No you will not.
OWN RECOGNIZANCE, i.e. no cash bail
On your own recognizance pretty much means that you are released on bail on the promise to appear for your court dates. You may be released by a justice of the peace on your own recognizance during your bail hearing.
true
There is no firm answer for this question. The amount of bail for any particular charge will vary from court to court and often from case to case. The potential release scenario can vary from release on own recognizance to a no bond hold with a variety of bail bond types, amounts and conditions in between.
More than 40 percent of felony defendants released before trial paid a bail Many walk the streets on their own recognizance Release on recognizance (ROR) a pretrial release in which a defendant with ties to the community is not required to post bail but promises to appear at all subsequent proceedings. (Introduction to Criminal Justice 10th Edition) p.335, Larry J. Siegel
Manhattan Bail Project
"Personal Recognizance" means that you have a good enough background and sufficient "ties to the community" that the court will release you without your having to post a money bond.
From the information given in the question, I seriously doubt that any judge would consider you a good bail candidate or that any bailbondsman would want to risk his investment on you. In my experience, when it comes to bail release - one strike and you're out.
Personal recognizance.
The study that tested the effectiveness of the release-on-recognizance alternative was the Manhattan Bail Project, which took place in New York City. This project was one of the first to evaluate the impact of bail reform on pretrial release rates and court appearances.
Means you can't be released o.r. (own recognizance) or they won't trust you and bail probably req'd.
The alternative to bail is to remain in custody pending resolution of the case. Added: OR - you can try petitioning the court for ROR (release on recognizance) otherwise knowns as 'personal bond.'