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  • Writer's pictureDerek Santos

Community Bail Bond Update – 06 AUGUST – 02 SEPTEMBER 2022

Updated: May 23, 2023



What has been done:


Our Community Bail Bond Program expands further as we begin engaging with more jail facilities in NCR and look towards other regions. Our Program Field Officers forged ahead going above and beyond the call of duty. These included conducting weekly monitoring/home visits of successfully released participants as well as attending to their court hearings and other steps they are taking towards reintegration.


Aside from the weekly monitoring of our released Participants, our Program Field Officers likewise were unfailing in conducting initial home and barangay visits for applicants, coordinating with barangay officials & PAO lawyers, and the processing of bail.


For this period, we were able to successfully release 4 CBB Participants from detention through bail and other means. They join the 90 other CBB Participants that have been released, all of whom we are assisting towards community reintegration.


Last August 20, 2022, our PRESO CBB Team gathered with representatives from the Parole & Probation Administration (PPA) for an informal gathering to celebrate the birthday of Dr. Raymund Narag who returned to the country for some engagements. The PPA has fully embraced the human rights-based approach to corrections management which Dr. Narag and our organization has been advocating for.


We attended the Navotas City Jail Male Dorm’s service providers meeting last August 30. We also gave a cash prize donation for their Lingo ng Wika Program.


We take pride in congratulating our very own Sol Baltazar for being recognized as a Special Awardee during their recently held 31st Founding Anniversary last August 25, 2022. Ate Sol was acknowledged for her work as jail Volunteer Coordinator & catechist under the Restorative Justice Ministry of the Archdiocese of Cubao.

As of September 2, there have been 300 individuals referred to our program coming from 18 jail facilities, 7 police stations, 3 youth centers, and 3 correctional facilities. Of this number 144 had been interviewed. Of the interviewed, 53 had been successfully bailed out while another 41 had been released through other legal means.

More significantly, we have a total of 21 CBB Participants who have successfully graduated from the CBB Program. We consider participants as having successfully graduated from the Program after their cases have been closed, and at least another six months of monitoring have elapsed. Throughout this period, they must have shown to be responsible members of their community and can lead productive lives.

With their release, the government has now saved Php 1,370,180.00. This is computed by adding the amount budgeted per day (PhP70 for food) per PDL multiplied by the number of days since the day of the release from jail of every individual Participant. These savings will increase as days go by and as long as their cases are not terminated. For those whose cases are dismissed, served early or whose probation was approved, we expect a savings of least 60 days of non-incarceration.


Additionally, on top of the food savings by the government, these individuals are now back to the community and actively engaged in their livelihood- hence contributing to the economy. We minimized their exposure to the criminogenic jail environment leading to better reentry to the society as responsible members.


As we forge ahead with our Community Bail Bond Program, we continue to learn and re-learn approaches and procedures. And this is a welcome experience for us. We envision that more PDLs and CICLs would be assisted soon with their liberties restored, their dignity regained and that their lives are eventually rebuilt. We as a community have a significant role in all these. In the long run, support for our prisons and prisoners as a whole would benefit all of society in terms of lower rates of recidivism and increased sense of public safety. GOD IS ON OUR SIDE!

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