Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Evaluation design and methodology
- 3 The Effective Bail Scheme in Yorkshire and Humberside
- 4 The operation of the Effective Bail Scheme
- 5 The Effective Bail Scheme's work with defendants
- 6 Interviewees' perspectives on the Effective Bail Scheme
- 7 Interim outcomes of the Effective Bail Scheme
- 8 Conclusions
- References
- Appendix One Figure A1 Process maps of the Effective Bail Scheme
- Appendix Two Commencements on the EBS by area
- Appendix Three EBS caseloads
- Appendix Four EBS accommodation
- Appendix Five Accommodation caseloads
4 - The operation of the Effective Bail Scheme
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Evaluation design and methodology
- 3 The Effective Bail Scheme in Yorkshire and Humberside
- 4 The operation of the Effective Bail Scheme
- 5 The Effective Bail Scheme's work with defendants
- 6 Interviewees' perspectives on the Effective Bail Scheme
- 7 Interim outcomes of the Effective Bail Scheme
- 8 Conclusions
- References
- Appendix One Figure A1 Process maps of the Effective Bail Scheme
- Appendix Two Commencements on the EBS by area
- Appendix Three EBS caseloads
- Appendix Four EBS accommodation
- Appendix Five Accommodation caseloads
Summary
This chapter examines data relating to the operation of the EBS and its component parts between its implementation and the end of June 2008. It explores take-up of the scheme and the caseload of the EBS in different court areas throughout this period. The second part of the chapter examines the demographic characteristics of defendants as well as their current offences and offending and bail histories. It also explores differences in these factors between defendants who were bailed to the EBS and those who were remanded in custody in order to begin to understand why some proposals for bail support failed. Data presented in this chapter were gleaned from bail information and bail support records.
Figure 4.1 provides details of the process which resulted in 658 defendants being bailed with EBS. Bail information officers initially identified 1,417 defendants who may have been eligible for the EBS because they were detained in police custody while awaiting their first court appearance or because they had been remanded in custody at an earlier hearing.
In over a third (n=523, 37%) of cases no proposal for bail support was submitted to the courts. Three-quarters (n=398, 76%) of this group were deemed to be either unsuitable, ineligible or both for the EBS. There is some overlap between the two categories. In terms of unsuitability, the most frequently cited reasons were that defendants had no support needs (n=22), there were concerns about manageability (n=15) or no suitable accommodation was available (n=12). In terms of ineligibility, the most frequently cited reason was that defendants were ineligible for Restriction on Bail (RoB) (n=99). A policy decision was made early on in the pilot that defendants who tested positive for a specified Class A drug at the police station and who were therefore eligible for RoB could not be offered bail support. This decision was taken because of concerns about duplication of work and overburdening defendants. Consequently, most RoB-eligible cases were screened out before bail information officers interviewed defendants. However, nearly without exception, interviewees advocated that decision-makers should be able to impose RoB and bail support conditions together. The reasons given for this were that there was no accommodation provided by the Drug Interventions Programme (DIP) and that there was uncertainty about the level of support offered by DIP other than in relation to drug treatment.
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- Bail Support Schemes for Adults , pp. 35 - 52Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2011