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It means there is another case with far more nail or a hold. A judge orders one dollar bail so a person receives credit for time in jail on that case.
Setting $1 bail means that he has another pending case that is keeping him in jail. Until that other case is resolved, paying $1 will NOT get him out of jail. That $1 bail is ensuring that corrections recognizes he is incarcerated so that he is earning time served on BOTH cases.
Some examples of typical bail amounts for common crimes are: Petty theft: $50 to $1,000. DUI: $500 to $10,000. Assault: $1,000 to $50,000. Murder: $1 million or more.
Use the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) inmate locator to find out when a prisoner is or was expected to be released. To learn more details about an inmate, find out how to submit a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to BOP.
Post-conviction bail is usually not available after convictions of serious or violent crimes, but some jurisdictions allow post-conviction bail when a defendant's sentence is shorter than the amount of time that it would likely take to resolve the appeal.
Local jails (and other regional facilities) can and do release inmates at all hours of the day or night.
Best-case scenario: Release within 30 minutes to 2 hours after posting bail during regular business hours. More typical scenario: Release within 4-8 hours, especially during off-peak hours or weekends. Worst-case scenario: Release could be delayed for 24 hours or more in complex cases or due to logistical hurdles.
For more information on bail, contact the Las Vegas Detention Center at their bail hotline, 702-229-6460. Male inmates will be released at the corner of 1st Street and Lewis Avenue in downtown Las Vegas. Female inmates are also released at the corner of 1st Street and Lewis Avenue, but only during daylight hours.
In 1966, Congress enacted the Bail Reform Act, which expanded the bail rights of federal criminal defendants by giving non-capital defendants a statutory right to be released pending trial, on their personal recognizance or on personal bond, unless a judicial officer determined that such incentives would not adequately ...
Bail bond agents can carry firearms (like regular citizens) and make arrests in California. However, they do not have the same power as police officers to investigate crimes, enforce traffic laws, or cordon off specific areas. The authority of bail bond agents is more circumstance-dependent.