The judge.
If you cannot afford to pay the bail, 99% of the time you can get a bail bondsman. Sometimes, if the bail is not a lot, they won't pay it.
The first thing to do is contact a bail bondsman to find out the amount that is needed for bail. Once done, you must pay that amount to the bondsman and the bondsman will go to jail, pay the amount and that person will be released.
9,600 Dollars.
If you have bail set at $250k, that's what you need to pay in order to be bailed out.
No. When posting bail (bond) you pay a bondsman an amount negotiated usually 10% of the total bail amount. Example $50,000 bail, you pay the bondsman $5,000 then put up co-lateral worth $50,000 and the bondsman is the one to pay the State/Court the balance. If the person on bail forfeits (skips out) on the bail then the collateral becomes property of the bondsman. The original $5,000 is how the bondsman earns his living.
Only if they pay the bail or sign over the bond into their name.
Provided you have enough cash on your person when you are arrested, then yes, you may pay your own bail. Otherwise, a phone call will be required.
Yes. When you use the services of a bail bondsman you are, in effect, "renting" his services to pay your bond. Whether you are exonerated or not, it is a legitimate debt and you still need to pay the the bail bondsman for the use of his money.
this is called a deposit bail. A bail bond is when you have someone else pay your bail.
you would have to pay all three bails, you can usually get a bondsman and meet in the county where the person is held and pay all three bonds right there (so you wont have to run to the other 2 counties)
You will have to pay the bailbondsman's fee for the use of his services (and money). You DID use his services. The fact that your bail was revoked is not his fault.