Contact the Bail Bond Company: Inform the bail bond company of your intention to remove your name from the bond. They will provide you with the necessary steps and paperwork required for the process. Notify the Court: In some cases, you may need to file a motion with the court to remove your name from the bail bond.
Authority of Bail Bond Agents 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.
Before giving us a call, make sure you have the following information handy: The full name of the person who was arrested. Where is the person being held for custody (you should include the name of jail, city, and county) The person's booking number.
No - if you signed the bond it doesn't matter whether you have a job or not - or whether the bondsman asked you if you did. You are liable as surety on the bond - having a job or not has nothing to do with your liability. Sorry.
Yes! In California, bonds can be posted twenty-four hours a day, seven days per week. But whether you can bail someone out of jail at any time depends on their situation. When someone is arrested, they have a first appearance soon after.
Authorizing Act: Section 1802.5 of the California Insurance Code reads, in part: A bail permittee is a person permitted to solicit, negotiate, issue and deliver bail bonds. Qualifications: Minimum Age: 18 years.
Setting bail in California requires judges to release defendants before trial on affordable bail or with nonfinancial conditions of release unless the judge concludes, based on clear and convincing evidence, that these alternatives will not reasonably protect the public and the victim, or reasonably assure the ...
I presume that the inmate has several charges pending before a criminal court---perhaps even from different incidents on different days, and the fact that the bond is deemed to be inclusive means that it covers all of the separate charges that have been filed against the inmate as of the date of the pronouncement of ...
Unlike bonds in state courts, federal bonds are not automatically set. Instead, the defendant appears before a federal magistrate judge for a specific bail determination. States use a bail schedule. Federal courts do not use a bail schedule.