Philadelphia Eagles Bailed 9 People From Jail Using Social Justice Funds

The Philadelphia Eagles took their fight for social justice to the bank and bailed nine people out of a jail over the Thanksgiving holiday.

On the Wednesday before Thanksgiving, the Eagles posted $50,000 in bail ― $25,000 raised by the players and $25,000 matched by the team’s Eagles Social Justice Fund ― so that nine defendants in Philadelphia could spend Thanksgiving out of jail.

The money went to the Philadelphia Community Bail Fund, a local organization aimed at reforming the cash bailout system, which has been a major issue for Philadelphia city officials over the years.

Philadelphia has some of the highest incarceration rates in the U.S. Researchers at Princeton have also found that black defendants are subjected to higher bail from both black and white judges.

After the Thanksgiving bailout, Eagles safety Malcolm Jenkins and the Players Coalition, which he co-founded, hosted a services fair on Monday to connect the nine individuals with organizations that can help them get back on their feet.

“The cash bail system punishes poverty and … punishes people of color at a grossly disproportionate rate,” Jenkins said during a news conference on Monday, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported.

“Some people say we need the system to make our community safe — but as you can see here with these groups, we have everything we need to make our community safer, when we decide to invest in people and wrap our arms around people, as opposed to locking them up,” Jenkins said.

The Eagles posted bail after a brief confrontation between Jenkins and Carolina Panthers safety Eric Reid on Sunday over NFL players’ protests against social and racial injustice, which former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick launched two years ago.

Reid, a close friend of Kaepernick, knelt during Sunday’s national anthem. Jenkins, who had previously knelt for the anthems, then later raised his fist, no longer does so.

Earlier this year, the Players Coalition, led by Jenkins and former NFL star Anquan Boldin, reached an unprecedented agreement with the NFL to dedicate nearly $90,000 million to address social inequality.

The partnership was established in response to the protests Kaepernick started before he opted out of his contract with the 49ers in 2017.