Archive for the ‘Bail Bond Laws’ Category

Molestation suspect on the run busted by bounty hunters

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2011

SAN DIEGO (CBS8) – An accused child molester is back behind bars after an alleged attempt to flee the country was thwarted by bounty hunters.

According to court documents obtained by News8, 62-year-old Patrick Pawlicki, a businessman from Santa Ysabel, changed his appearance as part of his escape plan. Investigators say Pawlicki had lost about 50 pounds, and had dyed his gray hair, eyebrows and mustache brown, when he was tracked down in Jonesboro, Georgia.

A search warrant reveals Pawlicki was charged with 8 counts of felony child molestation against 3 different children under the age of 14, but failed to appear in court on October 28, 2011. The court forfeited his bond.

His $1 million dollar bail had been posted by King Stahlman Bail Bonds, so the company hired a bounty hunter to track down Pawlicki. Acting on an anonymous tip, a bail enforcement agent arrested Pawlicki at a hotel in Jonesboro, Georgia. Investigators say he had paid for fake documents and safe passage from San Diego, with plans to go to Miami to board a cargo ship bound for China.

Pawlicki is now back in San Diego’s downtown jail, being held without bail.

Get Out of Jail Free: Taxpayer-Funded Grants Place Criminals on the Street Without Posting Bail

Tuesday, September 13th, 2011

For fiscal year 2012, the House Appropriations Committee recommended $357 million for the Edward Byrne Justice Assistance Grant (JAG) program (H.R. 2596). Byrne JAG grants, administered by the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA), can be used by state and local governments for 29 broad criminal justice purposes, including funding pretrial release services.[1]

The original mission of pretrial release services during the 1960s was to assist in the release of the relatively few indigents who truly could not afford to post bail. However, the mission of too many pretrial services agencies has expanded beyond helping indigents to defendants who would normally secure release through private bond agents. These individuals are released on their own recognizance without offering anything of value to ensure that they return on their court dates. This, in turn, will most assuredly result in more criminals failing to appear in court and becoming fugitives from justice.

Philadelphia : A Case Study of Public Policy Disaster

About 40 years ago, Philadelphia assumed exclusive control over the city’s bail system by abolishing private bail services and implementing its own pretrial release service. The typical Philadelphia defendant is required to deposit only 10 percent of his total bail assigned by the judge and sign a statement agreeing that he will owe the remaining 90 percent for failure to appear on the court date.[2] According to a recent investigation by The Philadelphia Inquirer:

For decades, Philadelphia court officials have presided over an ineffective bail system that allowed accused criminals to skip court virtually without consequence. Defendants routinely failed to appear in court and just as routinely, failed to pay the forfeited bail that was supposed to come due as a result.[3]

Further, Philadelphia court officials admitted that no one made any effort to collect the money owed the city by those who had skipped their court dates.[4]

What is the result of the city’s pretrial release services? Today, fugitive defendants owe the city more than $1 billion for failing to appear for their trials.[5] Further, there are more than 47,000 defendants wanted on bench warrants for failing to appear for trial.[6]

The Private Sector Does it Better (Again)

Private bail bond insurers provide important services to defendants and society at no cost to taxpayers. In exchange for a fee, private bond agents secure the release of defendants from jail while the accused await trail. Compared to other types of pretrial release, research indicates that private bond agents are more effective at ensuring defendants make their court appearances.[7] Individuals who obtain their release through private bond agents are 28 percent less likely to fail to appear before court than when freed on their own recognizance.[8] When defendants fail to appear before the courts and remain at large for more than a year, private bond agents seem to be more effective at catching these fugitives than public law enforcement. Those released through the assistance of private bond agents have a fugitive rate that is 53 percent lower than the fugitive rates of those released on their own recognizance.[9]

Lack of Accountability

While the performance of private bail bonding is well known and documented, we know far less than we should about pretrial release services funded by the Byrne JAG program. This is important because under the Byrne JAG performance monitoring system, pretrial release services do not have to report how they are performing. Performance monitoring through the systematic and recurrent documentation of important features of program performance is crucial to assessing whether programs are operating as intended.[10] When appropriately applied, performance monitoring can provide timely information on program performance to local program administrators and grant-making bureaus.

While most Byrne JAG recipients, including police departments, are required to report annual performance measures to the BJA, pretrial release agencies are not required to report any performance measures. To correct this deficiency, The Citizens Right to Know Act of 2011 (H.R. 1885), sponsored by Representative Ted Poe (R–TX), would require pretrial release agencies receiving federal taxpayer funding to report information regarding:

  • The number and names of defendants assigned to pretrial services;
  • The number and names of indigent defendants accepted into pretrial release programs;
  • The current charges and all past criminal convictions of defendants accepted into pretrial release programs;
  • The instances of defendants failing to appear at scheduled court appearances; and
  • All warrants issued or arrests made of defendants accepted into pretrial release programs.

While Congress should not be in the business of funding pretrial release services through the Byrne JAG program, The Citizens Right to Know Act takes appropriate steps for gaining systematic information on the performance of federally funded pretrial release services.

Taxpayers Should Not Pay for Pretrial Release

Government should not provide a public good when the private sector offers identical services with a similar—or as is often the case, greater—level of competence. In this case, Byrne JAG grants are being used to displace the services of private bond agents. Given the nation’s dire financial straits, an even better idea would be for Congress to eliminate funding for the Byrne JAG program altogether.

David B. Muhlhausen, Ph.D., is Research Fellow in Empirical Policy Analysis in the Center for Data Analysis at The Heritage Foundation.

Source

Bail bonds provide an option

Monday, June 20th, 2011

As the owner of a nationwide provider of bail bonds through a family-owned and operated property and casualty insurance company, I would like to respond to the June 14 editorial about the possibility of a return to commercialized bail in Wisconsin. In particular, I would like to clear up some of the misstatements about what bail does or does not do, as these corrections speak to the heart of the issue under consideration.

For starters, the editorial said commercialized bail “does little to ensure public safety.” The federal Bureau of Justice Statistics annual reports consistently show that defendants released on bail (financial release) return for their court appearances at a far higher rate than those released unsecured. What could be a better measure of public safety than that? And to be clear, the only purpose of either bail or the alternatives currently being used in Wisconsin is to ensure that defendants show up in court when they are supposed to.

Second, the editorial asked a good question related to the posting of a bail bond: “Where is the incentive to appear in court?”

When someone posts a bail bond, it is usually because he or she cannot afford the full amount required by the judge to secure release. A defendant buys a bail bond and has a huge incentive to appear for several reasons.

First, an agent often will secure collateral, which is held until the defendant appears. This collateral is returned only when the defendant fulfills the terms of the contract, i.e., returns to court.

Second, the agent often works with family and local community members to secure the bond, thereby engendering the defendant’s own support system and providing another very powerful incentive: family and peer pressure.

Finally, and this is true of all methods of pretrial release, if the defendant does not return to court, a warrant is issued for his or her arrest. However, only with bail does the defendant face the additional threat of being found and returned to court by a licensed professional bail agent. In fact, when compared to non-secured release, the defendant who posts bail has more – much more – incentive to appear in court. This is why “failure to appear” rates are much lower for bail than other means of release.

Perhaps the most inaccurate statement in the editorial is the notion that someone who posts bail “doesn’t have to follow any obligations set by the courts.” This is not true. The posting of bail only deals with release, not the conditions of the release.

If a judge orders someone into drug testing, rehabilitation or requires GPS monitoring, no bail agent in America can overrule that judge’s orders. In fact, as a surety, we work with our agents to help them assist the judiciary in this capacity, often offering these services through the private sector. This is especially helpful in smaller or in rural jurisdictions, where the courts themselves are unable to provide these services.

In closing, it is important to recognize that the editorial inferred that posting a bail bond would be exclusive to all other means of pretrial release. This, too, is not the case. The measure in question would simply offer defendants an option.

If a defendant wishes to use the current system of posting the entire amount, then he or she will still be able to do so. Unfortunately, most people can’t afford to shell out $10,000 or $20,000 and in many cases will be stuck behind bars for an extended period prior to being found guilty of any crime. This is not just a burden on a potentially innocent defendant but costs taxpayers millions of dollars in unnecessary jail costs as well.

The editorial was correct in noting that Wisconsin is one of only a handful of states that do not allow bail bondsmen. While Wisconsin has a long history of being at the forefront of social change, this is one area where it would be best to do what 46 other states currently do – give defendants an option they can afford.

Debbie Jallad is president of Accredited Surety and Casualty Co. Inc. of Orlando, Fla.

Source

Indiana Court Case Summary

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011

In Sneed v. State, Case No. 16A01-1010-CR-544 (Ind.App. April 25, 2011) the defendant was charged with two counts of selling methamphetamine.  The trial court set her bond at $25,000 cash only and denied her motion to reduce the amount or permit a surety bond.  The defendant appealed, and the Court held that in light of the serious charges and potential period of incarceration the trial court did not abuse its discretion as to the amount of the bond.  The Court held, however, that it was an abuse of discretion not to permit a surety bond as an alternative.  In a footnote, the Court described the surety alternative as: “A bail bondsman will, in return for a non-refundable fee paid by the defendant, put up his own money with the trial court in the form of a surety, pledging to cover the defendant’s bail. Because the bondsman is risking the entire amount if the defendant fails to appear for trial, the bondsman has a powerful incentive to return the defendant to court to face charges. On the other hand, when the defendant is able to deposit the entire amount of the cash bail without the help of a bondsman, it is not very likely anyone will pursue the defendant if he or she decides to skip town prior to trial.”

Who can you Trust in the Bail Bonds Industry?

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011

Only people who have never truly dealt with the bail bonds industry would ever tell you that you can’t trust anyone in it. That would be an extremely negative way to look at the industry, and it would still be very negative if you said that most people couldn’t be trusted. It’s simply not true, especially in these modern times where the bail bonds industry has improved dramatically over the last few decades. It is no longer an industry that is littered with untrustworthy people; it is now littered with fantastic bail bond agencies who offer you an excellent level of service and high quality customer care.

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That being said, there are still some people out there who want to ruin it for everyone else. These people are only interested in making a quick buck, and to call them bail bondsmen would be a huge compliment. Most of them are little more than scammers. They will try to entice you with promises of incredibly low prices and turnaround times that seem too good to be true. Well unfortunately they are. These people will just take your money and run with it instead of actually helping you bail someone out of jail.

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To avoid these people, you just need to use your instincts. Only talk to bail bond agencies that have a good reputation and who will talk to you about your situation. Ask them for more information about their company, and if you aren’t happy with the answers, tell them that you’d like to look elsewhere. You don’t have to start the process straight away; you can talk to the bail bond agency and try to figure out whether they are a team of people that you would like to deal with.