In the US, the arraigning judge decides typically whether bail will be assessed, and how much. The judge at the preliminary hearing may modify this, or any other judge to whom a motion is submitted.
ANYTHING is possible. In actuality a judge can revoke your bond at ANY time - but unless new evidence has suddenly been developed against you that makes you a bigger flight risk - it is likely you will remain free until your trial.
no
Assuming there is a finding of probable cause at the preliminary hearing, the next step in the process is discovery, then motions, then plea or trial. For a detailed discussion of the felony process, see the related link below.
That is entirely up to the judge, there is no way to know what they might do or say. .
A "summons" comes from the court. In a case that they will drop the case, but the judge could charge you a fine.
A Writ of Habeas Corpus.
to a lower court"Remand" can have two meanings.An Appelate Court can remand a case back to a lower court for correction or further action,-OR-A trial judge can remand a defendant to jail if, after a preliminary hearing, they find there is reason to hold the accused for trial.
Depending on the case, the judge may ask you why you failed to show. He may be lenient depending on your answer and sincerity. Other times, a judge will add more charges on and require you to stay in jail until the next hearing.
Yes.
If your are detained and questioned by the police as a suspect in a crime, you must be charged with a crime or released. If you are charged, you are Mirandized and arraigned. You wait in jail for a bail hearing. When you get your hearing, the judge will hear the charges against you brought by the ADA and you will have a court-appointed defense attorney; the judge will assign the amount of bail and the method in which it may be paid: cash or bond. I'm not an attorney and this is not in any way to substitute for actual legal advice.
When a person commits perjury in any court, including family court, the DA will being charges. In some cases, the judge will bring the charges against the person and sentence the person to jail.