“It’s only three days.”
That’s what a court staffer in Ferguson, Missouri told the Department of Justice when asked why they don’t track the time a person spends behind bars before their case is heard by a judge.
In Ferguson, if you are arrested and too poor to post bond, they can hold you for three days before you even get to see a judge. And if the judge releases you after those three days, and you are later found guilty of that small offense for which you were arrested, you don’t get credit for those three days toward your sentence.
Even if your sentence was just two days, you would have to go back to jail for a total of five days. But if you can afford to pay the bond, even if you pose a risk to public safety, then you would be released — no matter your criminal history or likelihood to commit a crime while awaiting trial.
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The DOJ’s report on Ferguson found that the authorities don’t bother to track whether you’ve served time when it comes to calculating sentences. This cavalier attitude about three days in the life of a person underscores what’s missing in our paradigm about how we use jails. It’s only three days — what’s the big deal?
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What would happen if you were gone from your life, unexpectedly, for three days? For most of the people arrested in America, three days could mean a disruption in income, maybe the loss of a job, missing doses of medication or other health care needs, or the inability to make the rent payment, and probably more than a few missed birthdays or other special family events.
More than what someone misses or loses during those three days, there is a toll paid by our communities and victims. Three days in jail makes a low-risk person more likely to come out at higher risk to commit a crime in the near future. This impact isn’t true for higher-risk people—they go in high-risk and come out likely the same, unless we do something to help them. But the vast majority of those in jail in America, including Ferguson, are low-risk. So these three days are not “no big deal.” In fact, they turn out to matter the most.
Let’s not forget that this dysfunctional system isn’t hurting everyone equally: African Americans make up 93% of all arrests in Ferguson and 95% of those spending two days in jail or more.
Nationwide, people of color are bearing the brunt of a discriminatory bail system that leaves those who can’t afford bond behind bars for anywhere from days to years before they get their day in court.
African Americans are two times more likely to be detained than whites for non-violent drug arrests in America, and their pretrial bond is 35% higher than for white men charged with the same offense.
But the issue of how people are being treated pretrial doesn’t stop with this “three day” problem, or the fact that they don’t get credit for serving those days: In Ferguson, the financial bond system itself is carelessly applied.









