The defendant cannot be released on bail until he or she has completed the sentence on the first crime. Therefore, bail is irrelevant at this time.
2006-09-17 07:48:06
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answer #1
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answered by Carl 7
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the main criteria for grant of bail is whether the accused could meddle with evidence if he is out, and whether he could be a social threat. there is no rule that a person charged with two offences must be denied bail. it is necessary to convince the court in each of the two cases that bail is grantable. there is another side - in case conviction is a certain probability, the same set of imprisonment can be set off in both the cases.
2006-09-17 09:45:28
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answer #2
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answered by HMG M 3
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No, it means the judge on the second charge thinks he's a flight risk so he is not going to give him the chance to run... I read your other question, bigamy charges??? And you want to bail him out WHY?? Get therapy and get into the real world, you're brainwashed!
2006-09-17 09:38:55
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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should have a bond on each charge
2006-09-17 09:43:57
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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No. It's up to the judge(s).
2006-09-17 10:23:26
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answer #5
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answered by joe916 3
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