Abstract
The use of AI algorithms in criminal trials has been the subject of very lively ethical and legal debates recently. While there
are concerns over the lack of accuracy and the harmful biases that certain algorithms display, new algorithms seem more
promising and might lead to more accurate legal decisions. Algorithms seem especially relevant for bail decisions, because
such decisions involve statistical data to which human reasoners struggle to give adequate weight. While getting the right
legal outcome is a strong desideratum of criminal trials, advocates of the relational theory of procedural justice give us good
reason to think that fairness and perceived fairness of legal procedures have a value that is independent from the outcome.
According to this literature, one key aspect of fairness is trustworthiness. In this paper, I argue that using certain algorithms
to assist bail decisions could increase three diferent aspects of judges’ trustworthiness: (1) actual trustworthiness, (2) rich
trustworthiness, and (3) perceived trustworthiness.