If the individual who has been out on bail has his bail revoked, he must turn himself in or a warrant (probably a bench warrant) will follow his failure to do so. Revocation of bail, for whatever reason, means the individual is no longer trusted or allowed to be "out on bail" and must submit to confinement. A failure to turn himself in will only add to the difficulties this individual already faces, and he'll be taking his chances by not reporting to the lockup. Bail might be renegotiated, but if the authority that granted bail revokes it, it's time to lock up or face increased consequences. Good luck.
Revoked by who? The court or the bail bondsman? If the court revoked your bond - there HAD to be some reason and you go to jail - period. If the bondsman withdrew your bond - you must immediately get someone else to post your bond, or you will have to go to jail to await your trial. Either way, you are looking at going behind bars.
The defendant is remanded to jail to await trial.
In Georgia if a bond is revoked you lose that money and the offender will be taken back to jail until the court date. If the judge happens to decide that bail can be posted again on their behalf the bond amount will more than likely increase.
If you are revoked in one state you are revoked in ALL states.
it will be revoked
A bail bond can be revoked by the bondsperson, for a violation of the terms of bail IE: possession of drugs, firearms or lying on your application. It can also be revoked by a court. Hope this helps. - SoCal Recovery Agent
Revocation, reduction or extension of the bond is generally done by the court, and the decision is generally up to the discretion of the judge, no matter how much the attorneys argue for or against. The times will depend on the scheduling of the court dockets, whether your bond setting case will be heard the next day or next month.Another View: If your bond was revoked it signifies that it must have been revoked by the court. Under such a scenario, unless the original judge chooses to reverse themself and re-offer you bond you will, in all likelihood, NOT be offered bond again.
If the conditions of bond are violated then the bond can be raised or revoked resulting in incarceration.
your mom happens.
No. A sentence of probation means that you have already been tried and found guilty of an offense. If you violate your sentence (probation) you do not get a second bite at the apple with all the constitutional guarantees.
Yes. Committing a second crime while out on bond for another one is prima facie evidence that you are a bad risk for beig free on bond.
Bond revoke refers to the termination of a defendant's bail bond, typically due to a violation of the conditions set by the court. When a bond is revoked, the defendant is often taken back into custody until their next court appearance.
If YOU put up the bond amount, you will have it refunded by the court. If you paid to have a bailbondsman put up the bond, they will still charge you for the use of their services.