Below are the most current bail laws we have for this state. Send updates to your state's bail laws to us using our contact form. This is not legal advice as laws change all the time. Please check with the department of insurance for the most recent updates.
A. MCKINNEY’S CONSOLIDATED LAWS OF NEW YORK ANNOTATED CRIMINAL PROCEDURE LAW CHAPTER 11-A OF THE CONSOLIDATED LAWS PART THREE–SPECIAL PROCEEDINGS AND MISCELLANEOUS PROCEDURES TITLE P–PROCEDURES FOR SECURING ATTENDANCE AT CRIMINAL ACTIONS AND PROCEEDINGS OF DEFENDANTS AND WITNESSES UNDER CONTROL OF COURT–RECOGNIZANCE, BAIL AND COMMITMENT.
B. MCKINNEY’S CONSOLIDATED LAWS OF NEW YORK ANNOTATED INSURANCE LAW CHAPTER 28 OF THE CONSOLIDATED LAWS ARTICLE 68–BAIL BONDS.
C. New Legislation – 1999 New York Assembly Bill No. 1432, New York 223rd Annual Legislative Session Enacted Version Date November 21, 2000. AN ACT to amend the general business law, in relation to the licensing and conduct of the business of bail enforcement agent.
A. MCKINNEY’S CONSOLIDATED LAWS OF NEW YORK ANNOTATED INSURANCE LAW CHAPTER 28 OF THE CONSOLIDATED LAWS ARTICLE 68–BAIL BONDS § 6802. Professional bondsmen; licensing
(a) No person, firm or corporation or any officer or employee thereof shall act in this state as an agent or solicitor of an insurer doing a bail bond business in soliciting, negotiating or effectuating any such deposit or bail bond by such insurer unless licensed by the superintendent as an agent pursuant to the provisions of this section. Any person, firm or corporation so acting without being duly licensed shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
(b) Every corporation engaging as an insurer in the business of giving bail shall procure a license pursuant to the provisions of this section for each of its employees, officers and agents acting for it in soliciting, negotiating or effectuating any such deposit or bail bond.
(d) Any such license issued to a firm or corporation shall authorize only the members named in such license as sublicensees, to act individually as agents thereunder. Any sublicense issued to a corporation shall authorize only the officers and directors named in such license as sublicensees, to act individually as agents thereunder. Every sublicensee, acting as insurance agent pursuant to a license issued to a firm or corporation, shall be authorized to act only in the name of such firm or corporation.
(e) Before the issuance of a license every applicant shall satisfy the superintendent as to his trustworthiness and competence and otherwise comply with the conditions set forth in this section. The superintendent may refuse to issue any such license if in his judgment such refusal will best promote the interests of the people of this state.
(f) At the time of the application for every license a twenty-five dollar fee shall be paid to the superintendent for each year or fraction of a year in which a license shall be valid for each individual applicant and for each proposed sublicensee.
(g) Every applicant for a license hereunder shall file with the superintendent written evidence by those who know his character and reputation and by such other proof as the superintendent may require, including his fingerprints, that he is a person of good character and reputation and has never been convicted of any offense involving moral turpitude or of any crime. If such applicant is a firm or corporation such proof must be made with respect to every member, shareholder, officer and director of such firm or corporation.
(h) In order to determine the competence of each applicant for a license or a sublicense, the superintendent shall require every applicant to pass to the satisfaction of the superintendent a written examination to be prepared by the superintendent and appropriate to the doing of a bail bond business.
(i) Every individual applying to take any written examination shall at the time of applying pay to the superintendent, or at the discretion of the superintendent, directly to any organization that is under contract to provide examination services, an examination fee of an amount which is the actual documented administrative cost of conducting the examination as certified by the superintendent from time to time. An examination fee represents an administrative expense and is not refundable.
B. New Legislation – 1999 New York Assembly Bill No. 1432, New York 223rd Annual Legislative Session (FULL TEXT – STATE NET) VERSION: Enacted Version Date November 21, 2000. AN ACT to amend the general business law, in relation to the licensing and conduct of the business of bail enforcement agent.
Section 70. Licenses. 1. The department of state shall have the power to issue separate licenses to private investigators <<+ , BAIL ENFORCEMENT AGENTS +>> and to watch, guard or patrol agencies.
Section 3. Section 71 of the general business law is amended by adding a new subdivision 1-a to read as follows:
1-A. “bail enforcement agent” shall mean and include only the business of bail enforcement and shall also mean and include, separately or collectively, the engaging in the business of enforcing the terms and conditions of a person’s release from custody on bail in a criminal proceeding, including locating, apprehending and returning any such person released from custody on bail who has failed to appear at any stage of a criminal proceeding to answer the charge before the court in which he may be prosecuted.
Section 4. Section 71 of the general business law is amended by adding a new subdivision 4 to read as follows:
4. The term “business of bail enforcement agent” and the term “bail enforcement agent” shall mean and include any person, firm, company, partnership or corporation engaged in the business of bail enforcement as defined in subdivision one-a of this section with or without the assistance of any employee or employees.
1-a. Every such applicant for a license as bail enforcement agent shall establish to the satisfaction of the secretary of state (a) if the applicant be a person, or (b) in the case of a firm, company, partnership, or corporation, at least one member of such firm, partnership, company or corporation, has been regularly employed, for a period of not less than three years, performing such duties or providing such services as described as those furnished by a bail enforcement agent in section seventy-one of this article, as a sheriff, police officer in a city or county police department, or the division of state police, investigator in an agency of the state, county, or united states government, or employee of a licensed private investigator, or has had an equivalent position and experience or that such person or member was an employee of a police department who rendered service therein as a police officer for not less than twenty years or was an employee of a fire department who rendered service therein as a fire marshal for not less than twenty years.
1-b. The person or member meeting the experience requirement under subdivisions one and one-a of this section and any person or member of such firm, company, partnership or corporation who engages in the apprehension and return of suspects who fail to appear before the court must either satisfactorily complete a basic certification course in training for bail enforcement agents offered by a provider that is approved by the secretary of state; or such person or member must have served as a police officer, as that term is defined in subdivision thirty-four of section 1.20 of the criminal procedure law, for a period of not less than three years.
(a) The application shall be accompanied by a non-refundable fee, payable to the department of state for the use of the state, for each certificate of license, as hereinbelow enumerated, issued to the applicant, if the applicant be an individual, of four hundred dollars for a license as private investigator OR BAIL ENFORCEMENT AGENT, or if the applicant be a firm, partnership, limited liability company or corporation, a fee of five hundred dollars for a license as private investigator OR BAIL ENFORCEMENT AGENT.
(b) an applicant for a license as a bail enforcement agent shall execute, deliver and file with the office of such department a surety company bond in the sum of five hundred thousand dollar , conditioned for the faithful and honest conduct of such business by such applicant, which surety bond must be written by a company recognized and approved by the superintendent of insurance of the state, and approved by the department of state with respect to its form, manner of execution and sufficiency provided, FURTHER, however, before a license is issued to a non-resident the applicant must file with the secretary of state a written consent to the jurisdiction of the courts of New York. No such license as private investigator, bail enforcement agent or watch, guard or patrol agency shall be issued to a person under the age of twenty-five years.
(c) The secretary of state shall receive a non-refundable examination fee of fifteen dollars from each person who takes an examination to qualify for application for licensure pursuant to this article. Fees paid to the department of state pursuant to this article shall be deposited in the business and licensing services account established pursuant to section ninety-seven-y of the state finance law.
A. NY CRIM PRO § 540.10
1. If, without sufficient excuse, a principal does not appear when required or does not render himself amenable to the orders and processes of the criminal court wherein bail has been posted, the court must enter such facts upon its minutes and the bail bond or the cash bail, as the case may be, is thereupon forfeited.
A. MCKINNEY’S CONSOLIDATED LAWS OF NEW YORK ANNOTATED CRIMINAL PROCEDURE LAW CHAPTER 11-A OF THE CONSOLIDATED LAWS PART THREE–SPECIAL PROCEEDINGS AND MISCELLANEOUS PROCEDURES TITLE P–PROCEDURES FOR SECURING ATTENDANCE AT CRIMINAL ACTIONS AND PROCEEDINGS OF DEFENDANTS AND WITNESSES UNDER CONTROL OF COURT–RECOGNIZANCE, BAIL AND COMMITMENT ARTICLE 540–FORFEITURE OF BAIL AND REMISSION THEREOF
2. If the principal appears at any time before the final adjournment of the court, and satisfactorily excuses his neglect, the court may direct the forfeiture to be discharged upon such terms as are just. If the forfeiture is not so discharged and the forfeited bail consisted of a bail bond, the district attorney, within one hundred twenty days after the adjournment of the court at which such bond was directed to be forfeited, must proceed against the obligor or obligors who executed such bond, in the manner prescribed in subdivision three. If the forfeited bail consisted of cash bail, the county treasurer with whom it is deposited shall give written notice of the forfeiture to the person who posted cash bail for the defendant may at any time after the final adjournment of the court or forty-five days after notice of forfeiture required herein has been given, whichever comes later, apply the money deposited to the use of the county.
B. 1999 New York Assembly Bill No. 11023, New York 223rd Annual Legislative Session
The above section is amended to include:
4. notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary, the cash bail posted by a principal, who is under court order to pay child support and has accumulated arrears in the payment of such support, shall forfeit his or her bail pursuant to the rules and regulations promulgated by the chief administrator of the courts pursuant to paragraph (n) of subdivision two of section two hundred twelve of the judiciary law. no forfeiture of bail shall occur pursuant to this subdivision if a complainant in the criminal action against the principal is a person owed such child support.
A. MCKINNEY’S CONSOLIDATED LAWS OF NEW YORK ANNOTATED CRIMINAL PROCEDURE LAW CHAPTER 11-A OF THE CONSOLIDATED LAWS PART THREE–SPECIAL PROCEEDINGS AND MISCELLANEOUS PROCEDURES TITLE P–PROCEDURES FOR SECURING ATTENDANCE AT CRIMINAL ACTIONS AND PROCEEDINGS OF DEFENDANTS AND WITNESSES UNDER CONTROL OF COURT–RECOGNIZANCE, BAIL AND COMMITMENT ARTICLE 530–ORDERS OF RECOGNIZANCE OR BAIL WITH RESPECT TO DEFENDANTS IN CRIMINAL ACTIONS AND PROCEEDINGS–WHEN AND BY WHAT COURTS AUTHORIZED § 530.80 Order of recognizance or bail; surrender of defendant 9NYY.
1. At any time before the forfeiture of a bail bond, an obligor may surrender the defendant in his exoneration, or the defendant may surrender himself, to the court in which his case is pending or to the sheriff to whose custody he was committed at the time of giving bail, in the following manner:
(a) A certified copy of the bail bond must be delivered to the sheriff, who must detain the defendant in his custody thereon, as upon a commitment. The sheriff must acknowledge the surrender by a certificate in writing, and must forthwith notify the court in which the case is pending that such surrender has been made.
(b) Upon the bail bond and the certificate of the sheriff, or upon the surrender to the court in which the case is pending, such court must, upon five days notice to the district attorney, order that the bail be exonerated. On filing such order, the bail is exonerated accordingly.
3. At any time before the forfeiture of cash bail, the defendant may surrender himself or the person who posted bail for the defendant may surrender the defendant in the manner prescribed in subdivision one. In such case, the court must order a return of the money to the person who posted it, upon producing the certificate of the sheriff showing the surrender, and upon a notice of five days to the district attorney.
B. NY CRIM PRO § 330.10
1. Upon a verdict of complete acquittal, the court must immediately discharge the defendant if he is in the custody of the sheriff, or, if he is at liberty on bail, it must exonerate the bail.
C. NY CRIM PRO § 190.75
1. If upon a charge that a designated person committed a crime, either (a) the evidence before the grand jury is not legally sufficient to establish that such person committed such crime or any other offense, or (b) the grand jury is not satisfied that there is reasonable cause to believe that such person committed such crime or any other offense, it must dismiss the charge. In such case, the grand jury must, through its foreman or acting foreman, file its finding of dismissal with the court by which it was impaneled.
2. If the defendant was previously held for the action of the grand jury by a local criminal court, the superior court to which such dismissal is presented must order the defendant released from custody if he is in the custody of the sheriff, or, if he is at liberty on bail, it must exonerate the bail.
D. NY CRIM PRO § 180.70
At the conclusion of a hearing, the court must dispose of the felony complaint as follows:
4. If there is not reasonable cause to believe that the defendant committed any offense, the court must dismiss the felony complaint and discharge the defendant from custody if he is in custody, or, if he is at liberty on bail, it must exonerate the bail.
E. NY CRIM PRO § 210.45
8. When the court dismisses the entire indictment without authorizing resubmission of the charge or charges to a grand jury, it must order that the defendant be discharged from custody if he is in the custody of the sheriff, or if he is at liberty on bail it must exonerate the bail.
F. NY CRIM PRO § 620.60
1. [If] At any time after a material witness order has been issued the court [determines] that the order is no longer necessary or warranted, it must, as the situation requires, either discharge the witness from custody or exonerate the bail.
G. NY CRIM PRO § 730.50
1. When a superior court, following a hearing conducted pursuant to subdivision three or four of section 730.30 is satisfied that the defendant is an incapacitated person, or if no motion for such a hearing is made, it must adjudicate him an incapacitated person, and must issue a final order of observation or an order of commitment. Upon the issuance of an order of commitment, the court must exonerate the defendant’s bail if he was previously at liberty on bail.
H. NY CRIM PRO § 290.10
4. Upon issuing a trial order of dismissal which dismisses the entire indictment, the court must immediately discharge the defendant from custody if he is in custody of the sheriff, or, if he is at liberty on bail, it must exonerate the bail.
A. MCKINNEY’S CONSOLIDATED LAWS OF NEW YORK ANNOTATED CRIMINAL PROCEDURE LAW CHAPTER 11-A OF THE CONSOLIDATED LAWS PART THREE–SPECIAL PROCEEDINGS AND MISCELLANEOUS PROCEDURES TITLE P–PROCEDURES FOR SECURING ATTENDANCE AT CRIMINAL ACTIONS AND PROCEEDINGS OF DEFENDANTS AND WITNESSES UNDER CONTROL OF COURT–RECOGNIZANCE, BAIL AND COMMITMENT ARTICLE 540–FORFEITURE OF BAIL AND REMISSION THEREOF § 540.30 Remission of forfeiture
1. After the forfeiture of a bail bond or cash bail, as provided in section 540.10, an application for remission of such forfeiture may be made to a court as follows: (a) If the forfeiture has been ordered by a superior court, the application must be made in such court; (b) If the forfeiture has been ordered by a local criminal court, the application must be made to a superior court in the county, except that if the local criminal court which ordered the forfeiture was a district court, the application may alternatively be made to that district court.
2. The application must be made within one year after the forfeiture of the bail is declared upon at least five days notice to the district attorney and service of copies of the affidavits and papers upon which the application is founded. The court may grant the application and remit the forfeiture or any part thereof, upon such terms as are just. The application may be granted only upon payment of the costs and expenses incurred in the proceedings for the enforcement of the forfeiture.
B. MCKINNEY’S CONSOLIDATED LAWS OF NEW YORK ANNOTATED JUDICIARY LAW CHAPTER 30 OF THE CONSOLIDATED LAWS ARTICLE 20-A–REMISSION OF FINES AND FORFEITURES § 798. Remitting fines and penalties and discharging recognizances
A. MCKINNEY’S CONSOLIDATED LAWS OF NEW YORK ANNOTATED CRIMINAL PROCEDURE LAW CHAPTER 11-A OF THE CONSOLIDATED LAWS PART THREE—SPECIAL PROCEEDINGS AND MISCELLANEOUS PROCEDURES TITLE P—PROCEDURES FOR SECURING ATTENDANCE AT CRIMINAL ACTIONS AND PROCEEDINGS OF DEFENDANTS AND WITNESSES UNDER CONTROL OF COURT—RECOGNIZANCE, BAIL AND COMMITMENT ARTICLE 530—ORDERS OF RECOGNIZANCE OR BAIL WITH RESPECT TO DEFENDANTS IN CRIMINAL ACTIONS AND PROCEEDINGS—WHEN AND BY WHAT COURTS AUTHORIZED § 530.80 Order of recognizance or bail; surrender of defendant
2. For the purpose of surrendering the defendant, an obligor or the person who posted cash bail for the defendant may take him into custody at any place within the state, or he may, by a written authority indorsed on a certified copy of the bail bond, empower any person over twenty years of age to do so.
B. New Legislation – 1999 New York Assembly Bill No. 1432, New York 223rd Annual Legislative Session (FULL TEXT – STATE NET) VERSION: Enacted Version Date November 21, 2000. AN ACT to amend the general business law, in relation to the licensing and conduct of the business of bail enforcement agent.
A. MCKINNEY’S CONSOLIDATED LAWS OF NEW YORK ANNOTATED INSURANCE LAW CHAPTER 28 OF THE CONSOLIDATED LAWS ARTICLE 68—BAIL BONDS § 6804. Premium or compensation
(1) charge or receive, directly or indirectly, any greater compensation for making a deposit for bail or giving bail, or act in such business as aforesaid without obtaining a license, or
(2) accept any fee or compensation for obtaining a license or for obtaining a bondsman or bail bond. Such person or corporation shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and in addition shall in any action brought to recover any such overcharge be liable for treble damages.
(c) Any member of the bar having any financial interest by which he is to profit from the giving of bail shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
B. New Legislation – 1999 New York Assembly Bill No. 1432, New York 223rd Annual Legislative Session Enacted Version Date November 21, 2000. AN ACT to amend the general business law, in relation to the licensing and conduct of the business of bail enforcement agent.
A.In re International Fidelity Ins. Co. of New Jersey, Surety
272 A.D.2d 272, 710 N.Y.S.2d 241 (Mem), 2000 N.Y. Slip Op. 05379
N.Y.A.D. 1 Dept.
May 30, 2000
B.People v. Seneca Ins. Co.
C.People v. Burton
1990
150 Misc.2d 214, 569 N.Y.S.2d 861.
D.People v. Stuyvesant Ins. Co.
98 Misc.2d 210, 413 N.Y.S.2d 843
N.Y.Sup.
Feb 09, 1979
E.Public Service Mut. Ins. Co. v. Murtagh
15 Misc.2d 973, 182 N.Y.S.2d 650
N.Y.Sup.
Nov 28, 1958
See Sections Applicable Statues C. and Other Noteworthy Provsions B. above.