It’s basically a legal promise we make to the court. You pay us a small fee, and we put up the full bail amount to guarantee the defendant shows up for every single court date until the case is wrapped up.
In Oklahoma, the standard rate is 10%. If the judge sets bail at $10,000, you pay us $1,000. That’s a non-refundable fee for us taking on the risk of the full bond.
Yeah, we do. We know most people don't have thousands in cash just sitting in a drawer. We can usually work out a down payment and a monthly schedule that doesn't blow your whole budget.
Once the papers hit the jail desk, it’s usually 60 to 90 minutes. But if there’s a shift change or the jail is slammed with new arrests, it can take longer. We stay on them, though.
Full name, birth date, and which jail they’re in. If you have that, we can usually dig up the charges and the bond amount on our own.
No. That money is our service fee. It pays for the work we do to get them out and the risk we’re taking with the court. It’s gone once the bond is posted.
That’s just the legal word for the person signing for the bond—usually a family member. If you sign, you’re the one on the hook if the defendant decided to skip town.
If they skip, you’re responsible for the full amount of the bail plus whatever it costs us to track them down and bring them back to the jail. It’s a serious commitment.
Usually not for smaller stuff. Most of the time, a solid signature and a steady job are enough. We only look at property for massive felony bonds or high-risk cases.
Definitely. We deal with everything from simple possession to felony trafficking. Those bonds can be pricey, but we know the drill and move fast.
Sometimes there’s a standard bail schedule we can use. If not, we have to wait for the first appearance (the arraignment) before the judge gives us a number we can work with.
All the time. We track the mandatory "sobering up" holds at the jail so we can have the paperwork ready to go the second the jailer allows a release.
The first bond stays active, but you’ll probably need a new one for the new charges. If the second arrest breaks the judge’s rules, they might just revoke the first bond entirely.
Usually, no. Most bond agreements require you to stay in the state unless you get the green light from both us and the court in writing.
No. We only handle the jail release. You still need to find a defense attorney to handle the actual legal fight in the courtroom.
Basically, the bond gets killed and the person heads back to a cell. This usually happens if they blow off a court date, go radio silent on our office, or pick up a new charge while they're out.
We focus on jails like Moore, Norman, and Del City, but we can coordinate bail pretty much anywhere in the state of Oklahoma if needed.
Talk to us. If you’ve got a stable job and a reliable co-signer, we can often find a way to make a lower down payment work to get the process moving.
We try to keep you in the loop, but the defendant is legally responsible for knowing when to show up. Missing a date is the fastest way to get a warrant.
Only if the defendant is surrendered back to the jail. You can’t just "quit" because you’re annoyed with them, you’re in it until the case is over.
Call us the second you realize it. If it was a real mistake, like a car breakdown, we can often work with the court to fix it before a warrant gets issued.
They’re common, but be ready for a "cooling-off" period. Most jails won't let someone out for 12 to 24 hours on these charges, no matter how fast we file.
Yes. We take cash, credit cards, and most of the usual payment apps. We want to get the paperwork started as fast as possible.
The process is similar, but felony bails are way higher and the court is much stricter. We handle both with the same technical focus.
The bond is "exonerated" when the judge sentences the defendant or dismisses the case. That’s when your financial responsibility to the court finally ends.
Because we actually know the desk sergeants and the clerks. We don't just mail things in and hope, we hand-deliver the papers to make sure they don't get lost.
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