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SO WHY WERE THE BONDS WRITTEN? $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ http://fugitiverecovery.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=3072 |
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Author: | KARMA [ Thu 08 Feb 2007 19:55 ] |
Post subject: | SO WHY WERE THE BONDS WRITTEN? $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ |
Bounty hunters are searching for two men who have jumped bail, a bail bondsman said. Brenda Flores with AA Best Bail Bonds said Eduardo Zermenio, 38, and Raul Gonzales, 31, jumped bail and are considered dangerous.Zermenio was out on $100,000 bond after he was charged with aggravated sexual assault of his pre-teen stepdaughter, Flores said. "To me, it's not even human," Flores said. "He's a predator. He's out there to get other children also." Flores said he goes by different names such as Eddie or Baltazar. Bounty hunters have tracked him to known hangouts in an area off of Blanco Road and Edison Street, Flores said. Flores said Gonzales is wanted on charges of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and drug possession with intent to deliver. "This is a pusher," Flores said. "This is a person that needs to get off the streets." Gonzales is known to hang out near downtown off Euclid and Upson and at places on the South Side. Gonzales and Zermenio have practically disappeared with the help of friends and family, Flores said. There is a $1,000 reward for each man. If you know where Zermenio or Gonzales are, please call AA Best Bail Bonds at 210-225-2121. If the men are caught, a judge will remand them to jail without bond and they will stay there until the case goes to trial. |
Author: | AWOBB [ Thu 08 Feb 2007 20:31 ] |
Post subject: | |
We will not write bonds for predator's. I just refuse. I don't need the money that bad, Plus they are the ones who run the most. It anin't worth it to me. Let some other Bond company do it. I really don't understand why they did in the first place, except that they were looking at $$$$$$$. Now they are paying the price. What state was this in??? |
Author: | KARMA [ Thu 08 Feb 2007 20:44 ] |
Post subject: | |
OOOOOPS! I did kinda forget to put that in there ---- San Antonio, TX. $$$$$$$$$$$$ was exactly why the bonds were written and look who is crying that they are scary guys now. But then we all know that there some that do the dumbest things for that God Almighty Dollar ! I look at every bond that I write on an individual basis. I have bonded a couple of sex charges and they have gone on to be redeemed in court _ I have only had two that took pleas and it was a good move on their parts due to the parties involved and the fact they would not have had a snow balls chance in hell in front of the Judge much less a jury. I never write for the $$$$$ no matter how much I need the cash. |
Author: | Kathy [ Fri 09 Feb 2007 00:18 ] |
Post subject: | |
It's not predators, but mainly drug trafficers in my area. I rejected 1 in Dec. from CA on a $100K bond for 27.7 # of meth who was a Mexican National, and 2 in January from NYC on $150K each bonds for 38# of marijuana. Another agent bonded the CA one out (I rejected it without full cash collateral), and surprise, surprise, he didn't show. I heard that the agent supposedlhy had $300K in collateral, but from what his cosigners told me, it is all out of state. I am still waiting for updates on the forfeiture. The 2 from NY are still in custody, but I know one has gotten his bond lowered to $30K (happened to be in court that day), still out of reach since all agents have required cash collateral. I accepted a few collect calls and did three-ways until I heard that he was lying about being able to contact his girlfriend and other "peeps" and still couldn't get the collateral. The last one I took was under another name, and I told him not to call me again, and he hasn't. I have dealt with enough other bond agents, and learned enough with chasing their bad bonds to know who to write, and who not to write. Personal or professional, it is a learned experience. |
Author: | DMARTZ [ Fri 09 Feb 2007 08:18 ] |
Post subject: | |
Not only did she write a bad bond, and i would venture to say there's not enough collateral to cover it and they were on a payment plan.(Just speculation on my part). She wants to offer a low-ball-er fee for the recovery & rearrest of two armed and dangerous fugitives. This business has sunk to a real low over the years. |
Author: | tsuggs [ Fri 09 Feb 2007 11:15 ] |
Post subject: | |
All we can hope for is bail agents like these lose their asses and go out of business very quickly! |
Author: | AWOBB [ Fri 09 Feb 2007 16:07 ] |
Post subject: | |
Tony, I would have to agree with you!! |
Author: | KARMA [ Fri 09 Feb 2007 19:29 ] |
Post subject: | |
They do go out of business - they get cocky thinking that they know everything and then here ya go. |
Author: | AWOBB [ Fri 09 Feb 2007 20:12 ] |
Post subject: | |
Yap!!!! |
Author: | Kathy [ Sat 10 Feb 2007 00:45 ] |
Post subject: | |
Maybe the reward was just for info leading to the arrest of the suspects and she intended to have LE, other BE, or herself make the apprehension. I am in no way taking up for her, but it does say reward, not that she is paying a BEA that amount for the fee to make the apprehension. If someone provides the info and she can get LE to make the arrest then she has saved a chunk. I think any bail agent could legitimately do the same. If she hires a BEA, I'm sure she will have to pay the going rate, as would any of us. Then again, it was a really stupid bond... I was chatting with our head jailer today while doing a bond, and he asked if I had "so-and-so" on bond. I told him that I didn't, but one of the agents we hunt for had him a couple of years ago. Apparently the guy was arrested in CA, and was being extradited back here. We had a team looking for him well over a year ago, and his contacts there denied any info. Ironically, I got a phone call a few months ago wanting a reward for turning him in. I told them that one may have been given at the time, but it was well beyond the bondsman's final date for remission, so he wasn't worth s*** to us now. Then they wanted to know if the jail or court would give them something. I said that I doubted it since it was only a $2500 bond. I don't remember what the subsequent bench warrant amount was. Apparently I was wrong about the extradition, since they are bringing him back at a cost to the county of $1400. I guess they have decided to crack down more, because around the same time we were looking for this guy, they rejected an extradition from El Paso, TX on the same size felony bond. |
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