You or the person who cosigned on your behalf will be responsible for paying the bond cancellation. You may also be responsible for paying any additional fees for canceling the bond. Make sure to read the conditions of your contract…
You cannot get your money back if a bond is revoked. However, if you have a good reason for why you didn’t show up for court or why you broke a condition listed in your contract, your judge may decide…
Yes, your bond can be revoked if you break the conditions listed in your contract. The most common reason a bond is revoked is for failing to appear at your scheduled court appearance. In most cases, a revoked bond means…
Whatever their hourly rate is, usually 150-300 an hour. It depends on how many hours the lawyer takes to do the paperwork, anywhere maybe from 2-6.
You continue to stay on bond until your case is complete, in most cases you are still required to check-in.
As long as the judge and district attorney draw the case out. A simple misdemeanor such as a traffic violation or domestic violence case could technically be continued for months to years. Let's say a murder case is happening and…
Not on the indictment case itself… not at the federal level.
It means you have to pay $100,000 straight to the jail to get out and cannot use a bondsman.
Bail is the monetary (money) part and the bond is the signing of the documents. Bail is the dollar amount, the bond is the contractual agreement. Hence, you have the phrase, "bail bond".
Never from a bondsman, but if it's a cash-only bond, you do get your money back from the court minus small court fees. Court fees on a bond refund are usually $60-$300 depending.