When President Trump signed his executive orders to dismantle cashless bail in Washington, D.C. and across the country, critics immediately cried foul. They called it an attack on criminal justice reform, a return to the “bad old days,” and a rollback of progressive policies. But the truth is far more uncomfortable: this is the inevitable result of the left going too far.
Cashless bail was sold as a humane reform. Its purpose was simple—ensure that non-violent offenders, often poor and disproportionately Black or Brown, weren’t trapped in jail for weeks or months simply because they couldn’t afford bail. On paper, the reform had merit. No one disputes that sitting in a cell over a minor charge while a wealthier person walks free is unjust.
But in practice, cashless bail became something else entirely. Instead of a careful system designed to separate low-level offenders from serious threats, it turned into a revolving door. Violent offenders, repeat criminals, and even those with histories of failing to appear in court were released back into communities within hours. What followed was predictable: more crime, more victims, and more fear.
And here’s the reality that too many policymakers ignore: statistics don’t erase what people actually live with in Black communities. Experts may say “only 4% of released defendants are rearrested for violent crimes.” But if you’re the grandmother who sees the same young man who just shot someone back on the block the next day, that 4% feels like 100%. If you’re the small business owner robbed twice by the same offender, bail reform doesn’t look like compassion—it looks like abandonment.
At a public rally in March 2023, United Bodegas of America pushed back strongly against New York’s cashless bail law. A deli manager described the current situation bluntly:
“It is scary. Even my customers are scared coming in here.”
UBA spokesperson Fernando Mateo added: “Beyond increased patrols, … we want to see repeat offenders face harsher penalties, and for bail reform to be repealed.”
This erosion of trust is real. Black communities were told this law was designed to protect them, but what they see is criminals being protected while victims are forgotten. They see policymakers defending ideology instead of defending neighborhoods. They see a system that treats their streets as laboratories for failed experiments in justice.
The irony is painful. In trying to fix one injustice, the left created another. A policy meant to give poor defendants a fair shot has too often stripped poor neighborhoods of their safety. That is not compassion—it is negligence.
Trump’s executive order is not a cure-all. It won’t solve the deeper cultural and economic issues fueling crime. But it is a necessary correction. It reintroduces accountability where ideology had replaced common sense. The left wanted a world where money didn’t decide freedom. What they created instead was a system where danger didn’t either.
At some point, we must admit that outcomes matter more than intentions. If a reform consistently leads to more crime, more victims, and more broken communities, then it is not reform at all—it is regression. And once again, it is Black neighborhoods—the very ones the law was supposed to protect—that bear the heaviest cost.
The end of cashless bail should be a wake-up call. If we want true reform, it must be rooted in accountability, not ideology. It must protect the innocent as much as it protects the accused. And it must stop treating Black communities as acceptable places for failed experiments. We do not need “compassion” that costs lives. We need policies that work.