Bail Flashcards
a. Texas Constitution Sec. 11
All prisoners shall be bailable by sufficient sureties, unless for capital offenses, when the proof is evident; but this provision shall not be so construed as to prevent bail after indictment found upon examination of the evidence, in such manner as may be prescribed by law.
i. An appearance before a magistrate per CCP 15.17 is
not an arraignment. An arraignment relates to the time when a defendant has an opportunity to make a plea (26.03).
ii. Bail is the first point of
contact for both the defense attorney and the prosecutor.
- In Re Tharp
Judge sets bail for a certain amount of money OR 10% in cash. DA files a writ of mandamus because the court essentially created a differential bond. The court holds bail can be in ONLY two forms – bail bond or personal recognizance bond. CCP 17.01
a. CCP 17.01 – Bail = a security given by
the accused that he will appear and answer before the proper court the accusation brought against him. An officer having the defendant in custody can set the amount of bail (generally if a magistrate is unavailable
b. CCP 23.05 – if the defendant has jumped bail, the judge can
require subsequent bail to be posted in cash and ONLY in cash.
c. In cases of speeding and open container
a person MUST be allowed to be released on a PR bond for instances of speeding or open liquor container.
d. Writ of mandamus
when there is no other legal avenue and the person seeking the writ has the right to relief.
- Milner v. State
Suspect shot and killed his wife, shot and severely injured his mother-in-law. Suspect had been arrested on 2 previous cases. Bail was set at $500K. In setting bail, the court can look at: sufficiently high to give reasonable assurance undertaking will be complied with, bail is not an oppressive instrument, nature of the offense, ability to make bail, and future safety of victim and community (CCP 17.15)
a. Other factors considered
defendant’s work record
i. Family ties and ties to community
ii. Defendant’s length of residency
iii. Prior criminal record
iv. Defendant’s previous compliance with bail
v. Other outstanding bonds
vi. Aggravating factors in the charge offense
b. Defendant has burden of proof to
show bail is excessive
c. The defendant must also show that
efforts were made to meet the bail amount but that funds were exhausted. There is no reason given as to why the court would require the suspect to exhaust family assets as an independent adult.
- Ex Parte Vance
suspects enters Marine recruiting office and attempts to rob them of $1,200. During the attempted robbery he takes a hostage. The court set bail at $250,000 for each offense.
a. Defense is not entitled to an Interllocutory appeal on denial of a writ of habeas corpus. Defense can bring it up on appeal after trial.
b. On appeal the court reduced bail to $20,000.
c. The indictment can serve as evidence in a bond hearing
d. Defendant can testify at the hearing relating to the questions relating to bail. Prosecution cannot ask questions relating to offense itself.
- Kernahan v. State
Suspect arrested on felony theft of over $200. Suspect filed a motion to be released on personal bond per CCP 17.151 which says a defendant who is detained in jail pending trial of an accusation against him must be released either on personal bond or by reducing the amount of bail required, if the state is not ready for trial of the criminal action for which he is being detained within: 90 days (30 for class A, 15 for class B, 5 for class C) from the commencement of his detention if he is accused of a felony. The court lowered the suspect’s bail due to the state’s violation of 17.151. Appeal court over turned the trial court because the suspect should have been released on PR bond because he could not afford the $2500. He could no more make the $2500 bond as he could the $5000
a. The statute starts to count on
the date of arrest