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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
- Applicable Statutes.
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DISTRICT
OF COLUMBIA CODE 1981 PART IV. CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE
AND PRISONERS. TITLE 23. CRIMINAL PROCEDURE.CHAPTER 11.
Professional Bondsmen.
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MICHIE'S
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT RULES ANNOTATED SUPERIOR COURT
RULES OF CRIMINAL PROCEDURE XI. MISCELLANEOUS
PROVISIONS.Rule 116. Bonds and sureties.
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Licensing
Requirements for Agents.
***
The District of Columbia’s statutes do not appear to clearly
outline the powers of professional bondsmen in regard to
recovering bail. The statutes define a "bondsman" as
anyone engaged in the bonding business, including agents.
Therefore, some of the more pertinent qualifications – in
regard to individuals and for licensing purposes – for
sureities are given below, since both sureties and bondsmen
appear to be able to carry out activities associated with the
bonding business.
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DISTRICT
OF COLUMBIA CODE 1981 PART IV. CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE
AND PRISONERS. TITLE 23. CRIMINAL PROCEDURE. CHAPTER 11.
Professional Bondsmen.§ 23-1101 Definitions.
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The
term "bondsman" means any person or corporation
engaged in the bonding business either as a principal or as
an agent, clerk, or representative of another engaged in
such business.
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§
23-1108 Qualifications of bondsmen; rules to be prescribed
by courts; list of agents to be furnished; renewal of
authority to act; detailed records to be kept; penalties and
disqualifications.
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Duty
of the United States District Court for the District of
Columbia and the Superior Court of the District of Columbia,
to provide, the qualifications of persons and corporations
applying for authority to engage in the bonding business in
criminal cases in the District of Columbia, and the terms
and conditions upon which the business shall be carried on,
and no person or corporation shall, either as principal, or
as agent, or representative of another, engage in the
bonding business in either court until he shall, by order of
the court, be authorized to do so.
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The
courts shall take into consideration both the financial
responsibility and the moral qualities of the person so
applying, and no person shall be permitted to engage, either
as principal or agent, in the bonding business, who has ever
been convicted of an offense involving moral turpitude, or
who is not known to be a person of good moral character.
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Every
person qualifying to engage in the bonding business as
principal is required to file with the court a list showing
the name, age, and residence of each person employed by the
bondsman as agent, clerk, or representative in the bonding
business, and an affidavit from each of these persons
stating that he will abide by the terms and provisions of
this chapter.
- Each of the courts shall
require the authority of each of those persons to be
renewed from time to time at such periods as the court may
by rule provide, and before the authority shall be renewed
the court shall require from each of those persons an
affidavit that since his previous qualification to engage
in the bonding business he has abided by the provisions of
this chapter, and any person swearing falsely in any of
the affidavits shall be guilty of perjury.
- Whoever violates any rule or
regulation prescribed under this subsection shall be fined
not more than $500 or imprisoned not more than six months,
or both, and if he is a bondsman shall be disqualified from
thereafter engaging in any manner in the bonding business
for such period of time as the trial judge shall order.
- MICHIE'S DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
COURT RULES ANNOTATED SUPERIOR COURT RULES OF CRIMINAL
PROCEDURE XI. MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS. Rule 116. Bonds and
sureties.
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Except
by Court order no person shall be authorized to engage in
the bonding business in criminal cases in this Court. No
order of authorization shall be entered until such
application and such supporting documents as are hereinafter
required shall have been filed and the approval by this
Court shall have been noted thereon.
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Contents
of application. Every individual proposing to engage in the
bonding business in criminal cases in this Court shall file
with the Court a written application which shall set forth
the following information and statements under oath:
- (i) A detailed listing of
real estate owned by the applicant in the District of
Columbia, including: the address, lot, value, date of
title, purchase price, the liber and folio of the land
records; that the property is not encumbered;
improvements; the nature and extent of a spouse's title or
interest;
- (ii) The amount of the
applicant's unsecured indebtedness and obligations;
- (iii) Whether the applicant
is, or has been, in default in the payment of forfeited
bail bond or recognizance in any court in the District of
Columbia, the amount of bail bond or recognizance on any
default recited, the date of forfeiture, the court, title
and number of the cause in which such forfeiture was
declared;
- (iv) Whether the applicant
has ever been arrested, charged or convicted of any
offense;
- (v) Proof of applicant's
good moral character, attested by the statements of at
least 2 residents of the District of Columbia not related
to the applicant, and who shall so certify;
- (vi) A declaration by the
applicant that the applicant will in all respects abide by
the terms and provisions of these Rules and Chapter 11 of
Title 23 of the D.C. Code;
- (vii) A listing of the name,
age and residence of each and every person authorized to
represent the applicant as agent, clerk or representative
in the bonding business, accompanied by an affidavit from
each person listed, declaring that the person will in all
respects abide by the terms and provisions of these Rules
and Chapter 11 of said Title 23;
- (viii) Each person holding a
power of attorney from an authorized individual surety
shall file a duplicate original copy thereof with the
Clerk of this Court;
- (ix) The application shall
also recite a declaration to which the applicant shall
fully agree and subscribe in which he or she commits not
to sell, convey, or mortgage any listed real estate
without obtaining leave of the court.
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Applications
shall be filed on or before the 10th day of January of each
2nd year thereafter, or oftener if required by the Court, by
each individual surety desiring to continue in said
business, which application must receive the approval of the
Court before the surety shall be entitled to continue to
appear as surety on bonds or recognizances in this Court.
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With
each application for renewal there shall also be filed an
affidavit to the effect that since the surety's previous
qualifications the surety has in all respects abided by the
terms and provisions of these Rules and Chapter 11 of said
Title 23, together with a certificate of the Clerk of this
Court wherein it is stated that the Clerk has examined the
records of the applicant and found them to be in good order
as to form.
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The
original application of every individual proposing to engage
in the bonding business, and every application for renewal
of authority to continue herein, shall state the aggregate
amount of bonds or recognizance in any court of the District
of Columbia upon which such person is surety.
- Fingerprinting. The applicant
shall submit to the taking of the applicant's fingerprints
by the Clerk of this Court, as shall each person authorized
to represent the applicant as agent, clerk or representative
in the bonding business. On all renewals, the Clerk of the
Court, with the approval of the Chief Judge, may waive the
requirement for refingerprinting.
(For further information on
authorization of sureites, see the entire section listed above).
- Notice of Forfeiture
- MICHIE'S DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
COURT RULES ANNOTATED SUPERIOR COURT RULES OF CRIMINAL
PROCEDURE XI. MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS. Rule 116. Bonds and
sureties.
(1)
Declaration. If there is a breach of condition of a bond, the
Court shall declare a forfeiture of the bail.
- When a forfeiture has not been
set aside, the Court shall on motion enter a judgment of
default and execution may issue thereon. By entering into a
bond the obligors submit to the jurisdiction of the Court
and irrevocably appoint the Clerk of the Court as their
agent upon whom any papers affecting their liability may be
served. Their liability may be enforced on motion without
the necessity of an independent action. The motion and such
notice of the motion as the Court prescribes may be served
on the Clerk of the Court, who shall forthwith mail copies
to the obligors at their last known addresses.
- Court decisions
- American Bankers Ins. Co.
v. United States,
App. D.C., 596 A.2d 598 (1991). Bonding company that
had constructive notice of defendant's failure to appear at
status hearing or trial, was not denied due process where
appearance bond was forfeited, and superior court delayed
for nearly 13 months its notifying bonding company of
forfeiture.
- Allotted Time between
Forfeiture Declaration and Payment Due Date.
- (No additional provisions
appear to be given in the statutes in regard to timetables
for payment of forfeitures other than those listed above).
- Forfeiture Defenses.
- MICHIE'S DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
COURT RULES ANNOTATED SUPERIOR COURT RULES OF CRIMINAL
PROCEDURE XI. MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS.
Rule 116. Bonds and sureties.
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The
Court may direct that a forfeiture be set aside, upon such
conditions as the Court may impose, if it appears that
justice does not require the enforcement of the forfeiture.
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No
forfeiture may be set aside in the case of a defendant who
has failed to appear except upon the approval of the judge
who originally imposed the forfeiture.
- When the condition of the bond
has been satisfied or the forfeiture thereof has been set
aside or permitted the Court shall exonerate the obligors
and release any bail. A surety may be exonerated by a
deposit of cash in the amount of the bond or by a timely
surrender of the defendant into custody.
- Court decisions
- Indiana Lumbermen's Mut.
Ins. Co. v. United States,
App. D.C., 640 A.2d 1036 (1994).
- Analysis factors in weighing
set aside. -- In exercising its discretion in deciding
whether to set aside a bond forfeiture, the trial court is
to weigh a number of factors, including, but not limited
to: the willfulness of the defendant's breach of bond
conditions, the participation of the bondsman in
rearresting the defendant, and the prejudice suffered by
the government by the breach of the bond conditions.
- Effect of surety's failure
to fulfill duties. -- A surety which has failed to carry
out its responsibilities has little, if any, basis for
requesting the exercise of the court's discretion in its
favor.
- Remission.
- MICHIE'S DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
COURT RULES ANNOTATED SUPERIOR COURT RULES OF CRIMINAL
PROCEDURE XI. MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS. Rule 116.
Bonds and sureties.
- After entry of such judgment,
the Court may remit it in whole or in part under the
conditions applying to the setting aside of forfeiture in
subparagraph (2) of this section.
- Court decisions
- Allegheny Mut. Cas. Co. v.
United States, App.
D.C., 622 A.2d 1099 (1993). Setting aside of bond
forfeiture is within trial court's discretion. -- Whether
the trial court should set aside a forfeiture of a surety
bond is within the court's sound discretion, and the trial
court's decision will be reversed only upon a showing of
abuse of discretion.
- Bail Agent’s Arrest
Authority.
- (The statutes do not appear to
provide any explicit arrest authority for bail agents.
However, the power to arrest seems to be implied given the
function of bail bonding business as described in the
statutes. Common law tradition is also almost certain to
provide this authority).
- Other Noteworthy Provisions.
- DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CODE 1981
PART IV. CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE AND PRISONERS. TITLE 23.
CRIMINAL PROCEDURE. CHAPTER 11. Professional Bondsmen.§
23-1103 Procuring business through official or attorney for
a consideration prohibited.
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It
shall be unlawful for any bondsman, either directly or
indirectly, to give, donate, lend, contribute, or to promise
to give, donate, lend, or contribute any money, property,
entertainment, or other thing of value whatsoever to any
attorney at law, police officer, deputy United States
marshal, jailer, probation officer, clerk, or other attache
of a criminal court, or public official of any character,
for procuring or assisting in procuring any person to employ
the bondsman to execute as surety any bond for compensation
in any criminal case in the District of Columbia.
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It
shall be unlawful for any attorney at law, police officer,
deputy United States marshal, jailer, probation officer,
clerk, bailiff, or other attache of a criminal court, or
public official of any character, to accept or receive from
a bondsman any money, property, entertainment, or other
thing of value whatsoever for procuring or assisting in
procuring a person to employ a bondsman to execute as surety
any bond for compensation in a criminal case in the District
of Columbia.
§ 23-1104 Attorneys procuring
employment through official or bondsman for a consideration
prohibited.
- It shall be unlawful for any
attorney at law, either directly or indirectly, to give,
loan, donate, contribute, or to promise to give, loan,
donate, or contribute any money, property, entertainment, or
other thing of value whatsoever to, or to split or divide
any fee or commission with, any bondsman, police officer,
deputy United States marshal, probation officer, bailiff,
clerk, or other attache of any criminal court for causing or
procuring or assisting in causing or procuring a person to
employ the attorney to represent him in a criminal case in
the District of Columbia.
§ 23-1105 Receiving other than
regular fee for bonding prohibited; bondsmen prohibited from
endeavoring to secure dismissal or settlement.
- It shall be lawful to charge
for executing a bond in a criminal case in the District of
Columbia, but it shall be unlawful for a bondsman, either
directly or indirectly, to charge, accept, or receive a sum
of money, or other thing of value, other than the regular
fee for bonding, from a person for whom he has executed
bond, for any other service whatever performed in connection
with any indictment, information, or charge upon which the
person is bailed or held in the District of Columbia. It
also shall be unlawful for any bondsman to settle, or
attempt to settle, or to procure or attempt to procure the
dismissal of any indictment, information, or charge against
any person in custody or held upon bond in the District of
Columbia, with a court, or with the prosecuting attorney in
a court in the District of Columbia.
§ 23-1107 Bondsmen prohibited
from entering place of detention unless requested by prisoner;
record of visit to be kept.
- It shall be unlawful for a
bondsman to enter a police precinct, jail, prisoner's dock,
house of detention, or other place where persons in the
custody of the law are detained in the District of Columbia
for the purpose of obtaining employment as a bondsman,
without having been previously called by a person detained
or by some relative or other authorized person acting for or
on behalf of the person detained. Whenever a bondsman enters
a police precinct, jail, prisoner's dock, house of
detention, or other place where persons in the custody of
the law are detained in the District of Columbia, he shall
forthwith give to the person in charge thereof his mission
there and the name of the person calling him and requesting
him to come to such place. That information shall be
recorded by the person in charge of the place of detention
and preserved as a public record, and the failure of the
bondsman to give that information, or the failure of the
person in charge of the place of detention to make and
preserve a record of that information, shall constitute a
violation of this chapter.
§ 23-1109 Giving advance
information of proposed raid.
- It shall not be
unlawful for any police or other peace officer, in
conducting any raid or in executing any search warrant or
warrant of arrest, to communicate to any person engaged in
the bonding business, any fact necessary to enable the
officer to obtain information necessary to carry out the
raid or execute the process.
- Noteworthy State Appellate
Decisions.
Indiana Lumbermen’s Mut.
Ins. Co. v. U.S.
640 A.2d 1036
D.C.
Apr 25, 1994
- Surety filed motion to set
aside forfeiture of personal appearance bond. The Superior
Court of the District of Columbia, Robert I. Richter, J.,
denied motion, and surety appealed. The Court of Appeals,
Sullivan, J., held that: (1) trial court did not abuse its
discretion in denying surety's motion without an evidentiary
hearing, and (2) trial court did not abuse its discretion in
denying motion to vacate forfeiture.
Affirmed.
- Trial court was not required
to conduct hearing on motion to set aside forfeiture of
personal appearance bond, where defendant's attorney made no
attempt to explain or justify his client's absence, record
did not show that surety ever appeared before trial court
prior to defendant's apprehension with explanation of
mitigating circumstances, and surety did not demonstrate
that despite its most diligent efforts to locate defendant,
it could not do so before date of scheduled status hearing.
Criminal Rule 116(h).
Allegheny Mut. Cas. Co. v.
U.S.
622 A.2d 1099
D.C.
Jan 29, 1993
- Bail bondsman appealed from
order of the Superior Court, Colleen Kollar- Kotelly, Trial
Judge, denying motion to set aside bond forfeiture after
nonappearance of defendant at sentencing. The Court of
Appeals, Sullivan, J., held that trial court erred in not
granting evidentiary hearing on motion because it was not in
possession of all facts necessary to make proper
determination.
Reversed and remanded.
American Bankers Ins. Co. v.
U.S.
596 A.2d 598
D.C.
Sep 13, 1991
- Bonding company brought motion
to set aside and vacate forfeiture of appearance bond. The
Superior Court, Evelyn E.C. Queen, J., denied motion.
Bonding company appealed. The Court of Appeals, Belson,
Senior Judge, held that: (1) bonding company had
constructive notice that defendant did not appear at status
hearing or at trial and that, consequently, appearance bond
was forfeited, and therefore, court's delay in notifying
company of forfeiture for nearly 13 months did not violate
due process, and (2) bonding company agent had apparent
authority to execute appearance bond, and therefore bonding
company was liable on forfeited bond.
Affirmed.
United
States v. Nell
515
F.2d 1351
D.C. Cir. 1975
- Hearing on motion to set aside
bond forfeiture. -- Given a proffer of data regarding
asserted departures from the customary practice by the bail
agency and the clerk's office, a bondsman's assistance in
apprehending the defendant and the delay or prejudice
suffered by the government by the breach, it was error for
the trial judge not to have held an evidentiary hearing on
motion of bondsman to set aside bond forfeiture.
Akins
v. United States
679
A.2d 1017
App. D.C., (1996).
- Bail bondsmen are not subject
to the Fourth Amendment. -- Bail bondsmen are not subject to
the Fourth Amendment as it regards the seizure of persons or
personal effects.
- Bounty Hunter Provisions.
At this time, there appear to be
no specific regulations for "Bounty Hunters" in the
District of Columbia statutes.
- Online Case Checking.
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