What is a bond hearing. Can you receive bond if you are incarserated for a mtr?
What is a bond hearing. Can you receive bond if you are incarserated for a mtr?
It is a hearing before a judge or magistrate at which your eligibility for release on bond is considered, and if granted the amount is set.
Hearing
Hearing
umm i think
You draft a Motion for Bond and Motion for an Emergency Hearing. You file it with the appropriate clerk of court and serve it on the appropriate parties. Then you contact the Judge's staff and request that it be set down for a hearing.
In Session - 2009 George Zimmerman Bond Hearing was released on: USA: 29 June 2012
Bond Violation Hearing
It doesn't take that long to get a bond hearing depending on where you live. If you are in a busy area, it could be a couple weeks.
If you are charged in court with a felony offense, the judge will hold a bond hearing to see if you are elgible for release on bond. If you are, he will set a monetary amount for the bond (e.g.: $25,000) to ensure your appearance at the next hearing. Anyone with $25,000. (usually a bailbondsman) will put up that amount of money in return for a payment of (usually 10%) of that amount. In brief - THAT is how a felony bond works.
If the preliminary hearing is commensurate with your bond hearing, it is possible that you could either have bail set at that time, or released on Personal Rocognizance.
If I understand the question correctly - yes - they may use this record at a bond hearing.
Yes, bail may be set without a hearing. In many jurisdictions bail bond amounts and conditions of release are initially set by jailers according to a preset bond schedule authorized by the courts.
Something is not right with this question. If the judge authorized your release and set the bond amount - if you are able to post that amount - then the arresting officer has NO authority to continue to hold you --UNLESS-- it was discovered since the bond hearing that you are wanted for another offense which was unknown by the judge at the bond hearing, and for which you have yet to be arraigned.