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CO family bond company http://fugitiverecovery.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=26&t=3114 |
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Author: | Kathy [ Sat 10 Feb 2007 23:51 ] |
Post subject: | CO family bond company |
I don't know them personally, but we have a couple of mutual frequent flyers. http://www.glenwoodindependent.com/arti ... /FRONTPAGE Bounty hunting is a family affair -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Click to Enlarge Browse and Buy Post Independent Photos From left, Katie Biorn, Dick Ross, and Judi Ross, make up Ross Bail Bonds and intend to raise the standards of what to expect from bail bondsmen, Thursday in Glenwood. Vail Daily/Shane Macomber -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- J.K. Perry Glenwood Springs, CO Colorado January 20, 2007 GLENWOOD SPRINGS - Katie Biorn plays the flirt, drug addict and other roles to find "clients" who skip court on her dime. Her bounty hunter's uniform consists of street clothes that cover six butterfly-heavy tattoos spread across her 27-year-old body. She carries a hidden badge and mace, but never a gun. Her tongue is pierced. "I'm really a prissy girl, not the girl you'd expect to be a bounty hunter," said Biorn, whose parents own Glenwood Springs-based Ross Bail Bonds, which issues bonds in Glenwood Springs, Aspen and Eagle. Two months ago, Biorn and fellow bounty hunters staked out a Wyoming methamphetamine lab waiting for a missing client known to frequent the spot. The man failed to show after 10 hours, so the bounty hunters went inside and posed as his friends to find out where he was. The homeowner told them he was staying nearby. "I'll act as a decoy to get information," she said. "You kind of have to feel the situation to determine what role you take." The bounty hunters went to the house, where parked in the open garage they found a Harley-Davidson they knew belonged to the man. Biorn and the others were let into the house where a mysterious arm partly hung outside a closet. They pulled the man out. "It's definitely an adrenaline rush because you never know what's going to happen - if they're going to freak out or if they're on drugs," Biorn said. "Once you get them in the car it's a feeling of relief knowing you don't have that bond hanging over your head." Biorn brought the man back to the Glenwood Springs jail, which is near Ross Bail Bonds. Biorn, a mother of triplet girls and an adopted nephew, became a bounty hunter four years ago to help father Dick Ross and to keep the business in the family. She had previously owned several tattoo shops, which she sold. Family affair Four bounty hunters work at the business - Biorn, Dick and Judi Ross, and Chris Truax. "I love working with my family," she said. "It definitely works out. We have each other's back." Ross opened the bonds business 11 years ago. He knew from years working as a Garfield County Sheriff's deputy that bondsmen can earn good money, he said. "It can be lucrative if you play your cards right," wife Judi Ross added. Clients pay 15 percent of their bond and a co-signer vouches for the rest. The bond is supposed to ensure someone charged with a crime shows up for court. But when a client misses court, can't be found and no one pays, the Ross' must pay the court themselves, which only happens about once every hundred times, Judi Ross said. "Every day you pray you don't get a certified letter, because that's how you know someone has missed court," she said. "We try to put good bonds together so it doesn't come to that point. We have to be cautious. Transients and illegals we have to be very careful about because they're very hard to track." Non-violent offenders When tracking someone, the Ross Bail Bonds bounty hunters are careful. They don't carry guns, they'll call police if they need help and they avoid dangerous situations where their clients might become violent. "No bond in our opinion is worth a life, including the person with the bond," Judi Ross said. "We're not in the business to get anybody hurt. We're in the business to make sure they get a fair trial." Besides, the people who skip town normally act civilized when they're caught. "Most of the time you find them in closets or under the trailer skirting or at a friend's house," Judi Ross said. "Once they're caught they're handcuffed and usually not violent. Most of the time what they do is cry." As Biorn searches for bounty, her kids often stay with grandma Judi Ross and play bondsgirl or bondsboy. Biorn hopes the next generation chooses another profession. "It's cool, but being an attorney or judge would be awesome," Biorn said. |
Author: | jlsmith [ Mon 12 Feb 2007 06:42 ] |
Post subject: | |
Great article JLS |
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