It is a hearing before a judge or magistrate at which your eligibility for release on bond is considered, and if granted the amount is set.
What is a bond hearing. Can you receive bond if you are incarserated for a mtr? What is a bond hearing. Can you receive bond if you are incarserated for a mtr?
A judge in Florida set George Zimmerman's bond at $150,000.
At the request of the prosecutor and the decision of a judge.
No. Not at the police station anyway. Theft Over $300 is a felony in Illinois. You have to go to the county jail and go before a judge who will set bond.
50,000
Something is not right with this question. If the judge authorized your release and set the bond amount - if you are able to post that amount - then the arresting officer has NO authority to continue to hold you --UNLESS-- it was discovered since the bond hearing that you are wanted for another offense which was unknown by the judge at the bond hearing, and for which you have yet to be arraigned.
An inmate can be held without bond until they are sentenced then in fact they will began their sentence. An inmate can however go to a bond hearing where a judge may or may not set a bond or bail. If the judge feels the person is not ready to be let back in society due to their crime they will deny bond. If the judge feels the indivual is not a threat to the community or a victim they will set a bail. Usually the bail will be high if the crime is serious.
Whether a bond is set or withheld is determined by the judge. Unless there are additional circumstances, I would expect a judge to allow a bail, at the very least; however, the judge is certainly capable of withholding. Bail amounts are determined by local jurisdictions, so the Answers' Contributors are not capable of providing a numerical amount.
You draft a Motion for Bond and Motion for an Emergency Hearing. You file it with the appropriate clerk of court and serve it on the appropriate parties. Then you contact the Judge's staff and request that it be set down for a hearing.
This is not an easily answered question. It entirely depends on the specific State that the bond was issued in, there is no universal standard for bonding and issuance in the US.
A schedule of bonds for various offenses is established by your state court system. Depending upon the seriousness of the crime and the your individual circumstances the judge may set this bond somewhere within that range, or he may not offer you bond at all, at his discretion.