Criminal prosecutions often move slowly, sometimes taking months or years. Yet when we look at deterring crime, swift and certain consequences are the most effective. That disconnect between what is known through research and what is done in practice makes it harder to actually reduce criminal behavior.

In a typical criminal case, police first make an arrest and take the person into custody. Soon after, a judge decides whether the person will be released before trial and on what bail or conditions. Prosecutors then decide whether to file formal charges—usually a written complaint, information, or indictment. Once formal charges are filed, both sides enter discovery, where the parties have certain obligations to share evidence, witnesses, expert reports, and more with the opposing party. While most cases end in a plea deal, the remainder proceed to trial.

Delays can happen at any stage of this process. Beyond undermining deterrence, delays also harm the public in predictable ways. Victims wait longer for closure, witnesses lose track of details or disappear, and the justice system burns scarce resources managing cases that drag on. Defendants face continued uncertainty, disruptions to employment and other responsibilities, and deferred accountability.

Bail Delays

Bail—the tool used to determine someone’s pretrial release or detention—is often the first major delay point in a case, with consequences for liberty, stability, and public safety. While every state has rules on how quickly a defendant’s initial bail decision must be made, they vary widely. Some are specific (e.g., within 24 hours), while others are vague (e.g., “without unnecessary delay”) and can result in release decisions taking days or even weeks to make.

Even brief jail stays can disrupt employment, housing, and family stability. For others, detention interrupts treatment, medication routines, or support systems. Unsurprisingly, research has found that even a single night in jail can increase the likelihood that an individual will offend in the future.

Faster bail decisions generally preserve the same outcomes and public safety considerations without needless and potentially harmful delay. While many courts already complete bail decisions within 24 to 48 hours, clear, enforceable timelines help ensure consistency across all cases. Without firm expectations, delay becomes easier to rationalize and harder to correct.

States with Strong Policies

States with Weak Policies

Operational Concerns

Charging Delays

Charging is when the government formally files a criminal case against a defendant to start the prosecution. It tells a person what crimes they are accused of and what penalties they may face. This is also when the defendant can meaningfully begin building a defense. States vary in how prosecutions are initiated—some allow a prosecutor to file charges directly (often through a “complaint” and “information”) while others require a grand jury indictment. In some jurisdictions, police-issued citations can function as formal charging documents for low-level misdemeanors or infractions. Regardless, people often remain incarcerated while prosecutors decide what charges to file. Even more troubling, the right-to-a-speedy-trial clock generally does not begin to run until the state files formal charges.

Similar to bail, timelines for charging decisions differ. Some states require release from custody or case dismissal if a charging decision is not made within a set period (generally initiated after arrest or initial appearance), while others impose no timelines at all. Until charges are filed, a defendant cannot clear their name or accept accountability, and victims are left uncertain whether justice will be pursued.

States with Strong Policies

States with Weak Policies

Operational Concerns

Discovery Delays

Discovery is the evidence-sharing process that ensures each party is fully informed about the evidence the opposing party intends to use. It is when the defense gets the police reports, witness statements, lab results, and video needed to evaluate the allegations and prepare for their defense. When that disclosure is slow or incomplete, substantive hearing or trial delays are almost inevitable.

Every state has discovery rules, but they vary widely in how deadlines are triggered and what happens when they are missed. Some jurisdictions use fixed time limits that start at arrest or at the filing of charges; others set the clock based on a court event (e.g., a scheduled trial date), which can become a moving target. Dismissal is rarely imposed even where it is permitted, as most discovery violations are met with a continuance that prolongs the prosecution. When courts accept late disclosures, delay becomes normalized and accountability disappears.

States with Strong Policies

States with Weak Policies

Operational Concerns

Trial Delays

Speedy trial is the set of rules defining how long the state can keep a case pending before it must go to trial or be resolved. It is also one of the few protections against delay that is grounded in the U.S. Constitution. However, what counts as “speedy” is largely left to the states. A timeline might start running at arrest, when charges are formally filed, or at arraignment (when someone enters a plea of guilty or not guilty). Many jurisdictions apply different deadlines for misdemeanors and felonies, with shorter limits for lower-level cases and longer windows for more complex prosecutions.

Speedy trial timelines often differ by custody status as well, and for good reason. For jailed individuals, delays compound work and family disruptions while increasing pressure to take a deal just to get released. Released defendants are not immune to these issues, as they still face months or years of court hearings pulling them away from life obligations, but courts generally treat these harms as less severe.

Remedies for violations range from release from custody to dismissal of charges, either with prejudice or without (which bars refiling).

States with Strong Policies

States with Weak Policies

Operational Concerns

Conclusion

Careful decision-making and due process are important in criminal prosecutions; however, thoughtful prosecution and protection of fundamental rights need not conflict with efficiency. While cost concerns are common with efficiency changes, the status quo is far pricier. Each continuance adds staff hours, courtroom time, transport costs, and jail days, not to mention the cost of delayed accountability. Some states have shown that courts can move cases faster without cutting corners, using simple changes like better scheduling, earlier case triage, consistent practices, and advanced technology. Where proven models exist, delay becomes a choice that requires defined expectations through rules and policy.

The Criminal Justice and Civil Liberties program focuses on public policy reforms that prioritize public safety as well as due process, fiscal responsibility, and individual liberty.