With the permission of the court and the bondsmen, and usually only for a verifiable family emergency.
Ask ur local sheriff dept admin front desk clerk and/or criminal court records front-desk - in person.
If you are out on bond for the DUI in Virginia, you will need to ask your bondsman if you can leave the state. Usually, the bond papers do not allow a person to leave the state.
Police department. Just give the name of the person and if you know where they went.
There is no state law governing this. That information would be contained in your "release on bond" papers. If you are bonded by a bailbondsman, I STRONGLY suggest that you do not leave the state or you will be chased down by a "skip tracer."
Unless the bond is posted they won't be released.
The bond release papers that you received should set forth any restrictions. If you are unsure, contact the court and ask.
Typically states will require you to post bond before leaving their state. In Wisconsin we usually will hold a person until they can pay the bond. The only time we will release an out of state person without bond is if they can prove that they have strong ties to the community such as working in the state or spend a lot of time due to family, etc. If this isn't the case, be prepared to sit it jail until payment is made. The reason for this is the relative difficulty of getting the money from the out of state person. Laws don't permit police from another state to receive the money for another.
Only if they pay the bail or sign over the bond into their name.
Each state is different with their bonds. Usually a person can get a bond immediately and be released in less than a hour.
It depends on state law. In Missouri, you can put it in the will.
It depends on what conditions are set by the judge when the bail is set. Often you can leave the state as long as you keep the authorities informed of your whereabouts, and, of course, if you fail to appear, you forfeit the bail -- even if you appear later.
Nothing, being out on bail means you have not been convicted. In the United States, you are innocent until proven guilty.Another View: WRONG! First of all: If you are out on bail, you are most likely under some kind of court ordered travel restrictions (i.e.: NOT to leave the jurisdiction of the court).Second of all: If your bail was posted by a bailbondsman and you leave the state, you will have more than the law to worry about when the bondsman's skip-tracer catches you and brings you back.
A person can find out the municipal bond rate in New York at the website MunicipalBonds and select the state. A person can also find out through the government bonds site for New York.