Current:Home > FinanceChurches and nonprofits ensnared in Georgia push to restrict bail funds -ChatGPT
Churches and nonprofits ensnared in Georgia push to restrict bail funds
View
Date:2025-04-12 07:47:58
ATLANTA (AP) — When she was behind bars in Georgia, Nia Thomas would use toothpaste to stick handwritten flyers to the wall and spread the word about community bail funds that could pay inmates’ bonds, no strings attached.
“I was posting the phone numbers in everybody’s rooms, everybody’s dorms, every jail I went to,” Thomas said.
But wide-scale initiatives like the one that paid $50,000 for her pretrial release on drug trafficking charges in May 2022 could be significantly restricted, if not criminalized, under a Georgia bill awaiting Republican Gov. Brian Kemp’s signature. Opponents have called the measure an unprecedented attack on bail funds, churches and other community organizations that post inmates’ bonds as they await trial.
Thomas, a mother of four who is currently awaiting sentencing after reaching a plea deal, said she frequently encountered fellow inmates who had been charged with misdemeanors or traffic violations but were languishing in jail for months because they were unable to gather a few hundred dollars to secure their freedom.
Her own bond was far larger, but her application for relief was accepted by the Georgia nonprofit Barred Business, which paid for her release as part of community bail funds’ annual “Mama’s Day Bail Out” initiative. Within days, Thomas, now 30, was reunited with her family in Atlanta as they held a celebratory crab boil.
Initiatives such as “Mama’s Day Bail Out” and the “Freedom Day Project” — which occur in June, around Juneteenth and Father’s Day — are a hallmark for some Black churches in Georgia including Atlanta’s historic Ebenezer Baptist Church, where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. preached.
Senate Bill 63, which passed the GOP-dominated Legislature earlier this month, would expand the number of charges that require cash bail, while restricting who can post that bail.
Specifically, no person or organization could post more than three cash bonds in a year. Groups such as churches or charitable bail funds could post unlimited surety bonds, but only if they fulfill the same requirements that bail bond companies do — a process involving passing background checks, paying fees, holding a business license, securing the approval of the local sheriff and establishing a cash escrow account or other form of collateral.
Proponents say well-meaning organizations should have no issue following the same rules as bail bond companies. Republican bill sponsor Sen. Randy Robertson insists he has not created any “red tape” by forcing bail funds to go through these numerous requirements.
But the measure comes as conservative legislatures in recent years have sought to constrain community bail funds. Countless protesters arrested during 2020’s racial injustice protests benefited from the funds, and more recently they’ve posted bond for activists arrested in connection with violent demonstrations against a planned Atlanta-area police training center that critics dubbed “Cop City.”
Georgia prosecutors have noted that some “Stop Cop City” protesters had the Atlanta Solidarity Fund’s phone number written on their body, evidence, according to the prosecutors, that the activists intended to do something that could get them arrested. Three of the bail fund’s leaders were charged with charity fraud last year and are among 61 indicted on racketeering charges.
Rep. Houston Gaines said the Atlanta Solidarity Fund’s legal issues show the need for more oversight.
“Once they reach that (three-cash-bond-per-year) threshold, these groups need to register properly as a bondsman. ... They can bail out as many folks as they want, but they need to do so under the same rules and regulations as bondsmen,” he said.
Democrats, though, are aghast at the proposal, which they argue would cause even worse overcrowding in jails and disproportionately hurt poor, minority defendants. They have urged Kemp to veto it and have portrayed the legislation as a gift to for-profit bail bond companies and a betrayal of his predecessor, GOP Gov. Nathan Deal, who made criminal justice reform a hallmark of his legacy.
“Why should a church have to become a bail bondsman to bond out its constituents, its citizens, its parishioners?” said Democratic Rep. Tanya Miller. “What happened to your First Amendment right to pool your money and go bond out people because you care about them as human beings or what they stand for to your community?”
Bridgette Simpson, the executive director of Barred Business, which provides not only bail but also long-term support such as mental health services and housing aid, said she’s struggling to contemplate what would happen to her nonprofit if the bill becomes law.
“I’m devastated,” Simpson said. “I’ve cried quite a few times because I’m very close with the mothers that we bail out. It’s heartbreaking because how would else Nia have gotten out? How else would she have gotten to spend time with her children?”
Robertson, a longtime sheriff’s deputy and former state president of the Fraternal Order of Police, said Simpson should have no issue continuing her organization’s work: “Maybe her model will need to be tweaked. I promise, I am not an evil person.”
The American Civil Liberties of Georgia has threatened to sue if Kemp signs the bill, saying it “unconstitutionally criminalizes poverty and restricts conduct protected by the First Amendment.” A Kemp spokesperson said the legislation is undergoing a “thorough review process.”
And while the Georgia Association of Professional Bondsmen is in favor of the overall bill, the group’s president, Charles Shaw, told the Associated Press that the GAPB is “neutral” on the specific paragraph that clamps down on bail funds.
“We do believe that there has been an abuse of the process by certain bail funds across the country of unknown entities funding the release of people without really any means to secure the bond or get the people back, which is the whole purpose of bond,” Shaw said. “But we certainly don’t want to oppress churches or a family member from getting out their family.”
Community bail funds have been around for more than a century: during the period known as the “first Red Scare,” the ACLU created a bail fund in 1920 to help labor organizers and other alleged Communists who were facing sedition charges.
Bail funds went on to play a significant role in the civil rights movement and received newfound attention for helping to bail out thousands of activists during the 2020 racial injustice protests that roiled the nation, with bail fund donation links going viral on social media as celebrities and countless others poured in donations.
The funds were so effective that they increasingly drew the ire of politicians, who started pushing bills to restrict community bail funds, said Pilar Weiss, who helps lead the National Bail Fund Network, which includes more than 90 nonprofits across the U.S. But no state has enacted anything close to what Georgia has passed, she said.
Thomas spent the past year and a half volunteering, going back to school and providing for her family by doing an assortment of jobs, including babysitting, cleaning homes and delivering food — all while taking care of her 4-month-old daughter, Nilah. Without Barred Business, Thomas believes she would still be stuck behind bars and would be facing a tougher sentence.
“If I was never bonded out, I would have never gotten the opportunity to show that I can turn my life around,” Thomas said.
veryGood! (839)
Related
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- What's open New Year's Day 2024? Details on Walmart, Starbucks, restaurants, stores
- Bowl game schedule today: Breaking down the five college football bowl games on Jan. 1
- Live updates | Fighting in central and southern Gaza after Israel says it’s pulling some troops out
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Last-of-its-kind College Football Playoff arrives with murky future on horizon
- Fighting in southern Gaza city after Israel says it is pulling thousands of troops from other areas
- Tens of thousands flee central Gaza as Israel's offensive expands
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- The Rock returns to WWE on 'Raw,' teases WrestleMania 40 match vs. Roman Reigns
Ranking
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Washington vs. Michigan: Odds and how to watch 2024 CFP National Championship
- Zapatista indigenous rebel movement marks 30 years since its armed uprising in southern Mexico
- A missing person with no memory: How investigators solved the cold case of Seven Doe
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- The USS Gerald R. Ford aircraft carrier is returning home after extended deployment defending Israel
- Ashes of Canadian ‘Star Trek’ fan to be sent into space along with those of TV series’ stars
- Elvis is in the building, along with fishmongers as part of a nautical scene for the Winter Classic
Recommendation
Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
Hilary Swank Reflects on Birth of Her Angel Babies in Message on Gratitude
Last-of-its-kind College Football Playoff arrives with murky future on horizon
Stock market today: Asian markets are mixed on the first trading day of 2024
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
$842 million Powerball ticket sold in Michigan, 1st time the game has been won on New Year’s Day
22 people hospitalized from carbon monoxide poisoning at Mormon church in Utah
Tom Wilkinson, The Full Monty actor, dies at 75