Arkansas chief justice cites Johnny Cash in bail dissent
By ANDREW DeMILLO, Associated Press
Feb 11, 2016 11:11 AM CST

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Objecting to the Arkansas Supreme Court ruling that lower-court judges can require that defendants pay their bail only in cash, the high court's chief justice cited a musician seldom thought of as a legal scholar: Johnny Cash.

Interim Chief Justice Howard Brill on Thursday cited Cash's song "Starkville City Jail" in a dissent. He said it was wrong for the majority to deny a Benton County man's objection to a $300,000 cash-only bail set in an assault and battery case.

In the 5-2 ruling, justices said Arkansas' constitution allows cash-only bail. Brill's dissent begins with lyrics from Cash's song about his 1965 arrest in the Mississippi town for public drunkenness.

Brill said requiring cash-only for bail strips a person of a constitutional right to provide sufficient surety for their release.

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The story has been corrected to show that the $300,000 was bail, not bond.