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"Bail" refers to the temporary release of a person awaiting trial, often involving a monetary guarantee, or it can mean to remove water from a boat. In contrast, "bale" typically refers to a large bundle of goods, such as hay or cotton, tightly bound and often wrapped in twine.
Definitions of Bail and Bale The verb bail also means to scoop water out of a boat or to run away from a difficult situation. The noun bale refers to a large bundle, usually one that has been tightly wrapped and bound. As a verb, bale means to press (something) together and wrap it into a tight bundle.
The Guardian/Observer Style Guide has adopted the spelling bale for both jumping from an airplane and for pouring water out of a boat: bail out a prisoner, a company or person in financial difficulty; but bale out a boat or from an aircraft.
(beɪl ) Word forms: plural, 3rd person singular present tense bales , baling , past tense, past participle baled. 1. countable noun usually plural A bale is a large quantity of something such as hay, cloth, or paper, tied together tightly.
Bail is the right to be released from custody before the case is concluded, or sentence is passed, assuming there is no risk of absconding or committing further offences while on bail or attempting to interfere with witnesses or otherwise pervert the course of justice.
If you use the base spelling "bail", then you should use "bailing" as the gerund form. If you prefer "bale", you'd use "baling". You should not write "bail" and "baling" together. There are other verbs spelled "bail" (get somebody out of jail) and "bale" (form into a bale or bundle).
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.
Moreover, under the Eighth Amendment of the United States Constitution, excessive bail is bail set at a figure higher than an amount reasonably calculated to fulfill or achieve its purpose.
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.
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.