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I've been arrested. What happens now?

What happens immediately after you’ve been arrested is a bit dependent on the circumstances of your arrest. For individuals who have been arrested for a misdemeanor, depending on the court and the jail, their bond may be set by schedule, and they may be able to post bond and be released within hours. For those arrested on a felony, if arrested without a warrant, the court must make a determination that there was probable cause for the arrest within 72 hours of the arrest. This can be done either by a court appearance or by the court simply reviewing the arrest affidavit submitted by the arresting officer and making a probable cause determination from that document. If the person was arrested pursuant to an arrest warrant, then the probable cause determination has already been made. If bond was not set on the warrant, itself, it will be within 72 hours (unless the arrest was for domestic abuse battery, violation of a protective order, stalking, a sex offense, or a crime involving acts or threats of violence against a family member, household member, or dating partner. (For more information about that, see last week’s post.)

Once bail has been set, whether or not the arrested individual is able to post bail, her case will likely be set for either an initial appearance, bond return date, or arraignment. if bond is posted and the defendant is released, the court may set a bond return date on which the defendant must appear in court. This is simply a date to ensure that the defendant is following the rules of his bail obligation. Arraignment is the first court date on which anything of substance will likely happen in the case (assuming there has not been a bond hearing previously). Arraignment is the court appearance at which the State will file the Bill of Information or other charging document and that document will be read to the defendant in its entirety (unless she waives that reading).

The defendant will then be asked how she pleads to the charges. If she pleas guilty, she will be waiving all additional rights to trial, representation by counsel, against self-incrimination, for compulsory process, etc… and she will be sentenced by the court at that time.

If she pleas not guilty, the case will continue and the State will have to provide her attorney with the discovery in the case. Discovery is simply any evidence the State intends to use against the defendant at the trial of the case.

The case will likely be set for several additional court appearances as the parties negotiate and/or fight about potential resolutions, discovery issues, suppression issues, etc…

If you or someone you know has been arrested and is looking for legal representation, give us a call to set up a consult at (318) 459-9111.