Bondsman

A bondsman is a person who acts as security for someone else's bail. In order to do a good job as a bondsman, the bondsman needs to know a lot about the bail process and laws. Even though authorities only arrest presumably innocent people, it is legal keep them in jail from the time of arrest until the trial date. If authorities could not do this, most criminals would not bother appearing in court for trial. However, our nation does not like keeping innocent people in jail, so a judge usually sets bail. This means that the accused can await trial out of jail if he or she pays a set amount of money. The court will refund this money after the trial.

Though the amount should never be exorbitant, it should be significant enough to make a criminal reluctant to forfeit it. When accused people cannot afford to pay the bail, they contact a bondsman. A good bondsman does whatever he or she can do to get the accused out of jail. Friends or family members may contact the bondsman on behalf of the accused. If this third party hires the bondsman, then the third party is responsible to the bondsman if the accused does not appear for all court dates.

Hiring a bondsman is also easier than going through the bail process alone. A bondsman does all of the footwork, and fills out all the paperwork for the bail. The bondsman charges a premium that is usually ten percent of the amount of the bond. The bondsman does not refund this premium when the court exonerates the bail, even if the accused makes all of the court dates and gets an innocent verdict. The premium is the bondsman's price for his or her service. To get the services of a qualified bondsman, contact 1stClassBailBonds.com.

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