Showing posts with label Better Bail Bonds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Better Bail Bonds. Show all posts

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Better Bail Bonds Wins 2011 Best of Mesa Award

November 10, 2011 --24/7 Get Bail/Better Bail Bonds, with offices in Mesa and Phoenix, AZ, has been selected for the 2011 Best of Mesa Award in the Bail Bond Services category by the U.S. Commerce Association (USCA).

The USCA "Best of Local Business" Award Program recognizes outstanding local businesses throughout the country.

Each year, the USCA identifies companies that they believe have achieved exceptional marketing success in their local community and business category.

These are local companies that enhance the positive image of small business through service to their customers and community. | News Release

Monday, October 31, 2011

Recommended Website Would Deter Bond Violators

FDL Reporter Online
Fond du Lac, Wisconsin

Written by Coleen Kottke

October 25, 2011

JUNEAU, WI -- Dodge County Sheriff Todd Nehls is interested in revamping the Dodge County Sheriff's Office website so that those on bond can have their bail bond conditions posted online.

According to Nehls, the link on the website would help inform the public about bond conditions and would give the public a chance to report anyone who is violating bond conditions.

Nehls notes that his office regularly receives public complaints about defendants violating bond conditions, but few people file reports with the police. He believes that an online link would make it easier to ensure that defendants, who are required to abstain from alcohol, driving, or have other bond conditions, actually do conform to those conditions or face consequences.  |  READ MORE

Thursday, October 20, 2011

NJ Governor Has Qualms About Bail Law


North Carolina Gov. Beverly Perdue will let an omnibus bill become law without her signature despite concerns about a provision that changes how bail bond agents can seek to get their money back through state courts, her office said Friday.

The Republican-led Legislature approved largely on party lines the omnibus bill that cleaned up other measures that became law this year. But it also contained a section that would make it easier for the state's bail bondsmen to recover money if a defendant skips court.

| READ MORE

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

First Meeting for New County Bail Bond Board





Titus County reaches a historic milestone on Monday afternoon as the first meeting is called for the new county bail bond board.

Creation of the board was unanimously approved by the commissioners last Jan. 10. The first meeting of the board will convene in the county courtroom at 3:30 p.m.

Lee said all bondsmen doing business in Titus County have been invited, and he hopes they all attend and offer their input.

Lee started the unprecedented process this year of holding bail bondsmen in default when their clients abscond, with two forfeiture hearings already held this year, in September and this past spring. | READ MORE

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Finding the Best Bail Bond Services

Everyone makes mistakes from time to time, and no matter who you are or where you are from, you may find yourself in need of a bail bondsman at some point, whether it is for you or a loved one. Better Bail Bonds is available 24/7 to assist you in your time of need.

A bail bond is basically like a deposit. The person who needs bail will pay a percentage and the bailbond agent takes care of the rest. Only having to pay a percentage is not as much of a financial burden on the person who is in trouble.

You’re going to need all the information you can get on the person to be bonded out, if it’s a friend or family member. Make sure you know their address, the crime they were arrested for, place of employment, how long they’ve lived at their current residence, and similar information before calling a bail bondsman.

Better Bail Bonds will need this information on the defendant, and it will save you time later if you have all this written down beforehand. It will be easier for us to help you with all the information we need up front.

Better Bail Bonds offers low collateral and easy payment plans, with as little as 5% down. When you talk to a bail bondsman, he or she can help you set up a payment plan that fits your budget.

Since Arizona is a collateral state by law, please have any information on collateral available, as well as information on whether the person that needs bail assistance is a first time offender or will need additional monitoring once released.

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

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Suspects bonding out of jail for less, affecting public safety

August 23, 2011 by Collateral Staff
Posted in: Bail Buzz

CHATTANOOGA, TN — Local judges note that bonding companies in Chattanooga are accepting low payments to get defendants out of jail, which could affect public safety. Bondsmen state that the current economic climate is putting pressure on them to accept, in some cases, 3% of a bond amount.

Some experts believe that the trend – while not against any laws – could result in higher bonds set by judges. The state bonding association believes that there is a saturation in the market, meaning more competition for bondsmen.

The association has considered increasing the requirements for new bondsmen, increasing fees, or even limiting the number of bail businesses allowed to open. | Read More

Friday, August 19, 2011

Judges Trust Violent Criminals to Show for Sentencing

BY TRESA BALDAS

DETROIT FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

They were all convicted of violent crimes: a child rapist from Texas, a Pennsylvania drug dealer and a Detroit man who sexually abused an 8-year-old girl.

They all fled while awaiting sentencing.

No surprise, say critics who question why courts are releasing convicted felons at the most crucial stage in the game: when the presumption of innocence is gone, and they know they're facing hard time.

Those critics -- bail bond agents, crime-victim rights advocates and prosecutors -- say there's a long-standing problem in the criminal justice system: judges releasing dangerous felons after they've been convicted, trusting them to show for sentencing.

Sometimes, they bolt.  |   READ MORE

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Hotel Standoff in Tucson, Arizona   

The Sheriff's Office responded to a call concerning shots fired near the Interstate 10 and Irvington Road at 2:11 a.m. When they arrived, deputies talked with two bail bondsmen from Better Bail Bonds who had left a hotel room after hearing shots from another room where they believed Felix was staying. Luis Felix, Jr., 22, surrendered himself to a SWAT team, according to the Pima County Sheriff's Office.

Monday, August 15, 2011

PreTrial Services Program Creates Debate

August 9, 2011 by Collateral Staff
Posted in: Bail Buzz

DELAND, FL — Volusia County Sheriff Ben Johnson, Public Defender Jim Purdy, State Attorney R.J. Larizza, and Chief Judge William Parsons have all put their support behind the local pretrial services program. The program has supervised more than 5000 cases in 2010 alone but faces budget cuts in 2012. However, not everyone agrees with the utility of the program. Senator Ellyn Bogdanoff has filed a bill which would limit pretrial services to indigent defendants. | Read More

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Lack of Jail Space to Affect Bail Bonds

Jail space may affect bail bonds in Coryell CountyPosted On: Saturday, Jul. 23 2011 11:55 PMBy Philip Jankowski
Killeen Daily Herald
When justices of the peace set bail bond amounts for accused criminals, they take into account the nature of the charge, whether the person may be a flight risk and if the person may pose a danger to the community.

In Coryell County, justices of the peace may have to consider another factor — the lack of space at the Coryell County Jail.

Coryell County Judge John E. Firth said the undersized jail "significantly" affects bail bond amounts set by justices of the peace.

READ MORE

Friday, July 22, 2011

"Stephanie Plum" Author Brings Bounty Hunters to the Big Screen

From "Collateral" - a Bail Industry Magazine

Having bounty hunters as her primary characters gives Janet Evanovich a seemingly endless supply of plot twists because the fugitives they’re chasing are never short of head-scratching reasons for failing to appear at court appearances, she said.

“What’s great about writing these books is that there are nearly as many stories as there are people who decide, for whatever reason, not to show up for their court appearances,” Evanovich said.

Read More