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by Dave Soulia, for FYIVT.com
For years, Vermont’s courts had a simple rule built into their standard Conditions of Release Order:
Condition 3 — “You must not be charged with or have probable cause found for a new offense while this case is open.”
That rule — effectively, don’t get rearrested while awaiting trial — was part of Form 344, used by the state judiciary since at least the 1990s. Then, in April 2025, the Judiciary rolled out a new form, 200-00344, and Condition 3 quietly vanished.

From Form 344 to 200-00344
The old form (Rev. 7/09 SML) always began with three commonsense directives:
- You must come to court when you are told to.
- You must give your attorney and the court clerk your address and phone number, and if it changes you must tell them immediately.
- You must not be charged with or have probable cause found for a new offense while this case is open.
But the 2025 update changed the numbering. Under the new Form 200-00344, Condition 3 now simply reads: “You must come to Court on [date].” The prohibition on being charged with a new offense is gone.
This raises an obvious question: why weren’t the first three conditions — appear in court, provide contact information, and avoid rearrest — written into statute as mandatory for every defendant? And why was the third condition, after decades of use, explicitly removed?

Why Optional? Why Removed?
Vermont law, specifically 13 V.S.A. § 7554, requires judges to impose the least restrictive conditions necessary to ensure a defendant’s appearance and protect the public. The law does not mandate any single condition. Condition 3 may have been seen as too broad — an automatic penalty that conflicted with the statute’s precision requirement.
Still, for many Vermonters, it defies common sense: what’s the purpose of pretrial release if the court doesn’t explicitly bar a defendant from reoffending while awaiting trial?
The Data: 2019–March 2025
The Vermont Judiciary supplied condition-of-release data covering 1995–2025, but earlier years appear incomplete, likely due to gaps in digitization. From 2019 onward, however, the data is robust, covering more than 36,500 criminal cases statewide through March 2025.
- Total cases with Condition 3: 730 out of 36,539 (~2.0%).
- First modern use in this dataset: 17 cases in 2019.
- Peak year: 2024, with 369 cases, more than the previous five years combined.
- Final use: 104 cases in the first three months of 2025.
- After April 2025: Condition 3 disappears completely with the new form.
In other words, Condition 3 was never applied broadly. Even in 2024, at its peak, it was imposed in just 4.6% of all criminal cases that year.


County Breakdown (2019–Mar 2025)
Where Condition 3 was applied most:
- Windham Unit — 305
- Bennington Unit — 132
- Rutland Unit — 98
- Windsor Unit — 86
- Caledonia Unit — 34
- Washington Unit — 16
- Chittenden Unit — 14
- Orange Unit — 12
- Addison Unit — 10
- Franklin Unit — 8
- Orleans Unit — 8
- Essex Unit — 4
- Grand Isle Unit — 2
- Lamoille Unit — 1
Windham, Bennington, Rutland, and Windsor together account for ~85% of all Condition 3 cases during this six-year period.

The 2024 Surge
For most of 2019–2023, Condition 3 appeared in only 20–90 cases per year. Then, in 2024, the number skyrocketed to 369 cases. Windham (110), Bennington (106), and Rutland (78) drove the surge.
By early 2025, another 104 cases carried the condition — before the April form revision eliminated it altogether.
Correlation With Crime Trends
The timing is striking. FYIVT previously reported in February 2025 that Vermont crime spiked following bail reform, with motor vehicle theft up 70.5% in 2021 and aggravated assaults, burglaries, and repeat offenses climbing thereafter.
That crime surge coincides almost perfectly with the sudden uptick in Condition 3’s use in 2024 — just before it was abolished. Judges in Windham, Bennington, and Rutland appear to have leaned harder on the no-rearrest clause precisely when repeat offending was most visible. And then the Judiciary removed it altogether.
The Bottom Line
Condition 3 — don’t get rearrested while awaiting trial — was part of Vermont’s bail paperwork for decades. From 2019 through March 2025, it was imposed in only about 2% of cases, with heavy concentration in a few southern counties. Its use spiked in 2024, then disappeared entirely in April 2025 when the new form took effect.
The result is a paradox: the simplest, most commonsense condition — don’t commit another crime while you’re awaiting trial — is no longer even listed as an option.
Why it was dropped remains unanswered. But the numbers are clear: Vermont courts leaned on Condition 3 the hardest in the very year before it was eliminated, and now the one safeguard Vermonters assumed was non-negotiable is gone.
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Categories: Commentary, Public Safety









It would have been interesting if the author had contacted any of the judges for their comments/reasons. Subject of their next story?
TOUGH LOVE Youth gangs are rampant in the US, not just VT, They must think crime is a game. Send teen gang members to a prison with harden prisoners for an education. “AN ATTITUDE ADJUSTMENT”. Might make them rethink, facing reality. One on one with a prisoner showing what it’s like.. It has worked before. Cheap rehab. Court would sentence them to that “punishment–. “Tough Love” sentencing and not for just one day, get interviewed by a few prisoners and show prison life.. See prison conditions, the food, cells, searches, conditions, being told what to do hand cuffs, clothing, group showers, naked, bath facilities stay in a cell for a day, alone, no phone, TV, possible rape, etc..The prisoners might benefit in doing good. Let them be tried in an adult Court, for an adult crime. Fast trial. The situation is now overwhelming, no safe streets or homes. Costly prisons would be for hardened prisoners. Too costly in Vermont to build an “Alligator Alcatraz” for youths. The alternative for these youths if they don’t like the work details, they cab leave under Court supervision.
The young gang members would have “their rights” of “do process”. Might need legislature approval if they have the back bone to implement. In a prison, they would be under supervision at all times.
Gang members mainly impress other members with violence to be accepted, and tattoos and lack education or a job. Seen some TV programs show prison life, not fun. There’s tougher alternatives punishment fro serous crimes. There are solutions and this is one of them, not considered. It should be if you commit a crime in VT, you’ll go to prison. Vermont could set n example for other states. For the youth, this is a one time opportunity Socialist / Liberals should be glad criminals are off the streets and given a one time chance, no baby sitting. No more revolving Courtroom doors, the youth walks in it and the door spins and the kid is back on the street to repeat.
FOR REHAB: bring back the CCC program (my father was in the CCC’s in the early 30’s and depression time, no jobs).This will provide jobs for these kids and in turn they help the state and communities in times of disasters or worthwhile projects (The Long Trail etc). They would get housing, meals, clothing, comrade, and a sense of purpose. The state would have to support the CCC atmosphere, but would realize a huge return in fixing the state and it’s people. A complete mental thinking overhaul needs doing to solve the crime problem. The Depression solutions under FDR solved mega problems, many projects were built. A similar solution can be obtainable without excessive undertaking. History books can be a guide. Might also make a Legislator and Governor happy, they accomplished something positive and take credit.
My $0.02, thinking out of the box, connecting with history. Hope others take up on this.
Agree Tom, a CCC type program should work. My father was in the CCC’s to make money since his father was a deadbeat and his mom had several young children at home. He wasn’t a disciplinary problem since he was on HS Football and Basketball teams, but it did instill further discipline that permitted him to rise more quickly through the ranks of the Army after Pearl Harbor and learned skills he used his entire life he used until he retired at age 75. Didn’t realize until I was cleaning out his paperwork at his passing that the CCC’s not only sent 75% of their earnings home to a designated adult, but also required education with useful classes. His were Construction Mathematics and English class in Report Writing. Programed served several purposes for the infrastructure and families.
Facts are a bit stubborn.
When people see truth they can make decisions, informed, Vermont has a serious issue with bringing out the truth. Thank you VDC for shedding light.
If we didn’t know any better, we might be tempted to think that our lawmakers, and those responsible for removing this most common sense condition of all conditions, are intentionally trying to destroy the basic moral law and order foundations of our society.