Friday, September 30, 2011

San Jose Sharks vs. Bad Boys Bail Bonds

Have the San Jose Sharks violated fans’ freedom of speech?
Greg Wyshynski - September 27, 2011
From YAHOO! SPORTS


Watch any NHL game on television, and you may not remember what the fans seated in back of the home bench were wearing that night.

Here's the thing: The Sharks argue that "promotion" of a business on a T-shirt at the game is actually "advertising." So the team changed its dress code at HP Pavilion for the 2011-12 season: Prohibiting ticket holders from using their tickets to "generate publicity for the purposes of promoting and/or marketing other businesses."

Which means, going forward, the team intends to ban Bad Boys Bail Bonds T-shirts behind the players' bench.

Which means they now have a 260-pound problem on their hands named Jeffrey Stanley, who owns the company.

"My constitutional attorney says we have a legal right to wear the shirts at the game," Stanley told us on Monday.

Bad Boys Bail Bonds was founded in 1998 by Stanley, and now has seven offices in California. He's been a Sharks season-ticket holder for around a decade, and currently has two seats behind the home bench and two seats behind the visitors' bench — a seating request from his daughters, who wanted to be on the glass. They've worn the bail bonds shirts to the game for years.

Last season, Stanley decided to further his relationship with the Sharks by buying ad space behind the benches and sponsoring the penalty box, which seems like a rather appropriate venue for a bail bonds company.  |  Read More

Friday, September 16, 2011

Mother used house she doesn't own as bond collateral for fugitive son


The mother of fugitive cop David Britto used her home as collateral to get her son out of jail. Now it seems there is a problem: She didn't own the house.

The mix-up appears to be yet another misstep in the dramatic saga of the Boynton Beach police officer who bolted for Brazil late last month rather than stand trial on charges of trafficking methamphetamines.
 
 
 

Friday, September 9, 2011

Local Bondsmen Seek Change in Bail Law

Local bondsmen seek change in bail law
by The Associated Press

MCT REGIONAL NEWS
By Cassie Shaner

The Dominion Post, Morgantown, W.Va.
McClatchy-Tribune Information Services

Sept. 05--Bail bonding is regulated at the county level in West Virginia, but two local bondsmen want to see statewide rules implemented.

Bill Garvin, owner of Bill's Bail Bonds, hopes a bill establishing statewide regulations will be introduced during the 2012 legislative session.

He said bail bonds are regulated by justice departments in some states and insurance commissions in others. Either way, he said it's better than allowing counties to establish their own rules.  |   Read More

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Bondsman Prevents Arson

August 30, 2011 by Collateral Staff
Posted in: Bail Buzz
COLUMBUS, OH — A bondsman was watching a house in Columbus when he saw two men lighting an object on fire and throwing it at a home.

Concerned that the two men were trying to start a house fire, the bondsman got out of his car and chased the suspects.

He also called police to report the incident. The suspects got away, but police say that no damage was done to the home, likely as a result of the bondsman’s intervention. |  Read More