The Impact of Defense Counsel at Bail Hearings

Shamena Anwar, Shawn D. Bushway, John Engberg

ResearchPosted on rand.org May 11, 2023Published in: Science Advances, Volume 9, Issue 18 (May 2023). doi: 10.1126/sciadv.ade3909

Roughly half of U.S. counties do not provide defense counsel at bail hearings, and few studies have documented the potential impacts of legal representation at this stage. This paper presents the results from a field experiment in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, that provided a public defender at a defendant's initial bail hearing. The presence of a public defender decreased the use of monetary bail and pretrial detention without increasing failure to appear rates at the preliminary hearing. The intervention did, however, result in a short-term increase in rearrests on theft charges, although a theft incident would have to be at least 8.5 times as costly as a day in detention for jurisdictions to find this tradeoff undesirable.

Topics

Document Details

  • Publisher: Science Advances
  • Availability: Non-RAND
  • Year: 2023
  • Pages: 11
  • Document Number: EP-70066

This publication is part of the RAND external publication series. Many RAND studies are published in peer-reviewed scholarly journals, as chapters in commercial books, or as documents published by other organizations.

RAND is a nonprofit institution that helps improve policy and decisionmaking through research and analysis. RAND's publications do not necessarily reflect the opinions of its research clients and sponsors.

Version Note

This publication supersedes a previous version published in 2022 (WR-A1960-1).