A judge can revoke bail until the case is disposed of by dismissal, conviction or being found not guilty.
This depends on how the bail was handled. If a Bondsperson decided to revoke (surrender) your bail, you can bail out via another Bondsperson. If a Judge denied bail only he or another Judge can reinstate it. You need to file a motion for change of bond conditions or motion for bond reduction.
Yes. He put his moneyup for you, didn't he? In simple terms you 'rented' his money for your cash bond, for which he is entitled to payment for the length of time he had it 'at risk.'
A bail bondsman can ask the court to revoke a bond, but the judge alone has the final say whether a bail bond may be revoked.
if you violate any of your conditions of probation that were set by the judge, it will be enough grounds for the judge to revoke your probation.
A judge decides first of all whether the accused can be released on bail, and secondly, what the amount of the bail should be. If the judge thinks that there is too much risk that the accused will seek to flee, or may commit additional crimes while out on bail, then the judge can deny bail.
They will set a bail amount for you and someone on the outside will have to pay the bail or get a bails bondsman and pay 10 percent of what the judge has set as your bail.
The judge
If a judge allows it.
No. The power to grant and revoke powers under a Power of Attorney rests with the individual. If there are special circumstances, the matter must be brought before a judge and the judge can revoke the POA.
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.
In the US, the arraigning judge decides typically whether bail will be assessed, and how much. The judge at the preliminary hearing may modify this, or any other judge to whom a motion is submitted.
At the request of the prosecutor and the decision of a judge.