Thursday, December 23, 2010

Bail Bondsman In Hot Water After Shooting

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (WVLT)- A bail bondsman and the suspect he was trying to take into custody are both facing charges this morning-- after a violent scene in the parking lot of Clinton Plaza.

A KPD officer responded to a shots fired called at the North Knoxville shopping center-- when he came across the bondsman-- Darrin Charette-- holding James Branam at gun-point.



Charette, who works for "Donna's Bail Bonds" out of Jefferson County, claims he was trying to detain Banam on a warrant out of that county.

Police believe that Charette fired several shots in the suspect's direction, when he tried to make a run for it.

The scene unfolded near an open day care and a number of other businesses.

Both the bondsman and his intended catch are facing a number charges, while Branam was returned to Jefferson County to face the prior charges.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Judge Loses Bench Over Bail Bonds Gifts

Seems like recently we've seen quite a few bondsmen arrested for illegal business practices or issues relating to their bonding agencies. However, someone from the other side of the fence has been identified in a bail bonds scandal. Thomas Porteous, a well known federal judge in Louisiana, has been removed from the bench after a US Senate hearing. At issue, was his acceptance of gifts from bail bondsmen. Gifts included trips, meals and other items of value. The problem is that these gifts may have affected the judge's consideration of bail bonds and treatment of the bondsmen on the cases.



Testifying against Porteous was a a New Orleans bail bondsman, would said that he took the judge on expensive trips, provided lavish meals at expensive restaurants, and had his cars filled with gas and washed. In exchange, the judge would set bail for defendants at the highest amount possible. Therefore the bail bondsman would earn higher bail bonds fees.

While the Senate convicted him 69-27, the charges actually pertain to his time as a state judge. This is unusual to say the least, that a federal judge was removed for actions stemming for time prior to the federal judgeship. Although, this was far from Porteous' only knock. Other allegations relate to unrelated cases where he improper contact with attorneys or false statements during his own bankruptcy proceedings.

Even though Congress found Porteous guilty, he was not charged with any criminal offenses. After an exensive 8 year investigation by the the Justice Department and FBI, no indictments were handed down. The judge blamed gambling and alcohol as reasons for his actions.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Bail Bond Agency To Forfeit $100,000 Bond

A federal judge has ordered a bail bond company to forfeit the $100,000 it promised to guarantee court appearances by an Ohio woman who later fled the country following her corporate fraud conviction.

Garcia Bail Bonds of Phoenix had asked the judge to reconsider after fugitive Rebecca Parrett was found and arrested in Mexico in October.

U.S. District Court Judge Algenon Marbley ruled Wednesday that the bond company had done nothing to locate Parrett after she fled and that the government had expended considerable resources tracking her.

An attorney for the bond company says he has not yet seen the ruling.

Parrett was convicted in 2008 in the $1.9 billion fraud case. She is being held in the Franklin County Jail in Columbus following her return to Ohio about a week ago.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- An Ohio fugitive convicted in a $1.9 billion corporate fraud case has returned to Ohio after her arrest in Mexico in October.

Rebecca Parrett was being held in the Franklin County Jail in Columbus on Wednesday following her return to the state about a week ago.

Drew Shadwick of the U.S. Marshal's Service says a court date has not yet been set for Parrett.

She disappeared in March 2008 after she was convicted of securities fraud, wire fraud and other charges in a scheme at health care financing company National Century Financial Enterprises.

A judge sentenced her in absentia to 25 years in prison.

A message was left Wednesday with attorney Gregory Peterson, who has previously represented Parrett.

To read more go to: Bloomberg Business Week

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Celebrity Loses $1 Million Bail

American actor RANDY QUAID and his wife EVI QUAID have forfeited $1 million in bail bonds after failing to show up for their latest court date, less than a month after they missed their previous hearing, reports the New York Post.


The couple, who were scheduled to appear in court on charges of felony burglary, failed to attend the hearing in Santa Barbara California yesterday (16th November 2010). They were previously scheduled to appear in court on October 18th 2010 on the same charges, and after failing to attend, the judge issued a warrant for their arrest. The Quaids have been the subject of much media attention in recent months due to their strange behaviour. After initially being arrested for 'squatting' in a home that did not belong to them, the couple claimed they were the next intended victims on a 'Hollywood death list', which, they say, had already caused the deaths of HEATH LEDGER, CHRIS PENN, and DAVID CARRADINE.

The couple's lawyer, BOB SANGER, told the judge yesterday that the Quaids had not appeared because Randy's passport had been confiscated by Canadian authorities after he attempted to claim asylum there. Warrants for the couple's arrest are still in effect, and Judge DONNA GECK said that the $500,000 bail bonds placed on both individuals had now been forfeited

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Three Arrested For Posting Fake Bail Bonds

This one comes to us from India. While we try to focus on bail bnds issues in the United States, thi is just to interesting to pass up. Imagine what would hapen to a bail bonsman in the who got caught for trying to post fake bail bonds.  
LUDHIANA: Three people have been booked on the directions of a judicial magistrate first class for having submitted fake bail bonds in a case in the court of Judicial Magistrate first class, Deepti Gupta.


The accused were identified as Sandeep Singh of Sunder Nagar, Ludhiana, Malkit Singh of Basti Bajigar, Misal Nagar, Doraha and Lal Chand of Doraha. They were booked under sections 420 (Cheating and dishonestly inducing delivery of property), 199 (for false statement made in declaration which is by law receivable as evidence), 200 (for making a declaration which is inadmissible merely upon the ground of some informality) and 120-B (punishment of criminal conspiracy) of the Indian Penal Code.


The complainant stated that the accused had furnished false bail bonds. The accused had earlier too furnished such bonds. "We have arrested all the accused in the case," said investigation officer Jaspal Singh.


Sources said there was a need to check this illegality that was being highlighted almost everyday and strict action taken to root out the problems completely. In petty offences like cheque-bounce cases, personal bonds should be accepted and if the accused fails to appear in court, an action for declaring him a proclaimed offender should be initiated straight away. This would help to curb illegal acts like those of the furnishing of fake bail bonds and the harassment of people for acquiring the same, said advocate Deepjot Singh.
For more please go to: India Times

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Bail Bonds Agency Arrests Journalist

DropZone is a multi function business in Anchorage Alaska that offers bail enforcement services. Their private security firm handcuffed and detained a journalist at a local town hall meeting.

William Fulton, head of DropZone, said his firm handles VIP and concert security, bail bond enforcement, and the occasional domestic abuse case as well. Fulton noted that they were hired for the Republican Senate nominee's, Joe Miller, town hall at Central Middle School in Anchorage because the school district requires security for private events.

Tony Hopfinger, the founder and editor of online news site the Alaska Dispatch, was handcuffed and detained by DropZone yesterday after repeatedly trying to question and videotape Miller.

Lt. Dave Parker, Public Information Officer for the Anchorage PD, told TPM that under Alaska law, non-law enforcement can conduct "private persons arrest, which is commonly called a citizens arrest," when they witness a crime being committed. This, he said, is what happened at Miller's event.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Bail Bondsman To The Stars

A SELLOUT crowd and a $300,000 payday awaited the comedian Katt Williams one November evening two years ago. It was to be his first performance at Carnegie Hall.

Just one problem: Mr. Williams was in jail.

He had been arrested that morning with members of his entourage at 28th Street and Broadway on gun possession charges. The show’s promoters were poised to pull the plug unless Mr. Williams’s lawyer, Charles A. Ross, could guarantee that he would appear.

For Mr. Ross, there was only one person to call: Ira. Ira Judelson, bail bondsman, is an inevitable entry in the BlackBerrys of New York defense lawyers, an A.T.M. for desperate rappers, actors, athletes, executives and madams with pocketbooks much fatter than his.

When Mr. Ross called that November afternoon, Mr. Judelson did what he does. He talked with two of Mr. Williams’s managers about pledging their homes as collateral, ran checks to see which had more equity, then had the owner of that one sign over the property.

Read Full Article at: New York Times

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Woman Claims Bail Bondsman Sexually Coerced Her

A woman who says she was coerced into having sex with a bail agent earlier this month will file a lawsuit against the man on Monday, her attorney said.

The 20-year-old Ocoee woman claims Allen Robert Burns Jr. of Mike Snapp Bail Bonds demanded collateral and said he would revoke her bond and put her back in jail unless she had sex with him, according to a draft of the suit.



The woman complied but then reported the incident to the Orange County Sheriff's Office.

Burns, 36, of Apopka, was arrested Jan. 20 and faces sexual assault charges. He was released from the Orange County Jail on $10,000 bond.

"This is a sad case of a man abusing his authority and position of power to instill fear and take advantage of a woman he should have been helping," said Richard Schwamm, the woman's attorney.

The woman, who has asked to remain anonymous because the nature of the crime against her, was arrested in October on a theft charge. That charge was dropped Jan. 25.

Sheriff's deputies investigated a 2005 claim that Burns sexually assaulted a woman who described herself as his friendly acquaintance, the Sheriff's Office said.

The sheriff's office also referred a 2008 sexual-assault claim against Burns to the Orlando Police Department.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Bail Bondsman Shot And Killed

RANCHO SANTA MARGARITA, Calif. — Authorities say the owner of a bail bonds business was shot and killed by another man in a home in an upscale neighborhood in Orange County.

Sheriff's spokesman Jim Amormino said Sunday that Dean Patrick Maldonado was shot by a 51-year-old guest of the woman who owned the home in Rancho Santa Margarita.

Amormino said Maldonado entered the home through a rear sliding door late Saturday night, and the shooting occurred sometime afterward.


He said the circumstances of the shooting were not clear.

Maldonado's daughter Megan Maldonado says the home belonged to her father's girlfriend.

Property records show that the homeowner is Linda Shaw-Sprowl, a personal trainer.

The name of the suspect has not been released.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

PreTrial Release Debate Heats Up

A so-called ``bailout'' for the bail bond industry is dissolving into political gamesmanship as the legislation advances to the House floor.

The sponsor, a future House speaker, stripped controversial language last month to disarm a skeptical panel -- but restored a similar provision Monday with the consent of friendlier lawmakers. And now a prominent bail bond business is being criticized for hosting a fundraiser for state Rep. Sandy Adams just three days after she helped pushed the bill through her committee. ``This whole thing smells,'' said Hillsborough County Sheriff's Col. Jim Previtera. The measure would eliminate pretrial release programs operated in several Florida counties by limiting eligibility only to indigent, nonviolent defendants. It also revokes a county's ability to charge a fee, with exceptions for court-ordered GPS monitoring and rehabilitation programs.

BARBED EXCHANGES It's a polarizing battle, drawing barbed exchanges in hearings as the bail bond industry fights what it sees as an overzealous government competing with business.


The local entities -- led by sheriffs -- contend the measure will make it harder for defendants to get out of jail and cost taxpayers millions more to house and feed inmates awaiting trial. The debate consumed the House Criminal and Civil Justice Policy Council for more than an hour before it easily won approval. It now goes to the full House but faces an uphill battle in the Senate. In advancing it, Rep. Chris Dorworth, the anointed House leader in 2014, drew criticism for his tactics. He helped add a controversial provision after previously deleting similar language in a committee where he needed the support of a Democrat, who gave it an edge, 6-5.

Dorworth said the new language was a compromise that lets judges determine if a defendant is indigent and able to participate in the pretrial programs. But Rep. Perry Thurston, a Plantation Democrat, suggested it appeared disingenuous. ``I think it's potentially an attempt to do through the back door what he couldn't do through the front door,'' he said.

FUNDRAISER Adams, R-Orlando, who is running for Congress, is also drawing rebukes from critics.
The president and lobbyist for Accredited, a prominent Central Florida bail bond insurer, hosted a fundraiser for Adams on March 29, just days after her House criminal justice budget committee passed the bill.
``It is very clear to me that when you have special interests with influence, these influences sometimes get preference over taxpayer's interests,'' said Pinellas County Sheriff Jim Coats. Adams, a former sheriff's deputy, said she supported the bill but didn't lobby for it. She disputed the timing. ``I never thought of it that way,'' she said. ``It had no bearing.'' The event raised at least $10,000. Deborah Jallad, the Accredited president, said she is a friend of Adams and also rejected any insinuations about the close timing of the vote and the fundraiser.

State law forbids lawmakers from raising campaign cash during the 60-day legislative session but provides exemptions for those running for Congress. All together, Accredited donated $15,000 to state lawmakers in the 2010 cycle and other bail bond companies added thousands more. Dorworth, the sponsor, received more than $4,000. He said it didn't influence his efforts.




Read more:Miami Herald
BY JOHN FRANK
Herald/Times Tallahassee Bureau

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Maryland Bail Bondsman Arrested On Tax Charges

Baltimore's leading bail bondsman and his son were arrested Wednesday on federal charges of filing false tax returns and illegally running an insurance business, among other counts.

Milton Tillman Jr., 54, and his son, Milton Tillman III, 35, who run 4 Aces Bail Bonds Inc. and other companies, were each released pending trial during an initial appearance in Baltimore U.S. District Court on Wednesday afternoon. Neither man had been able to review the 28-count indictment before being brought to court.

Tillman Jr.'s attorney said they "had known about this case for some time," however.

Federal agents raided Tillman Jr.'s offices a year and a half earlier, seizing financial, phone and business records belonging to him and his son, along with records from a longshoremen's union at the Dundalk Marine Terminal. Milton Jr. is also charged with defrauding Ports of America Baltimore Inc. by overrepresenting the hours he worked as a longshoreman.

He's been prosecuted federally twice. He pleaded guilty in 1993 to trying to bribe a city zoning board member, and in 1996 was sentenced to 57 months in prison on charges he failed to pay taxes and funneled money into a nightclub he owned. The new indictment, returned last month and unsealed Wednesday, contains similar charges.

Milton Jr. is charged with conspiracy to defraud the Treasury Department by underrepresenting his earnings as a bail bondsman while spending large amounts to acquire apartment buildings, pay court fines and maintain his BMW along with hefty premiums on nearly $10 million in life insurance. He's also charged with five counts of filing false tax returns, one count of unlawfully engaging in the insurance business (his previous convictions prevent it), and 15 counts of wire fraud.

Tillman III is charged with the conspiracy, five counts of false tax statements, and one count of permitting a prohibited person - his father - to participate in the insurance business.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Bail Bondsman To Be Sentenced For Tax Evasion

A Dorchester County bail bondsman is awaiting sentencing on a tax evasion charge, authorities said Friday.

Ernest Monroe Smith, 38, of Ridgeville, pleaded guilty late Thursday to one count of willfully making and filing a false U.S. individual income tax return, said acting U.S. Attorney Kevin F. McDonald.

Smith operates Ernest Smith Bail Bonds in the St. George area, McDonald said.

In the years 2005 and 2006, Smith received most of his bond fees in cash and deposited those fees in increments over time into his business bank account, which gave the appearance that his taxable income was less than the actual amount, McDonald said.

Smith admitted in court that he only reported gross receipts of $182,345 from his bail bonding business on his 2006 tax return, when in fact he had at least $463,318 in gross receipts that year, McDonald said.

Smith also understated his bail bonding gross receipts on his 2005 U.S. individual income tax return, McDonald said.

As part of a plea agreement, Smith stipulated he had underpaid his taxes by $95,629 in 2006, and by $53,876 in 2005, McDonald said.

The maximum penalty Smith could receive is a fine of $250,000, imprisonment of three years, supervised release of one year, and the costs of prosecution. Smith also has to pay the back taxes, McDonald said.

Senior U.S. District Judge Sol Blatt Jr. will sentence Smith at a later date, McDonald said. The case was investigated by agents of the IRS Criminal Investigation Division. Assistant U.S. Attorney Dean H. Secor of the Charleston office prosecuted the case.

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Bail Bonds Alterations Get Scrutiny

Hearing today • An agent for a bail bond firm that benefited from the changes has been subpoenaed. A court official who signed a judge's name in one case has been asked to attend.

ST. LOUIS - A judge said drug defendant Jimmy Gibson needed $50,000 in cash to get out of jail. One week later, Gibson paid just $5,000 and walked free. Nobody has been able to explain how it happened.

Gibson's release - and that of at least seven other defendants, some accused of violent crimes - has drawn an investigation by St. Louis Circuit Court judges, concern from the prosecutor and a complaint to the FBI.

Gibson's lawyer said he had not asked for the bond to be changed. In fact, he didn't know it had been lowered until told by a reporter.

Judge Jack Garvey said he never authorized it, although his name is on a bond reduction order that showed up in Gibson's court file only after a Post-Dispatch inquiry about it.

Court employee Mary Catherine Moran, who had signed Garvey's name to the document, told reporters that if he didn't authorize her to do it, then it must have been some other judge. She doesn't remember who.

Judges looking for answers have focused attention on Moran, whose job as "pretrial release commissioner" is to advise them on what bond to set for criminal defendants. She does not have authority to set or change felony case bonds on her own.

They also are focusing on Bob Block Bail Bonds, a business that benefited in each of the eight examples.

Garvey has subpoenaed the Block agent who wrote Gibson's bond to attend a hearing today to answer questions about it. The judge has asked - but not formally ordered - that Moran attend, too.

Moran insists she has done nothing wrong.

The bail bond company did not respond to messages. Its lawyer, Nick Zotos, said the firm has been around longer than any of its competitors. "The Blocks are still standing, and you only do that with savvy business practices and if you're above board."

Get out of jail card

In all but the most serious crimes, a defendant has a right to release on bail pending trial. That generally means posting money to be forfeited if he or she doesn't appear in court.

A judge sets the amount and specifies whether it must be in cash or can be posted by property or secured through a bail bondsman. In a secured bond, the defendant pays a 10 percent fee for the bondsman to pledge the full amount.

That word "secured" can make a big difference. A $50,000 cash bond requires the accused to come up with $50,000. A $50,000 secured bond requires only $5,000. Bondsmen get no business from cash-only bail.

Moran's office recommends bail terms in a job unique to St. Louis. In every other Missouri court circuit, judges decide on their own what is appropriate, considering the charge and the defendant's past and personal circumstances.

Moran, 59, of Florissant, joined the office in the 1970s as a deputy commissioner and has held the top spot for 11 years. She is paid about $81,000 a year and has six employees to provide round-the-clock screening of people under arrest. The job is sometimes called "bond commissioner."

Under Missouri Supreme Court rules, a bond modification must be sought in a motion to the court, with all parties notified.

In the eight cases identified by the Post-Dispatch, judges initially ordered the accused to put up $1,000 to $50,000 in cash for release. A short time later, each was changed to shift terms from cash to secured, or a court official accepted a different bond amount from what was ordered, with no explanation.

In every instance, there was no record in the public court files indicating who asked for the change.

Lowering threshold

Prompted by the newspaper's questions, Presiding Judge David Dowd said procedural changes will be made. He also appointed a panel of judges to review the policies and procedures, and learn what happened.

In an interview, Dowd said he was "troubled" by the Post-Dispatch findings.

Sources told the newspaper that they have raised concerns about Moran's office with the U.S. attorney's office and the FBI. As is standard practice, neither agency would confirm or deny the contact or an investigation.

Circuit Court Clerk Mariano Favazza said the unusual methods used in these cases amounted to "lowering the threshold for the defendant to step out of jail."

Dowd and Moran agreed during a joint interview last week that only an attorney representing a defendant, the defendant or, in rare cases, a relative, should ask a judge to change bail. They agreed that Moran does not have authority to ask for a change.

Moran said she prepares the paperwork for a change only when asked by a judge.

"'I don't walk into a judge's chambers and say, 'Here, can you change this?'" she said.

All of the lawyers, defendants and relatives who were reached by the newspaper in the cases at issue said they made no such requests. In at least two, the lawyers remained unaware even after the fact.

Two of the judges who signed orders changing the bonds, Ed Sweeney and Mark Neill, said Moran had brought the requests to them. The judges said they acted on Moran's recommendation, and that it has been a longtime practice in the courthouse. Both said they believed it to be proper.

"She's our commissioner and an employee of the bench," Neill said.

But other judges, some lawyers and Favazza all said it would be improper for a non-attorney to seek such a change, as it would amount to practicing law without a license.

"The law is clear that to advocate for someone in court, you need to be an attorney," Favazza said. "There is no difference between going into a courtroom or into a judge's chambers to ask for a bond modification. The end result is the same."

Sweeney said he would like the court to review the issue, complaining, "The language is unclear."

Circuit Attorney Jennifer Joyce said it's an important issue.

"We want to and should be notified every time there is a bond modification request - regardless of who makes that request - so that we may appear at a hearing to represent the victim or provide the opportunity for the victim to appear," she said in a written statement.

"Victims have a right to be present at court proceedings - just as defendants do - and to be informed by the prosecutor regarding hearings, any release of such person on bond or for any other reason, guilty pleas, probation revocations, etc. We take this responsibility to inform victims very seriously."

Charles Barberio, a lawyer, said that when he sought a bond reduction for a client Dec. 23, a judge said the decision would have to wait at least five days for proper notifications. Barberio said he returned Dec. 30 to find that the man had been inexplicably released six days earlier.

Joyce said she is "confident that these occurrences will be fully analyzed, and processes and procedures will be put in place to prevent these types of events from happening in the future."

Thwarting strategy

Whatever is happening, it works to thwart an attempt by judges to use bail as a way to streamline court cases and save taxpayers money.

Many defendants scrape together every last dime to pay bondsmen for their liberty, leaving nothing to hire lawyers. Overworked public defenders may reject such cases, reasoning that if these people had money for bond, they had money for attorneys.

So defendants would appear at hearing after hearing without counsel, jamming the docket with stalled cases until exasperated judges finally appointed lawyers at public expense to free the clog.

Several years ago, Sweeney, the judge, devised an answer that colleagues call a "Sweeney bond" or "split bond."

A judge sets a combination of secured bail, plus cash bail that's probably beyond the defendant's means. To get out, the accused must hire a lawyer to get the cash bail reduced, and still would have enough left over to pay for the secured bond.

It prompts defendants to obtain representation but also pulls dollars from bondsmen's pockets to pay lawyers.

who changed the bail?

Today, Judge Garvey will sentence Gibson, 39, who was convicted Oct. 8 of possession of a controlled substance.

After the jury verdict, Garvey initially refused to release Gibson on bail pending sentencing. But pressed by the defense lawyer, the judge set bond Oct. 23 at $50,000 in cash, knowing it was beyond Gibson's means.

A week later, Gibson was freed after paying a Bob Block bondsman $5,000 to post a $50,000 secured bond.

The paperwork to change bail to a secured bond from cash did not appear in the court file when a reporter inquired at the end of December. Nor was there any explanation of who asked for the modification.

On Jan 8, Moran produced an order, dated Oct. 30, that modified the bond and said Garvey authorized the change by phone. She has acknowledged signing his name, with her initials beside it. But Garvey said the call never happened.

In last week's interview, Moran said it must have been another judge, and that she probably wrote down the wrong name. She said she couldn't recall which judge had called her, nor explain who asked for the change.

"That's where my memory is a haze," she said.

Gibson's lawyer, Jermaine Wooten, said it wasn't him. "I don't think it was ever changed," Wooten said by phone last week.

While Garvey cannot talk about a pending case, he said that in general terms, he would be surprised to find out that someone was changing bonds that he set.

"Judges are very specific when they set bonds. I would never think that someone was changing my order after I made it," he said.

Another cash bond was changed with even less explanation.

St. Louis prosecutors charged Bobby Ray Williams, 62, with domestic assault and armed criminal action in April 2008 after police accused him of striking someone with his hand and a metal pole, and trying to choke and suffocate the person.

On June 20, 2008, Circuit Judge Calea Stovall-Reid set a $25,000 cash-only bail, "due to the nature of the charges."

The next month, Moran's office accepted a $25,000 secured bond from a Bob Block representative, although no paperwork to alter Stovall-Reid's order appears in the file.

Moran said missing paperwork would be the fault of Favazza's staff, which is responsible for maintaining court records. Favazza said they can only file the documents they receive, and that she has circumvented his office.

Post-Dispatch reporters examined about three dozen court files involving bonds written by Block, yielding the eight examples of unexplained reductions.

Moran suggested that non-Block cases were handled no differently, and produced 26 for reporters to examine. All them appeared to follow court rules.

The Block company ranks second in the value of bonds written in the city courts, at $3.6 million in 2009, according to the clerk's office.

Its website boasts that it has been "Putting feet back on the street since 1959!"

Other cases under investigation

In every instance, bond commissioner Mary Catherine Moran's office handled paperwork for the bail changes. Prosecutors were not notified. In each case, Bob Block Bail Bonds posted the bond.

- Emmanuel Mays, charged Dec. 22 with first-degree robbery and armed criminal action. Judge Ed Sweeney modified terms of a $40,000 bond on Dec. 24. Mays' attorney went to court a week later for a bond reduction, unaware his client was already out.

- Harold Perkins, charged Nov. 24 with two felony weapons charges. Judge Paula Bryant set a $20,000 split bond. The next day, Sweeney changed it to secured. Perkins' family said a Block bondsman arranged the switch.

- Terri Marie Jennings, charged Nov. 22 with first-degree domestic assault. Bryant set a $30,000 split bond. The next day, Sweeney changed it to secured. Jennings didn't hire an attorney until two weeks later.

- Darryl A. Haywood, charged Dec. 2 with felony drug trafficking and possession. Bryant set a $15,000 split bond Dec. 14. The next day, Judge Mark Neill changed it. Haywood didn't hire a lawyer until a month later.

- Dontra Snider, charged June 25, 2008, with felony drug trafficking, unlawful use of a weapon and resisting arrest. Sweeney set a $20,000 split bond. On July 3, he switched it to $20,000 secured. The public defender's office said it did not seek the change.

- Timothy Pruitt, charged Dec. 6 with felony theft. Bryant set a $10,000 split bond. A week later, Neill changed it to secured. Supporting paperwork showed up in the court file only after a Post-Dispatch inquiry. The public defender's office said it did not seek the change.

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