How Quickly Can You Get Out of Jail After Getting Arrested for Drug Crimes?
Sometimes cruise ships that depart from Florida seem like a magnet for trouble. If the norovirus doesn’t get you, medical errors by the infirmary staff will. The cruise that led to a zoo in Colombia where an anteater scratched a boy with its sharp claws started in Florida. Earlier this year, a passenger fell overboard from a cruise ship that had recently departed from Florida, before the ship reached its first port of call. When you consider things from this perspective, getting stopped by police on the way to the port to board a cruise ship may be the lesser of two misadventures. In August 2024, Jerlonda Cason was traveling on I-95 in Flagler County, headed for Port Canaveral, where she was about to go on a cruise, when a police car pulled her over because police suspected the driver of driving with a suspended license. The officer told Cason that the car smelled like marijuana, and Cason admitted that she had been smoking cannabis without a medical cannabis card. She also told the officer that she had MDMA tablets hidden inside her clothing. A search of her vehicle yielded small bags of cannabis packaged for resale and several thousand dollars in cash. She was taken to the Flagler County jail but was released less than three days later. If you have been arrested on suspicion of drug crimes and want to maximize your chances of remaining free while your case is pending, contact a Florida drug offenses attorney.
If You Can Stay Silent Until Your Lawyer Arrives, Your Chances of Getting Out of Jail Quickly Are Good
Staying behind bars until your trial is the exception rather than the rule, even if the drug charges you are facing are more serious than simple possession. The state is often willing to set a bail amount, and in nonviolent crime cases, sometimes to let defendants with pending charges stay out of jail until their trial or until they enter a guilty plea. News reports about Cason’s case did not specify the bail amount she was ordered to pay, if any. Even though bail amounts can be thousands of dollars, or even more, the defendants themselves do not always have to pay the full amount before the jail will release them; they can pay a percentage of the amount to a bail bond company, which will pay the full amount to the state.
Whether you remain detained until you enter a plea or go home to think clearly about presenting the best defenses depends on factors other than the charges you are facing. It also depends on the judge’s assessment of how likely you are to tamper with evidence or to commit additional crimes while you are free on bail.
Contact FL Drug Defense Group About Drug Cases
A Central Florida criminal defense lawyer can help you if you are being detained in jail after a drug-related arrest. Contact FL Drug Defense Group in Orlando, Florida to discuss your case.
Source:
yahoo.com/news/ecstasy-bust-florida-throws-familys-214243174.html