Within 48 hours of arrest, the defendant appears before a magistrate judge who considers whether to set bail or detain the defendant pending trial.
The judge considers factors including the nature of the offense, weight of evidence, defendant's character, employment, community ties, and prior record.
Many jurisdictions now use pretrial risk assessment tools to evaluate flight risk and danger to the community, supplementing (not replacing) judicial discretion.
The judge selects the least restrictive conditions that will reasonably assure appearance and community safety: personal recognizance, unsecured bond, cash bail, or secured bond with conditions.
The defendant (or a bail bondsman for a fee of typically 10-15%) posts the required amount. The money is returned upon compliance with all conditions.
Pretrial services monitors compliance with conditions. Either party may move to modify conditions if circumstances change (new evidence, violations, changed risk).
Bail determinations occur at the initial appearance or arraignment. The government may move for pretrial detention under the Bail Reform Act if the defendant poses a serious flight risk or danger to the community. At a detention hearing, the government must prove dangerousness by clear and convincing evidence or flight risk by a preponderance. The court may impose conditions of release such as electronic monitoring, travel restrictions, surrender of passport, curfew, or drug testing. If the defendant violates conditions, the court may revoke bail and order detention. A defendant denied bail may appeal the detention order.
Judge: "The court sets bail at $250,000 secured bond with the following conditions: surrender of passport, electronic monitoring, and no contact with any alleged victims."
Prosecutor: "Your Honor, the government moves for pretrial detention. The defendant faces a potential life sentence, has significant overseas assets, and dual citizenship — presenting an extreme flight risk."
Defense Attorney: "My client has deep roots in this community, Your Honor. She owns a home, her children attend local schools, and she has no prior criminal history. We request release on personal recognizance or, alternatively, a reasonable bail amount."
Students often conflate bail with bond. Bail is the amount set by the court; a bond is the instrument used to pay it. A surety bond through a bail bondsman typically costs 10-15% of the bail amount and is non-refundable, whereas cash bail posted directly with the court is returned upon case completion.
Federal bail is governed by the Bail Reform Act of 1984, creating a presumption of release with conditions. State bail systems vary dramatically — some use risk-assessment-based release, while others retain traditional cash bail. Several states have constitutional bail guarantees that federal law does not provide.
United States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739 (1987)
Upheld the constitutionality of pretrial detention under the Bail Reform Act of 1984, holding that preventive detention based on dangerousness does not violate due process or the Excessive Bail Clause.
Stack v. Boyle, 342 U.S. 1 (1951)
Established that bail set higher than necessary to ensure the defendant's appearance at trial is "excessive" under the Eighth Amendment.
Schilb v. Kuebel, 404 U.S. 357 (1971)
Upheld a state bail system allowing defendants to post 10% of the bail amount directly to the court rather than using a bail bondsman, promoting equal access to pretrial release.
| Cash Bail | Surety Bond |
|---|---|
| Defendant pays full amount to the court | Bondsman posts bail; defendant pays premium (10-15%) |
| Full amount returned if defendant appears | Premium is non-refundable regardless of outcome |
| Defendant bears entire financial burden upfront | Lower upfront cost but total loss of premium |
| No third-party involvement | Bondsman may require collateral and supervise defendant |
| Simpler process | Bondsman may employ bounty hunters if defendant flees |
What is the difference between bail and bond?
Bail is the amount of money set by the court that a defendant must pay to be released from custody pending trial. A bond is a financial guarantee (often through a bail bondsman) that the defendant will appear. With a cash bail, the defendant pays the full amount directly; with a surety bond, a bondsman posts the bail for a non-refundable premium, typically 10-15%.
How is bail amount determined?
Judges consider multiple factors when setting bail: the severity of the charges, the defendant's criminal history, flight risk, danger to the community, ties to the community, employment status, and financial resources. Under the Bail Reform Act of 1984, federal courts must impose the least restrictive conditions that will reasonably assure appearance and community safety.
Can bail be denied?
Yes, bail can be denied if the court finds that no conditions of release will reasonably assure the defendant's appearance or the safety of the community. Under the federal Bail Reform Act, pretrial detention is presumed for certain serious offenses including drug trafficking, crimes of violence, and offenses carrying life imprisonment.
An arraignment is a formal court proceeding in which a criminal defendant is brought before a judge,...
The defendant is the party against whom a lawsuit or criminal charge is brought. In civil cases, the...
The judge is the judicial officer who presides over court proceedings, rules on legal issues, instru...
Sentencing is the phase of a criminal proceeding in which the court imposes punishment upon a defend...
Apply your knowledge of this term in a realistic courtroom simulation
Start a Mock Trial