Lawsuit to Reform S.F. Bail System Hits Snag — but Will Continue

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As of March 2015, more than 45,000 jail inmates throughout the state had not been convicted of a crime, according to local jail data kept by the California Board of State and Community Corrections. Bail reformers argue many are held because they can't afford to pay their way out of jail. Photo courtesy of iStock

By Alex Emslie, KQED News Fix

A federal judge in Oakland has dismissed a host of motions that would have fast-tracked a constitutional challenge to the use of monetary bail in San Francisco, but she allowed a Washington, D.C., group to continue a civil rights lawsuit that could have a nationwide impact.

The organization Equal Justice Under Law brought the lawsuit in October on behalf of two low-income women arrested in San Francisco but never formally charged. The lawsuit alleges Riana Buffin’s $30,000 bail and Crystal Patterson’s $150,000 bail amounted to a punishment that unequally hits poor people, in violation of the 14th Amendment guarantees of due process and equal protection under the law. 

Read the complete story at KQED News Fix. 

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