Politics & Government

Strange Bedfellows Support Colorado Bill To Shorten Jail Stays

Backers want to save taxpayer money and keep people from "languishing" behind bars

Backers want to save taxpayer money and keep people from "languishing" behind bars
Backers want to save taxpayer money and keep people from "languishing" behind bars (Photo by Alex Burness)

DENVER, CO – By Alex Burness for The Colorado Independent. It’s probably not often that the bail industry, Charles Koch and progressive criminal justice reformers agree.

But all three are backing a bill that would require Colorado courts to develop plans to ensure no arrestee has to wait longer than 48 hours — the federal standard for due process, according to multiple circuit courts — for a bond-setting hearing.

In some cases, people must sit much longer two days in Colorado jails — four or five, sometimes — before their bond is ever set by a judge.

Find out what's happening in Denverfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Booked on a Friday after a judge has gone home? Even though you’ve only been accused of a crime at that point, you might not see a judge or leave jail until the following Monday. And if that Monday is a holiday, and the court is closed, your wait only gets longer.

People arrested on out-of-county warrants sometimes wait 10 or more days before being transferred to the jurisdiction that sought their arrest to begin with. One man waited 52 days in Teller County.

Find out what's happening in Denverfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

This is especially likely to happen in under-resourced courts open fewer than five days every week, or that close for extended periods on holidays. Only three counties in Colorado — Denver, Jefferson and Weld — stay open for more than five days a week.

The bipartisan bill to address this — SB-191 — is sponsored by Sens. Vicki Marble and Jeff Bridges. Americans for Prosperity-Colorado, which is funded by the politically conservative Koch family, the industry group American Bail Coalition and the ACLU headline an unusually diverse group of supporters.

This week, the bill passed out of the Senate Judiciary Committee and heads now for examination of the Finance Committee, which has not yet been scheduled.

READ MORE in The Colorado Independent

More from Denver