No. Not if she has a "no bail" hold on her.
"A person can find out about immigration bail bonds from an immigration bail bond company,from a bail bond agent, from a courthouse or from a government office."
Both Chico Bail Bond and Florida Bail Bonds Company offer immigration bonds. Both places also have websites that you can check out online for more information on this type of bail bonds.
If a person has skipped the country on an immigration bond, it is unlikely that it can be returned. It can generally only be returned if the person returns.
If you bonded someone out of jail and THEY went missing it should not legally be any reflection on you. What immigration has to do with it, is unclear to me.
Bail bonds are used to secure the release of a person accused of a crime from jail before their trial, while immigration bonds are used to secure the release of a detained immigrant facing deportation proceedings. Bail bonds are handled by state laws and immigration bonds are handled by federal laws through the Department of Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
No. Customs and Immigration will not allow entrance of Canadians with a Criminal Record. Therefore, a Canadian (released on bail) is subject to the same statute pertaining to the Criminal Code of Canada.
Because ICE is obviously trying to have your friend deported. His charges must be the type that affect immigration status.
Yes, depends on your state and their regulations. In California i bail out illegals all the time. Unless, the court places an INS hold. That's when the Immigration and Naturalization Service comes to deport them.
The fee is generally 10% of the bond, or more. Federal and immigration fees can hover around twice this amount.
The answer is YES. As a former criminal prosecutor and now a criminal and immigration defense lawyer, I can assure you that I have clients that are released from immigration detainers from all over the country all the time. If you want to bail someone out that is in jail on state or federal charges and has an immigration hold or detainer, you should work with a lawyer that knows both immigration and criminal defense. See my website criminalandimmigrationdefense.com. The jails will regularly tell you that you cannot pay the bail or bond on the criminal case but they are dead wrong. Certainly you can pay the criminal bail set by the judge and almost always you should when given the choice but they will fight you on it. The inmate will not get out right away but will taken to immigration custody where a deportation lawyer can request an immediate bond hearing and in most cases be granted one, depending on the severity of the crime and the person's past criminal record. Be wary of many lawyers both criminal and immigration lawyers that tell you that it cannot be done. They simply do not know both areas of the law. This is a very specialized field of law. My law firm has been doing it for 16 years. There are issues regarding whether the person will be given credit for the criminal case for the time that they are in immigration custody and that is why you should consult with a lawyer familiar with both criminal and immigration law before you do anything else. Good luck and keep fighting for his or her freedom! Michael Musa-Obregon, Esq. you can get out on bail for your criminal case but you stay in jail til ice picks you up. Then you have to post immigration bail. if that works then you get out but you can still be deported.
bail out
That is the correct spelling for the verb bail, here used as slang to mean leave (from bail out).