A court proceeding where the defendant is informed of the charges, and often given the opportunity to plead guilty, not guilty or no contest.
An arraignment is usually a criminal defendant's first appearance in court or before a judge on a criminal charge.
At arraignment, the charges against the defendant will be read or the defendant will be asked if he/she is aware of the charges against them, and they will be asked how they wish to plead. It is not a hearing to determine guilt or innocence.
Yes,you can trust me
No you can't do that
Six years.
No. Legally impossible. If you were never taken into custody and held, you have no need to be released on bond.
Not a good idea. The lawyer can negotiate it better than you can.
More would have to be known about the situation. HOWEVER - it SEEMS that, if the defendant was released on an arraignment bond and was subsequently indicted, officially charged, and the court process begun, then the arraignment bond would be subjugated to an appearance bond, but state laws may vary on this, and there may be more than just one charge against the defendant in play here. Not enough information is being disclosed. As far as expenses charged by a bailbondsman for supplying these services, you would have to speak with the bailbondsman to get a clearer picture.
Investigation > Arrest > Booking > Arraignment > Bond hearing (note: sometimes the arraignment and bond hearing are held simultaneously) > Preliminary hearing(s) > Jury Selection > Trial > Jury Deliberation > Verdict > Sentencing.
He's up for arraignment tomorrow.
(in the US) Oftentimes at the Arraignment Hearing. If not then, in a bond hearing shortly afterwards.first appearance. your welcome now get that 100!
At his arraignment, Frank gave a plea of not guilty
A f.t.a arraignment is another charge that stands for failure to appear in court
An order for arraignment is a court document that instructs a defendant to appear in court to be formally informed of the charges against them and to enter a plea (guilty or not guilty). It sets the date, time, and location for the arraignment to take place.