Thursday, January 20, 2011

Stop 'Catch and Release.'

For the past 15 years I have worked in Alachua County as a bail agent, and I have posted thousands of bail bonds for defendants. Using Court Services' own formula, that translates to tens of millions of dollars in savings of incarceration costs for the taxpayer.

I have never received any taxpayer money from Alachua County. However, I have paid county bond forfeitures, totaling $29,000, for four defendants I could never locate.

That's right, four of my bond clients in 15 years could not be found! I would challenge any pretrial release program to match that record.

The bottom line is this: bail bonding works. The reason is accountability — we get people to show up (or we pay big money), and unlike pretrial release programs, we will locate, arrest and return bond skips to jail, and we do this far better than any tax-based program around.

The courts, sheriff, state attorney and county commissioners can make all the arguments in the world for these public option programs, but the bottom line is, we taxpayers pay dearly for them!

It amazes me that as county and state budgets are strained to the point of busting, we sit here fighting over legislation that pits government's expenditures in the millions vs. private tax-free alternative-bail, which has worked very well in this country since its inception.

Pretrial programs are being advertised as a cheap solution to expensive incarceration, and the claim that only low-risk offenders are put in them is simply not the truth.

Pretrial release takes taxpayer money and uses it to fund the release of criminals back on the streets with absolutely no guarantee that they will ever come back to court.

These pretrial programs are funded by the same general fund that directly competes for money that could be used for police, fire, teachers, etc.

Pretrial programs have become a way for the court to rationalize releasing huge numbers of people from custody.

Pretrial has this nice PR platform saying that they can supervise individuals for a quarter the cost, but in truth, we taxpayer are spending millions for them to “supervise” just a few thousand people, and of those, a huge percentage will fail to return for court, or will violate some pretrial program regulation and be returned to jail.

Alachua county has thousands of warrants on people wanted for not coming to court (14,000 active warrants at last count, and climbing every day). The vast majority of theses individuals were released on their own recognizance by judges, or were recoged into one of these “supervised” programs.

It was no surprise to me that the only county in this part of Florida to see an increase in crime was Alachua County. What is surprising is that neither the sheriff nor the state attorney, nor do many of our county's judges, seem to have any problem with our judicial system's “catch and release” philosophy.

Sean R. Thomas lives in Gainesville.

http://www.gainesville.com/article/20100429/OPINION03/100429488?p=all&tc=pgall

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Cosigning on a bail bond-what are the risks?


What are your obligations and risks when you cosign on a bail bond? Co-signing on a bail bond is not like writing a letter of recommendation for an individual--it carries a real financial risk to the signer. You are guaranteeing an accused defendant’s appearance in court, for each and every court date that the person is required to make, until the charges against that defendant are terminated.


Cosigning usually involves the signing of a promissory note or an indemnity agreement, each of which financially obligates you up to the full amount of the bail bond you are guaranteeing. Many times these instruments (the promissory note or indemnity agreement) are executed in conjunction with your pledging of tangible property (i.e. cash, a real estate mortgage, a lien on an automobile, an assignment on a bank account, or even the pledging of household property, like electronics and jewelry).


The most common question a cosigner asks is this: how long am I financially responsible if I cosign on a bond?


* Until the bond client is sentenced on his or her cases. This includes sentences of probation, fines, jail or prison time.


* When the charges are dropped.


* When sentences are deferred. This includes pre-trial intervention or deferred prosecution.


* When the bondsman returns the defendant to jail (or when the defendant gets arrested on new charges) and the bondsman revokes the bond (this procedure is also called “off bonding”).


* When the judge revokes the bond, and returns the defendant to custody, due to a violation of a bond condition. This is not the same as forfeiting the bail bond-the co-signer will not be out any money in this case.


* 36 months after a bail bond is executed. After this amount of time has passed, all bail bonds are automatically cancelled by state statute.


Before signing to guarantee a bail bond, make sure you really know the person you are signing for, and be sure that the person is trustworthy. If things “go south” and your instincts tell you that the person may become a flight risk, contact the bail bondsman immediately. The bondsman can then try to find the individual and have him or her returned to jail. In this instance, only when the flight risk is behind bars does your financial obligation end.


If you have any questions about the risks of cosigning on a bail bond, feel free to call me at 352/376-6645.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Cash bonds vs bail bonds




People often ask “Why should I pay a bail bondsman a 10% fee for a bond if I have the money to put up for a cash bond?” That’s a good question. In the old days, when a person deposited the bond amount in cash, all of the money was returned to the depositor when the case was over.

A few years ago, however, the Florida legislature changed the laws so that the judge could order fines and court costs taken from the cash deposit. With government entities so cash-strapped now, often a very large percentage of the deposited money is being taken out of the cash bond amount. Sometimes they will take all of it.

But when a bail agent writes the bond, the 10 per cent bail bond fee is all a person is ever going to pay (Unless there is a breach of the bond due to the defendant’s nonappearance in court. But that’s another blog topic for another day). Most bail agencies will notify all indemnitors of court dates for defendants, and having the co-signer aware of all of the court dates makes it more likely that the defendant will make all of his (or her) court apprearances.

Before you becomes an indemnitor on a bail bond, you should know what your responsibilities include. In Florida, if a person released on a bail bond fails to show in court, the bail agent has 60 days to return the defendant to custody. If the person bonded out cannot be returned to jail in that period, the bondsman is legally bound to pay the full amount of the bond to the clerk of the court. This is called a bond estreature, or bond forfeiture (at this point, the cosigner becomes liable to the bail bondsman for the amount forfeited, usually the full amount of the bond). The agent then has 10 additional months to return the defendant to custody and receive almost all of the forfeited money back, and has an additional year after that to receive 50% of it back.

But if a person puts up a cash bond with the court, the laws covering the returning of cash bonds to a depositor are vague at best. Even if the defendant is only gone for a few days, the depositor risks loosing all of the money he put up with the court. Note the clerk of the court may not be obligated to notify the depositor of court dates. If a bondsman handles the release from jail, however, the laws are clearly spelled out by state statute and the indemnitor is protected, only being liable for the cost, if any, of bringing the bond skip back to custody after a breach of a bond.

In addition, if the cosigner on a bail bond feels like the person they signed for, or put up tangible collateral for, has become a risk to take off and is likely not go to court, the bail bondsman has the power to revoke that person’s bond and return them to custody. At that point, when the defendant is returned to jail, the co-signer’s liability goes away. A cash depositor has no such power to return a person to jail. And should the defendant miss court, the Florida bail agent has full arrest powers in almost every state, and can apprehend the absconder and return him to custody. The cash depositor, of course, has no such arrest powers, and as stated above, it may not make any difference once the defendant has missed his court date, as the money may be lost from day one.

If you have any more questions, call me at 352/376-6645 and I’ll be happy to answer any questions you might have about cash bonds and bail bonds.