Bail Money In Australia In King

Category:
State:
Multi-State
County:
King
Control #:
US-00006DR
Format:
Word; 
Rich Text
Instant download

Description

A bail bond is a bond provided by an insurance company through a bail bondsman acting as agent for the company, to allow an accused defendant to be released before trial. A bail bond is designed to ensure the appearance of the defendant in court at the scheduled time. Prior to the posting of a bail bond, the defendant or a co-signer must guarantee that they will pay the full amount of bail if the defendant does not appear in court. The bail bond company usually charges 10 percent of the amount of the bond and often requires the defendant to put up some collateral like a seconded of trust or mortgage on one's house.


When the case is concluded, the bail bond is "exonerated" and returned to the insurance company. If the defendant disappears and fails to appearing court (skips bail), the bond money will be forfeited unless the defendants found and returned. The bond may be forfeited, by order of the court, upon the partys failure to appear or to comply with the conditions of the bond. If the defendant is located and arrested by the bail agent the cosigner is responsible for all expenses the bail agent incurs while looking for the defendant.

Free preview
  • Preview Bail Bond Agreement
  • Preview Bail Bond Agreement
  • Preview Bail Bond Agreement

Form popularity

FAQ

The accused person must apply for bail. They can do this at any time from when they are charged with the crime until the case goes to court. If they do not get bail, they can apply again. They must show the court that there are new facts and circumstances since the first time they applied.

If you plead guilty, the Court may give you bail in some circumstances. If you plead guilty or are found guilty and will be sentenced to full time imprisonment, the Court must refuse bail unless there are exceptional circumstances.

If you plead guilty, the Court may give you bail in some circumstances. If you plead guilty or are found guilty and will be sentenced to full time imprisonment, the Court must refuse bail unless there are exceptional circumstances.

Usually you'll be granted bail unless the prosecutors can show there is an unacceptable risk of you committing further offences or failing to appear. In some cases, you may have to “show cause”—meaning you won't get bail unless you can show the court your imprisonment isn't justified.

Common bail conditions live at a particular address. comply with a curfew. be on home detention (with or without electronic monitoring) be supervised by a community corrections officer.

Trusted and secure by over 3 million people of the world’s leading companies

Bail Money In Australia In King