A 19-year-old man arrested in the aftermath of a mass-shooting incident in Montgomery, Alabama, remains free after posting a $60,000 bond, despite prosecutors’ arguments that the amount was insufficient. Two people were killed and 12 others injured at a post-football-game gathering on October 4.
The suspect, charged with attempted murder, was arraigned on October 16 and released the next day after bond was posted, via a bail bondsman. Montgomery County prosecutors filed a motion to raise the bond amount—describing the sum as “woefully inadequate to protect the public” given the violence involved.
During the hearing, the presiding judge declined to increase the bail, stating that prosecutors failed to present any new evidence that would have justified revisiting the bond terms. Community leaders expressed outrage, calling the outcome a “slap in the face” to victims and raising calls for statewide bail reform.
The case is now one of several sparking debate in Alabama over how judges handle bond decisions for violent-crime suspects, especially when public safety concerns conflict with statutory release standards.
