were cleared to detain defendants, including many firearm offenses, human trafficking, stalking, violent felonies, and domestic violence charges. Nevertheless, throughout 2022, opponents attacked the reforms, some falsely claiming that the changes would require people charged with crimes like second-degree murder and aggravated battery to be released without bail. Lawmakers further amended the rules earlier this month to make it clearer that judges have the authority to detain defendants they deem to be a threat to others or the community.
Prosecutors and police departments nevertheless opposed the reforms and around 60 different law enforcement agencies and prosecutors filed 64 lawsuits, arguing that the bail portion of the law violated the state's constitution. On Wednesday, Kankakee County Chief Judge Thomas W. Cunnington agreed.
Cunnington didn't say that the bail reforms are bad or wrong—he ruled that lawmakers didn't pass the law properly and that it infringes on the power of the judicial branch. The state's constitution specifically lists guidelines for bail and pretrial detention, and Cunnington determined that "had the Legislature wanted to change the provisions in the Constitution regarding eliminating monetary bail as a surety, they should have submitted the question on the ballot to the electorate at a general election." In other words, lawmakers should have gotten the public's approval via a ballot referendum and changed the constitution's text.
Cunnington also ruled that the bill runs afoul of crime victim rights protections found in the state's constitution, which require courts to consider the rights of victims and their families when setting bail amounts. Under Cunnington's logic, the new bail law would have stopped judges from setting bail amounts.
But much of the meat of Cunnington's ruling is specifically about how the state constitution separates the legislative branch from the judicial branch. While it may seem as though lawmakers should have the power to legislatively establish guidelines for how the courts operate, Cunnington noted that Illinois Supreme Court precedents have determined that there are limits. How a court is administered falls under the purview of the judiciary, and the state's Supreme Court back in 1975 determined that bail is "administrative" in nature. Over several state precedents, the top court has concluded that the judicial branch has independent authority over bail guidelines.
Cunnington ruled, then, that the bail reforms of the SAFE-T act violate the separation of powers between the legislative and judicial branches. "Because…all judges will be categorically prohibited from even considering in their discretion a monetary component to the conditions of release," he wrote, "the judiciary's inherent authority to set or deny bond will necessarily be infringed in all cases."
This would seem to doom the bail reforms if it's upheld, but Cunnington rejected the plaintiffs' request for a preliminary injunction to stop the reforms from being launched in January. Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Attorney General Kwame Raoul say they're going to appeal the ruling to the Illinois Supreme Court. Raoul noted in a statement that the ruling applies only in the cases that Cunnington ruled on in the 21st Judicial Circuit. According to Kankakee County State's Attorney Jim Rowe, that means the bail reforms won't be launched in the 65 counties that participated in the lawsuits, but will be implemented in 37 others.
It appears that Illinois will follow through with implementing bail reform changes knowing that they may ultimately be struck down by the state's Supreme Court. That said, if the bail reforms work out well, judges would be able to voluntarily maintain them even if the top court throws out the legislative mandate. If the reforms stop courts from using money to determine who gets stuck in pretrial detention and it doesn't affect crime rates or court compliance, then judges should consider keeping them. Bail was never meant to be a mechanism for keeping people detained over low-level offenses just because they can't afford to pay for their release.
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It's not so much Illinois trying to gradually legalize crime, but Chicago specifically. That way, they can point to crime statistics to prove Chicago is perfectly safe. It's just like the cities in California that have decriminalized shoplifting. Amazingly, reports of shoplifting have dropped to nothing.
Speaking from within the state, it's most everyone versus Cook County (which in turn is ruled by Chicago). The rest of us don't like this new law and have been trying to fight it. Unfortunately, the state supreme court is biased in favor of Chicago Democrats.
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The how is always more important than the what. Things have to be done right -- no matter what the thing is.
Whether bail reform is good or bad, if it should have been run through a referendum, then it should have been run through a referendum.
Too many people in this country just want the result they want, damn the process. Any means to an end.
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Something of value has to be on deposit to keep fleeing from a court charge. My question is; If it's not money what's it going to be? A lien on your house, car, land (something far more valuable?).
DHS just admitted they lost 450k illegal immigrants given no order to appear in court. So this is now common under dem rule. Break the law, no big deal. They need room for political dissidents like those being charged under FACE anyways.
Why have bail in the first place?
The root cause here is the failure of the government to provide the speedy trial commanded by the US Constitution.
Provide the speedy trial and the bail issue goes away.
Get arrested, go to trial the next day, no one ever spends more than a night in jail.
Like the south in the fifties; get arrested, get a fair trial, get sentenced, hit the chain gang the next day.
No worries.
The problem is laws have become so complicated it takes the state a year to figure out all the laws you've broken so they can offer to drop 28 charges in exchange for pleading guilty to the 1 thing you did that actually should be illegal.
Also, holding you for a year makes you so desperate to get out you'll plead to anything they offer just to be released.
Fix that first, and the speedy trial will fall into place on its own.
Force prosecutors into a set time frame to generate the charges. If they aren't ready, no arrest and no jail. Once time frame is done, no additional charges related to the same crime.
If they can't make a case, they shouldn't be able to arrest you. If they can make a case, you shouldn't be allowed to run around committing more crimes with no consequence while they keep pushing it off into the distance.
If you can't come up with at least 3 things that "should be illegal", you aren't presumption-of-guilt-ing hard enough.
If by speedy trial you mean the day of booking, then sure. Good luck getting council if you don't have one already.
The real point is to ensure people show up. You need to put enough consequence on failure to appear that non-compliance isn't an issue and any cost is too much for the "reform" group.
Yeah, next-day trials are a bad idea. If nothing else it would be difficult to issue and serve witness subpoenas in that time frame. Not to mention the lack of time to review Brady material. But there's no reason we can't have next-month trials in most cases. No criminal case should *ever* take a year to get to trial.
So in my world, bail would be an issue, but a much more minor one.
"Reasonable bail" is also in the constitution.
some small bit of good news, the January 6 defendants didn't have to suffer the indignity of cash bail.
This is exactly the problem with articles about no-cash-bail laws. They fail to give enough details to see if the effect will be
(a) to reduce pre-trial detention, i.e. release defendants who are already bailable but don’t have the cash, versus
(b) increase pre-trial detention, i.e. detain people who would have been able to make bail, versus
(c) just further empower already hyper-empowered judges and prosecutors to let favorites walk and subject enemies to lengthy detention without trial.
Reason’s articles on the subject do nothing to help the reader decide whether it’s (a), (b), or (c). Fortunately I live in a state where bail is a constitutional right, which does not prevent judges from setting it low or taking an IOU when appropriate, but does prevent them from locking up detainees with no way out.
“I live in a state where bail is a constitutional right”
That really ought to be everywhere. What’s the point of a 9th Amendment, or a Privileges and Immunities clause, if they don’t include the right to bail?
(Capital cases have traditionally been an exception, but apart from that, traditionally bail was recognized as a right until this modern and enlightened era.)
"just further empower already hyper-empowered judges and prosecutors to let favorites walk and subject enemies to lengthy detention without trial."
That's my own suspicion. The reformers don't mean for pretrial release to be permitted for political prisoners. They just want to release regular predators who victimize normies.
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Oh, and by the way, Shackford, any apologies for your debacle yesterday in defending sex shows for minors?
He was having an immoral panic.
Interesting. I'm rooting for this to be upheld so the useful idiots can impose this on themselves via referendum. Then they will have no one else to blame but themselves when they bury one of their loved ones.
Unconstitutional laws are fine as long as Democrats vote for them, or impose them by executive fiat.
The majority of the Illinois Supreme court are democrats, they will do as they're told.
Jebus, way to go, Shackford.
The kids at drag shows article, now this.
It's like striking out on two pitches.
Illinois would be a much better state without Chicago
I don't think any other state is so dominated by one city. Like 9 1/2 million out of 12 million in Illinois there.
No judge should ever say "What you are doing is unconstitutional, you have no authority to do it" and then say "but you can keep doing it for now"
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