Last updated on April 26, 2021
Locking up people before trial because they cannot afford to pay bail is a leading cause of mass incarceration in Tennessee and its impact is devastating for people who live in our state’s rural communities. Half of the nearly 30,000 people sitting in our state’s county jails are pre-trial detainees who are legally presumed innocent and are eligible for release. But because they cannot afford to pay a monetary bail amount set by a judge or magistrate, they instead languish behind bars while awaiting trial, often for low-level offenses.
Being incarcerated pre-trial can have a life-altering snow-ball effect, as many working Tennesseans lose their jobs or face eviction because they are unable to make bail and return to their homes and places of employment. Others face the terrifying possibility of losing custody of their children while they wait for their day in court.
While bail is a driver of mass incarceration statewide, its impact on rural communities is, in many cases, more severe than it is in Tennessee’s city centers. Since 2000, the pretrial incarceration rate has increased 163% in the state's 53 rural counties, compared to an increase of only 2% in the state’s urban counties. While larger, more densely populated counties logically have more people in their jails, in recent years small cities and rural counties in Tennessee have been those with the highest rates of incarceration per capita.
Money bail has created a two-tiered justice system in our state, where Tennesseans who have limited incomes – particularly those who live in rural communities – are punished more harshly than their neighbors who have access to resources and money.
Through a grant provided by the Vera Institute of Justice, ACLU-TN staff were able to travel to three rural communities across the state – McMinn County in East Tennessee, Warren County in Middle Tennessee, and Obion County in West Tennessee – to meet with and learn from people who had seen, first-hand, how this unfair practice had hurt them or others in their towns. These individuals bravely agreed to share their stories and lend their expertise and experience to better help people across the state of Tennessee – from community members in rural, suburban, and urban settings to state lawmakers considering legislative reforms – understand the dangerous, ineffective, and predatory ways the bail system hurts their neighbors.
These are their stories.
From McMinn County, we spoke to:
In Warren County, we spoke to:
Finally, in Obion County, we spoke to:
Transforming our state's treatment of people incarcerated while awaiting trial, including how communities rely on the use of money bail, will result in fewer people unnecessarily held behind bars simply because they cannot afford to post bond.
Let us know how money bail impacts your community or share your story about your experience with the bail system by taking our Money Bail Community Impact Survey. Your responses may be shared with state lawmakers as they discuss bail reform initiatives during the 2021 legislative summer study on bail issues (see below for more details).
This summer, lawmakers will take up the following bills during a study session (more bills may be added to this list):
| SB 289/HB 1518 | Bail, Bail Bonds – As introduced, requires the clerk of each court with criminal jurisdiction to submit a monthly report to the administrative office of the courts including certain statistical information about arrests, release, bonds, and failures to appear; requires clerks who fail to submit the required information to pay an administrative fee. | Current Status |
| SB 804/HB 897 | Bail, Bail Bonds - As introduced, establishes a registration program for the regulation and oversight of bail bondsmen by the department of commerce and insurance | Current Status |
| SB 805/HB 898 | Bail, Bail Bonds – As introduced, authorizes certain defendants to execute a bail bond with the clerk of the court in an amount equal to 10 percent of the defendant's bail; requires that bail amount paid by a defendant be first applied to the payment of any ordered restitution; creates a rebuttable presumption that a person charged with certain bailable offenses will not violate the conditions of the person's release; requires a magistrate to document the factors used in making a release determination. | Current Status |
| SB 1438/HB 420 | General Assembly – As introduced, creates an ad hoc committee consisting of members of the general assembly to review the current laws, rules, and policies of cash bail in this state, and report on its findings and recommendations by January 15, 2022. | Current Status |