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MAIN OFFICE
Freedom
Bail Bonding
10610 Main St
Fairfax, VA 22030
ph
703.691.4900
fax:703.385.5003
Call
any of our numbers for the locations of offices located in other counties
to serve your needs conveniently
©Copyright
2007-2008 Freedom bail Bonding, Inc.
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- Applicable Statutes.
- ANNOTATED CODE OF MARYLAND (ACM) 10-101 et seq. and Subtitle
3. Bail Bondsmen, 10-301 et seq. (Insurance licensing requirements
for bondsmen.)
- CODE OF MARYLAND REGULATIONS (COMAR) 31.03.05 et seq.(Regulates
the way bondsmen conduct their business, record keeping requirements,
etc.)
- MARYLAND RULES –CRIMINAL
CAUSES, RULE 4-217. (MARYLAND RULES are promulgated by the Maryland
Court of Appeals pursuant to the Maryland
Constitution, Article IV, Sec. 18. Such RULES have the force of law.
RULE 4-217 treats with surrender of defendants, forfeitures, forfeiture
defenses, etc.)
- Licensing Requirements for Agents.
In Maryland, each bail bondsmen
must obtain a certificate of qualification to act as a property and
casualty insurance agent, and obtain an appointment
from an insurer licensed to conduct the business of surety in Maryland.
The bail bondsman as a licensed insurance agent is subject to the entire
Insurance article in the ACM. Bail bondsmen who pledge property instead
of surety are under the jurisdiction of the District Court of Maryland,
and are defined by COMAR as "property bondsmen".
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An individual must obtain a license before
providing bail bond services in Maryland. The license is identical
to a certificate of qualification [ACM 1-304(a)(b)].
-
An applicant must meet the requirements
for acting as a property and casualty agent or broker [ACM 1-305].
-
Qualifications of Individual Applicants
[ACM 10-104].
- Be of good character and trustworthy,
- Have some knowledge of bail insurance,
- For three years preceding application, have at least one year as an
employee of a bail agent/insurer,
- Pass the examination given by the Commissioner.
- Under certain conditions the above can be waived by the Commissioner.
1) Qualifications of a partnership
or corporation [ACM 10-106]. In order to qualify, a partnership or
corporation primarily must be engaged
in bail insurance.
- The Application Process [ACM 10-112]. An applicant must
- File the application on a form provided by the commissioner,
- Pay the application fee,
- File in a manner or on a form the Commissioner provides: agency or
trade name to be used, business address, names and resident addresses
of each person holding a certificate of qualification doing business
under that name, and other information or documentation requested by
the Commissioner to attest to the professional competence and good character
of the applicant.
- The applicant for the broker license must post a $10,000 bond with
the Commissioner.
- An applicant that is a limited liability company, partnership, or corporation
must provide the name and address of each agents with direct control
of its fiscal management, and each owner, member, or manager.
- Continuing Education Requirements [ACM 10-116].
The Commissioner shall require continuing education for agents to renew
the certificate of qualification, but may not require them to receive
more than 16 hours of continuing education per renewal period for those
who have had a certificate for less than 25 consecutive years, or not
more than 8 hours for those having the certificate for 25 or more consecutive
years.
The agents shall obtain continuing education germane to the kind of
insurance for which they have received a certificate of qualification.
An insurer may not prohibit one of its agents from obtaining continuing
education credits from any course approved by the commissioner.
- The regulatory body is the Maryland Insurance Administration. (For
property bondsmen, the regulatory body is the District Court of Maryland.)
- Notice of Forfeiture. [RULE 4-217 (B)(3)(i)(1)].
If the defendant fails to
appear as required, the court shall order forfeiture of the bail bond
and issuance of a warrant for the defendant’s
arrest. The clerk shall promptly notify any surety on the defendant’s
bond and the State’s Attorney, of the forfeiture of the bond and
the issuance of the warrant.
- Allotted Time Between Forfeiture Declaration and Payment Due Date [RULE
4-217 (B)(3)(i)(3)(4)(A)(B)(C)].
- Within 90 days from the date the defendant fails to appear, which time
the court may extend to 180 days upon showing good cause, a surety shall
satisfy any order of forfeiture either by producing the defendant or
by paying the penalty sum of the bonds. If the defendant is produced
within the timeframe by the State, the forfeiture is satisfied minus
the expenses incurred by the State.
- If the forfeiture has not
been stricken or satisfied within the 90 day period (or 180 days, if
the time has been extended), the clerk shall
enter the order of forfeiture as a judgment against the defendant and
the surety for the amount of the bond including interests and costs from
the date of the forfeiture, and
- The clerk shall prepare,
attest, and deliver to any bail bond commissioner, to the State’s
Attorney, to the chief clerk of the District Court, and to the surety
the entry of the judgment.
- The State’s Attorney
shall be tasked with the enforcement of the judgment.
- Forfeiture Defenses [RULE 4-217 (B)(3)(i)(2)(A)(B)(C)(6).
- If the defendant or surety
can show reasonable ground for the failure to appear, the court shall
strike out the forfeiture in whole or in part
and set aside any judgment., and order the remission in whole or in part.
- If after the expiration of
the allowable period, but within 10 years from the date of the bond,
the surety produced evidence that the defendant
is incarcerated in a penal institution outside the state and that the
State’s Attorney is unwilling to issue a detainer and extradite
the defendant, the court shall strike out the forfeiture, set aside any
judgment., and order the return of the forfeiture.
- Remission [RULE 4-217 (B)(3)(i)(5)(6)(B)].
- When the defendant is produced
in court after the 90 day period (or 180 day period if applicable),
the surety may apply for the refund of
any penalty sum less expenses permitted by law. If no payment has been
made by the surety, upon application by the surety and satisfaction of
expenses, the judgment. against the surety shall be struck.
- If after the expiration of
the allowable period, but within 10 years from the sate of the bond,
the surety produced evidence that the defendant
is incarcerated in a penal institution outside the state and that the
State’s Attorney is unwilling to issue a detainer and extradite
the defendant, the court shall strike out the forfeiture, set aside any
judgment., and order the return of the forfeiture.
- Bail Agent’s Arrest
Authority [RULE 4-217 (B)(3)(h)(1)(2)(i)(3)
and RULE 722 (h)]
- A surety may surrender the defendant before a forfeiture.
- Within 90 days from the date the defendant fails to appear, which time
the court may extend to 180 days upon showing good cause, a surety shall
satisfy any order of forfeiture either by producing the defendant or
by paying the penalty sum of the bonds. Upon a motion by the surety and
a hearing by the court, the surety may be awarded an allowance for expenses
in locating and surrendering the defendant.
- Other Noteworthy Provisions. None
- Noteworthy State Appellate Decisions
Pantazes v. State , 834 A.2d 975 ( Md. App., 2003).
The defendant was convicted of child abuse but failed to appear at
his sentencing. At that time, the trial court “revoked” the
defendant's bail, but did not formally declare it forfeited. 264
days later, the court became aware that the bail was never officially
forfeited
and an administrative judge took corrective action and forfeited
the bond, issuing formal notice to the bonding company. The bonding
company
moved to strike the forfeiture. The Court of Special Appeals declared
that the delay did not prejudice the bondsman and he was still obligated
to produce the defendant.
Wiegand v. State , 363 Md. 186 (2001).
Defendant was charged with possession of marijuana and released on
a bond issued by the bond company. At the time of the undertaking,
the defendant was required to stay in the state of Maryland . However,
the court later modified the release conditions and allowed the defendant
to return to California without notifying the bondsman. The defendant
failed to appear in court and the court moved to forfeit the bond.
The bondsman filed a petition to strike the bond forfeiture. The Circuit
Court denied the petition. The bondsman appealed to the Court of Special
Appeals, which held that the bail bondsman was not entitled to be discharged
from obligation of the bail bond when the court amended the pre-trial
release conditions.
- Bounty Hunter Provisions.
There are no provisions relating to bounty hunters at this time.
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