if hes dumb enough to get thrown in jail i hope no one pays the bail bond!
If no one is able to help with the bail bond, there are a few potential options. You could look into hiring a bail bondsman who can pay the bond for a fee. Alternatively, you could try to negotiate with the court for a lower bail amount or explore the possibility of a property bond if you have assets that can be used as collateral. Finally, you can seek legal advice from an attorney who may have other strategies or suggestions.
this is called a deposit bail. A bail bond is when you have someone else pay your bail.
If you have already posted bail and need to move out of state before your trial, you should inform the court and your bail bondsman of your situation. In some cases, you may be able to designate someone else to handle the bail on your behalf, but you will need to seek approval from the court and follow the proper procedures. It's important to stay in communication with all relevant parties to ensure the bail process is handled correctly.
I believe that the terminology used in the question is mixed up. The bailbondsman IS the bonding person. If the defendant he has posted bail for absconds on him, the bond he posted is forfeited to the court, and he certainly CAN sue both the defendant AND anyone else who signed the bail contract, for the recovery of his lost bond.Another alternative is for him to send a "bail-agent" (bounty hunter) after the defendant. If he returns the absconding defendant to the court, that is the only way he can recover his money from the court, but he still may sue to recover his costs of hiring the bail agent out to recover the absconder..
If what you had with your husband was good before you caught him out (so to speak) then the answer lays in your own mind. Perhaps your acceptance of what has happened in the past and a review of how you were in reality effected might be in order. It seems that from your point of view the bond still exists or else you would not be asking this question. To put it bluntly if the bond you have is reliant on the fact that your husband has never lied to you or that your husband has fallen into a sexual experience that you were not a part of then the premise of the bond is pretty thin any way.
When a bailees bond is revoked, that means that the bondor or the court has deemed them to be too much of a repeat offender risk, or too much of flight risk. They must surrender themselves immediately to jail to await, in custody, court action on their case instead of being "free."
If the person posted a cash or property bond for the defendant, the person will lose their cash or property. If the person hired a bondsman for the defendant, the bondsman will be liable for the difference, and will send a bounty hunter after the defendant. They may or may not come back to the original person for the balance of the bond, depending on applicable state law and the circumstances.
The bond money is only to ensure that the accused shows up for court. As long as the accused attends all their court appearances, it makes no difference whether they are found guilty or not, the person putting up the bond will have it returned to them. If the services of a bail bondsman are used, the only cost will be the fee for using their services (usually somewhere around 10% of the bail amount). However - if the defendant fails to make a court appearance the bond money is forfeited to the court. Bail is a fee that is paid to the courts to ensure that a person charged with a crime will return to be tried. If the accused does not return for trial, the bail money is forfeited. If the person returns for trial, the bail money is returned. So, it is in the interest of the one paying bail to ensure that the accused returns. That is where bail bonding companies come in. For a fractional amount of the bail, they will pay your bail up front. If you return for trial, all is well (they get their money back and keep your fee). If you don't, they send a bounty hunter to find you and collect the entire amount of the bail (and turn you over to the authorities for skipping bail). But a guilty finding has no effect on the bail payer. Otherwise, bail bonding companies would all go out of business very quickly. The same is true when an individual pays bail. If you pay someone else's bail and they are later found guilty of the crime, that has no effect on the bail payer. If the person returned for trial, the bail money would have been returned to you. If you pay their bail and they skip, you lose the bail money and will have to find the person to get it from them. If they are ultimately found and tried and found guilty, they will be sentenced for their crime (jail, fine, etc.). But the person who posts bail is not affected by the verdict in the criminal case. Paying bail for an ultimately guilty person is not a crime.
I am in the same situation. My fiance was arrested, but I had posted bail. Then probation violated him, so now he is incarcerated yet my bail has not been released for the previous arrest. The time he has served does not account towards anything because technically he is out on bail. How do I go about getting this bail revoked so the clock can start ticking ?
No, the baby is not considered your husbands. (If you are sure that the baby was because of someone else, and not your husband.)
He is just known as your cousins husband to you and nothing else.
bail is when u have someone in jail.and u have someone else coming to get(bail) them out.all they are doing is paying money in order to get the person out of jail!!! Bail is money or other security posted as a guarantee that an accused person will appear in court.
Her husband who else would it be.