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Give Sean the bondsman a call to begin: He will talk to you about your situation, and get more details. The next step will be to fill out our online form. Your information will securely be sent to Sean, who will begin the process of bailing out your loved one. Once he has gone through the paperwork, he'll give you a call and he'll work to bail out your loved one. You'll make a payment through our payment portal. Working with Sean is easy and stress-free, because he knows the ins and outs of dozens of jails across Kansas. Easily and quickly bail out your loved one from jail.
Bail bonds are a type of financial guarantee that allows a person who has been arrested and charged with a crime to be released from custody until their court date. When a person is arrested, a bail amount is set by the court, and the defendant has the option of paying the full amount to secure their release. However, many people cannot afford to pay the full bail amount, which is where bail bonds come in. A bail bond is a contract between the defendant, a bail bondsman, and the court, in which the bail bondsman agrees to pay the full bail amount on behalf of the defendant in exchange for a fee, usually 10% of the bail amount. The defendant is then released from custody, and the bail bondsman is responsible for ensuring that the defendant appears in court for all scheduled hearings.
Bail bond companies are licensed by the state and regulated by the Department of Insurance. They are required to follow specific guidelines regarding fees, advertising, and the handling of client funds. The fee charged by a bail bond company is usually non-refundable and represents the company's fee for posting the bail bond. The bail bondsman may also require collateral, such as a house or car, to secure the bond. This is because if the defendant fails to appear in court, the bail bondsman is responsible for paying the full bail amount, and they will use the collateral to cover their losses.
Sean says, "I know you think of a bondsman as someone who gets people out of jail. What I really do is, sort of, switch the custody of the defendant from the jail, to my company, Sean the Bondsman. As long as they are in our “custody” they have to attend ALL the court dates associated with this case, we are on the bond together until either the case is officially dropped, pled out or they are sentenced, it's not just one court date in most cases. If they fail to appear at ANY of those court dates and then compound that problem by not contacting me, you don't know where they are, we can't find them and they evade arrest, EVENTUALLY the court will revoke that bond and the indemnitor (cosigner) is responsible for the entire amount of the bond, plus recovery fees as well as any applicable extradition fees if they are eventually recovered outside this district"