District Attorneys Raise Concerns About California Supreme Court's Cash Bail Ruling
- Two Bay Area District Attorneys expressed concern that the California Supreme Court ruling on cash bail, which requires bail to be affordable and limits pretrial detention to violent crime suspects, will hinder judges' ability to consider public safety risks before trial.
- San Francisco DA Brooke Jenkins warned that the ruling will release career criminals, including repeat offenders previously jailed for theft and drug offenses, calling it devastating for public safety.
- Despite crime drops attributed to swift pretrial detention, the DAs fear the ruling will reverse these gains amid ongoing drug and theft cases.
11 Articles
11 Articles
District attorneys raise concerns about California Supreme Court's cash bail ruling
Two Bay Area district attorneys are raising concerns about a recent California Supreme Court ruling regarding cash bail. San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins said the decision could threaten public safety in the city, noting the Public Defender’s Office has already filed motions calling for repeat drug offenders and robbery suspects to be released without a cash bond because of the ruling. Sergio Quintana has more in the video above.
Activist Judges Unleash Crime Waves as California’s Bail Fiasco Exposes the Rot in Our Justice System
When San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins warns that her city will once again become a national punchline for lawlessness, Americans should listen. The California Supreme Court’s recent ruling mandating “attainable” bail for offenses labeled “non-violent” is not mere legal tinkering. It is a deliberate invitation to chaos, one that prioritizes criminals over citizens and reveals the deep ideological capture of America’s judiciary. This…
POLITICS: Out-of-control judges lead to out-of-control crime
San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins said it best: “We are going to continue to be the brunt of every joke and attack on Fox News, and rightfully so.” She was referring to the decisoin last month by the California Supreme Court that bail for supposedly “non-violent” offenses must be “attainable.” That means hordes of repeat offenders are going to go free. Drug dealers who have been arrested dozens of times; retail looting gangs that st…
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