Yes! However, more than likely you will not be tested unless you are charged with some sort of CDS charge.
The court can order as a condition of bond for you to check in every so often while out on bond. During those check-ins you can be subject to random drug testing as another condition of bond. You would have been told this or it would have been stated as a bond condition on paper when you got out.
If you used a bail bond company, they will almost always require you to stay drug free. They can always revoke you bond if you are using and they find out. I all likelyhood you will have very little contact with them, and I've never heard of them drug testing anyone, but they can.
If you take some sort of guilty plea it is likely in some states that you will face a presentence investigation. During this investigation you might have to meet with some sort officer and take a drug test. If you fail, the court can revoke your bond or just give you a harsher sentence.
Your parole will be cancelled and you'll go back to prison.
He doesn't have a current drug case. He is free and not in jail or out on bail.
It's called a bail. As if someone where to ''bail'' you out.
yes, and you will go to 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.
Sort of, they allow you to be out of jail while waiting to be tried for a crime. They are a surety that you will appear in court. However, once convicted and sent to jail by a court, a bail bond will not then keep you out of jail. Also it is at the court's discretion weather or not to allow you bail and if a bond is required, to set the amount.
He was in jail but he post 50,000$ bail
No most are released on some type of Bail Bond.
a bail?
no, they do not.
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.