To bail is to discard water to keep a boat from sinking. Similarly, to bail out someone or a business is generally to keep them from financial ruin. One can partially bail out someone, as to assist them from financial ruin.
300 billion dollars
yes
90000
According to CNNMONEY.com there are at least 54 publicly traded companies that did not take a "bail out". Two examples of these companies are Hudson City Bank Corp (HCBK), and People's United Financial (PBCT). Fidelity and Goldman Sachs are two of the finance companies that did not take bail out money. However, companies and banks who did have returned the bail out money as of now. Goldman Sachs took $10 billion in TARP funds. And there are many financial institutions out there that have still not paid back the TARP money.
Out of business.
Yes, they can share ownership, just so long as he himself does not act as a bail agent. Bail agencies need a deep pockets investor. They invest their money in the business and make a profit from the percentage that the agency charges to write bonds for defendants.
bail bonds
In terms of bail bonds, a surety is a third party that pledges or promises money or property as bail (assurance to the court), for the court ordered appearance of an accused person.
no felony convictions MONEY OFFICEKNOWLEDGE OF BOND BAIL LAWS (CLASSES/SCHOOL) OR INTERNSHIPSOUTH CAROLINA requires 20 hrs of schooling no felonys 10k cash or property to open you own business. good or bad credit does not matter.
Bail bonds companies make money by charging a non-refundable fee, typically around 10 of the total bail amount, to post bail for individuals who cannot afford to pay the full bail themselves. This fee is their profit for taking on the financial risk of ensuring the defendant appears in court as required.
An American bail bond is the act of paying a jail a certain amount of money to release someone who has been arrested. The condition is that if any court dates are needed the bail bondsman will find the person who was arrested if they skip court. There is also a bail bonds company from Longview, Texas called American Bail Bonds (although this question specifically asks about American bail bond and not American Bail Bonds).
She is the bail bonds lady who lives and works in Colorado. She sometimes appears on random episodes of Dog The Bounty Hunter. I think she has the longest running bail bonds business or something.
Bail money can come from the the private funds of the individual who is charged, or his family. Also, there are businesses called "Bail Bondsmen" who will, for a fee, loan bail money to the defendant. Their business is to make a return on this investment by charging a fee or interest on the bail amount that is put at risk. (i.e.- for putting up a bail of $1,000. they may charge a $100. fee) If the defendant "skips" and fails to appear in court, the bail bondsman is then out the entire $1,100. Sometimes they can have large amounts of money at risk and this does not make bail bondsmen happy. They will sometimes hire people to locate and return the missing defendant so that they can recovere their money.
There are hundreds of bail bonds service in Los Angeles. Many are located in close proximity to the Los Angeles County Jail. The business pages of the book list bail bond services.
There are five dominant bail bonds companies in the desert city of Temecula, California. Those companies are Aladdin, Ablaze, Fausto's Bail Bonds, Harvey Bail Bonds, and About Time Bail Bonds.
Yes. If the bailee absconds - the bailbondsman loses the full amount of the bond - UNLESS aned UNTIL he captures the absconder and returns him to custody. That's why they employ bounty hunters.