Virginia HB357 - Weaken Bail Standards (2026): Difference between revisions
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* [https://lis.virginia.gov/ Virginia Legislative Information System] | * [https://lis.virginia.gov/ Virginia Legislative Information System] | ||
[[Category:Virginia | [[Category:Virginia Democrats Trifecta (2025)]] | ||
[[Category:Judicial Watch]] | [[Category:Judicial Watch]] | ||
[[Category:United States]] | [[Category:United States]] | ||
[[Category:Review Pending]] | [[Category:Review Pending]] | ||
Revision as of 19:59, 18 February 2026
Virginia HB357 — Weaken Bail Standards — Bill introduced by Virginia Democrats to make it harder for judges to deny bail, even for serious violent offenses.
Summary
HB357 would restrict judges' ability to deny bail for defendants charged with:
- Aggravated assault
- Armed robbery
- Drug trafficking
- Other serious offenses currently eligible for pretrial detention
Key Details
- Bill Number: HB357
- Session: 2026 Virginia General Assembly
- Category: Criminal Justice / Bail Reform
Context
This bill arrives amid national controversy over bail reform policies. Multiple cases tracked in the Judicial Watch section of this wiki document incidents where defendants released on low bail went on to commit additional violent crimes, including the Judge Joy Kennedy case in Cleveland where a defendant released on reduced bail killed a man days later.