You will go to the county jail or court house jail room till your case is heard and if found guilty you'll be sent to either county, city or state jail ... If sentence was imposed and is more then a year then you be sent to a prison either within the state or out of the state ...
You kiss your money goodbye. You may be able to recover all or a portion of it if you or the bail bondsman is able to locate the fugitive and return them to jail.
Yes but it hard to arrange fron jail
No. Bail does not allow a person to be free from jail or a death sentence. A person arrested is still considered innocent until a guilty verdict is issued. However, he is kept in jail to insure he does not run away. Under some conditions, a prisoner is released if there is a way to insure he will show up for the trial. One way is with bail. A person is released after giving the court a substantial some of money to hold until he returns for trial. At that time, the bail money is returned. If he does not appear for trial, he forfeits the bail money and an arrest warrant is issued for his recapture
When a person is being held in a county jail on warrant from another county, then a bail bond cannot be posted until that person has been transported to the county which issued the warrant.
Bail is imposed to guarantee the person will show up to the next and all subsequent court dates. However, many criminals "jump bail" (become "bail jumpers") and then, Bounty Hunters must search for them to re-arrest the criminal. At that point, a judge might revoke the previous bail OR impose an even higher bail amount. Bail imposition also has to do with the over-crowding of our jail systems. Without bail, charged persons stay in jail (not prison) until they are found guilty, when they are then moved to a prison to spend their sentences. Most charged persons without bail can sit in county jail for 1 to 2 years before their case comes to trial. So bail is designed to help reduce jail populations while also helping to give the person freedom from jail until proven guilty.
When you are out on bail it is similar to probation in that the court system is allowing you out under certain conditions. These conditions almost always include the non-use of drugs or alcohol. They can require you to submit to random testing and you have to comply or your bail will be revoked and you will sit in jail.
If a person is granted bail he can come up with it at any time. Of course he will remain in jail until then, or until a judge can release him on his own recognizance.
What the judge will do if a person jumps bail on a $20,000 bond is likely issue a warrant for the person's arrest. The person will become a wanted fugitive and will be sent immediately to jail when caught. Their bail may also be revoked.
The defendant is temporarily released from prison/jail.
The defendant is temporarily released from prison/jail.
Interim bail is bail that has been posted after a release from jail. This bail is posted as a continuance until trial.
You will set in jail until one your court date or two you bail out of jail. bail will depend on what you are being held for.