Historic Pretrial Legislation Advances Equal Justice in Michigan - The Bail Project Skip to main content

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Press Contact: Jeremy Cherson, Director of Communications

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 

(LANSING, MI) — Today, the Michigan House Criminal Justice Committee heard testimony on a bipartisan package of pretrial reforms (House Bills 4655-56 and 4658-4661) to improve Michigan’s criminal justice system by strengthening due process, preserving the presumption of innocence, advancing public safety, and limiting wealth-based detention. The legislative hearing included testimony from The Bail Project; local advocates; Representatives Carter, Grant, and Young; Chief Judge Bill McConico; and Ottawa County Public Defenders provided testimony on the urgent need for this robust legislative solution.

In response to the committee’s hearing, The Bail Project offered the following statement:

“The legislation heard today in Michigan’s House Committee on Criminal Justice advances common sense pretrial reforms that center fairness and equal justice in the state’s pretrial system. To the benefit of all Michiganders, the Committee should vote ‘yes’ on this package and advance meaningful criminal justice reforms that balance protecting public safety and mitigate the harms of unnecessary incarceration. The full passage of these bills is an opportunity for Michigan to lead the Midwest and the nation towards a more perfect criminal justice system.

These bipartisan bills offer an opportunity to move Michigan’s justice system forward, shifting away from a model where wealth acts as a proxy for safety, creating a two-tiered system – one for those with money, and another for everyone else.  On any given day, there are more than 16,000 people in Michigan jails, many of whom haven’t been convicted of a crime and are facing low-level, nonviolent charges, even though a judge has deemed them eligible for release. Michiganders deserve a more fair and effective pretrial system, and thankfully, the legislature now has the solution. 

We urge the Criminal Justice Committee, and then the full Michigan House of Representatives, to swiftly pass this crucial package of bills.”

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Director of Communications and Publications

Jeremy Cherson

As the Director of Communications and Publications, Mr. Cherson directs the organization’s communications, earned media and public relations, internal communications, and publications strategies. With more than fifteen years of experience in criminal justice reform, community-based research, government operations, and research and project management, Mr. Cherson joined The Bail Project in 2020 as the Senior Policy Advisor, where he helped develop the organization’s policy team and oversaw several state and local-level advocacy campaigns. Before The Bail Project, Mr. Cherson served in several positions within the de Blasio administration at the New York City Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice, where his work included the development of the Mayor’s Action Plan for Neighborhood Safety, a citywide community safety intervention grounded in the principles of participatory justice and where he also led the DOJ-funded Smart Defense Initiative to improve the administration and oversight of New York City’s Assigned Counsel Plan. He received a B.S. in film and television from Boston University and an M.P.A. in public and nonprofit management and policy from New York University.