BAIL SCHEDULE
Recommended Range
FELONIES: | |||
Capital felony | $50,000 | to | No Bail Allowed |
Murder | $15,000 | to | No Bail Allowed |
Offenses listed in § 15-13-3(b)(1) (other than murder) | $10,000 | to | No Bail Allowed |
Drug manufacturing and trafficking | $5,000 | to | $1,500,000 |
Class A felony | $10,000 | to | $60,000 |
Class B felony | $5,000 | to | $30,000 |
Class C felony | $2,500 | to | $15,000 |
Class D felony | $1,000 | to | $10,000 |
Misdemeanors (not included elsewhere in the schedule): | |||
Class A misdemeanor | $300 | to | $6,000 |
Class B misdemeanor | $300 | to | $3,000 |
Class C misdemeanor | $300 | to | $1,000 |
Violation | $300 | to | $500 |
Municipal-Ordinance Violations | $300 | to | $1,000 |
Traffic-Related Offenses: | |||
DUI | $1,000 | to | $7,500 |
Reckless driving | $300 | to | $1,000 |
Speeding | $300 | to | $500 |
Other traffic violations | $300 | to | $500 |
Ala. R. Crim. P. 7.2
Committee Comments to Amendment to Rule 7.2
Effective April 1, 1995
Rule 7.2(a) applies to pretrial release and is based on the presumption of innocence of the accused and the constitutional and statutory right of a defendant charged with a noncapital offense to be released on bail pending trial.
The 8th Amendment to the United States Constitution provides, "Excessive bails shall not be required, nor excessive fines composed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted." The Constitution of Alabama includes the additional guaranty that all defendants charged with noncapital offenses have an absolute right to bail prior to conviction. Article 1, Section 16, Alabama Constitution of 1901, provides:
"That all persons shall, before conviction, be bailable by sufficient sureties, except for capital offenses, when the proof is evident or the presumption great; and that excessive bail shall not in any case be required."
The allowance of bail as a matter of right prior to conviction is also recognized in Ala. Code 1975, § 15-13-2, and has been held to apply to defendants charged with noncapital offenses who are subsequently arrested for failure to appear on their scheduled court dates.
The provisions of Rule 7.2(a) authorizing judges and magistrates to release defendants charged with bailable offenses on their personal recognizance or an unsecured appearance bond are based on the presumption of innocence of the accused and the policy that a defendant should be released pending trial whenever possible. A defendant charged with an offense that is bailable as a matter of right is eligible for a recognizance release unless the judge or magistrate determines that the defendant's presence would not thereby be reasonably assured or that the defendant poses a real and present danger of harm to others. As used in this rule, "personal recognizance" means a release of the defendant without any condition of an undertaking relating to, or deposit of, security. Such release is distinguishable from release conditioned on the posting of bond or other security.
Subdivision (a) lists certain facts the court may consider when setting bail. This list incorporates the factors previously included in Rule 2, Alabama Rules of Judicial Administration, and is taken from the ABA Standards for Criminal Justice, Pretrial Release, 10-5.1 (2d ed. 1968), written to ensure that judicial officers not give inordinate weight to the nature of the present charge.
The term "community" as used in subsection (a)(4) shall be liberally construed and not limited to the court's jurisdiction.
Section (b) of the rule provides a bail schedule for trial courts and magistrates to use in setting bail for persons charged with bailable offenses as set forth in this rule and Rule 18, Alabama Rules of Judicial Administration. The bail schedule, previously contained in Rule 2, Alabama Rules of Judicial Administration, has been revised to reflect legislative changes in the maximum amount of bail for municipal ordinance violations and the incorporation of drug offenses into the Criminal Code and, in some instances, to recognize the increased penalties now authorized for the certain enumerated offenses.
Upon recommendation of the Supreme Court's Advisory Committee on Rules of Judicial Administration, the Advisory Committee on Criminal Procedure recommended this amendment to Rule 7, Alabama Rules of Criminal Procedure, to incorporate the bail schedule (as amended), which was previously included in Rule 2, Rules of Judicial Administration. It was the consensus of both committees that, with the adoption of the Rules of Criminal Procedure, the bail schedule should be included in Rule 7 of the criminal rules rather than continued in a rule of judicial administration.
Except where release in the minimum scheduled amount is required by law, see, e. g., Rule 4, Alabama Rules of Criminal Procedure, the bail schedule should be regarded only as a discretionary guide.
The bail schedule is based, in part, on the offense classification system established under the Alabama Criminal Code. The "capital felony" category is intended to cover those offenses provided in Article 2 of Chapter 5 of Title 13A, Code of Alabama 1975 ("Alabama Criminal Code"), and amendments thereto. Municipal ordinance infractions are included within the discretionary bail schedule to assist municipal courts and district courts having jurisdiction over municipal ordinance cases in setting bail for persons not released from custody and comports with § 12-14-5, Ala. Code 1975, establishing the maximum bail authorized for municipal ordinance violations. Because drug-related offenses are now included in the Alabama Criminal Code, these offenses are not itemized separately.
Although custodial arrest is not authorized for most traffic offenses, see Ala. Code 1975, § 32-1-4, these offenses are listed within recommended ranges for bail, to serve as a guide in instances where the defendant refuses to sign the promise-to-appear portion of the Uniform Traffic Ticket and Complaint.
Section (c) recognizes that after conviction the defendant is no longer presumed innocent and is not entitled to admission to bail as a matter of right. If a defendant's sentence is for twenty (20) years or less, the defendant can be admitted to bail, in the judge's discretion, unless the judge has reason to believe that bail will not reasonably assure that the defendant will not flee, or has reason to believe that there is a real and present danger to others posed by the defendant's being at large. Thus, Section (c) modifies Ala. Code 1975, § 12-22-170, which unconditionally allowed bail if the sentence did not exceed twenty (20) years.
Under Rule 7.2(c)(2)(i), a convicted defendant may apply for release on an appearance bond or on the defendant's personal recognizance at the time of filing a notice of appeal. This changes former practice, whereby application for release had to be made with the filing of a notice of appeal at the time the sentence was rendered (i.e., when the sentence was pronounced); that former practice presented an unduly restrictive, unfair, and technical trap for the unwary practitioner. See Ex parte Downer, 44 Ala. App. 77, 203 So. 2d 132 (1967); Ex parte Rogers, 53 Ala. App. 245, 298 So. 2d 665 (1974); Ex parte Pennington, 57 Ala. App. 128, 326 So. 2d 656 (1976). For "Appeal as of Right - When Taken," see A.R.App. P., Rule 4(b). Cf. Fed.R.Crim.P., Rule 46(c).
Rule 7.2(c)(2) allows some discretion to the trial judge in releasing the defendant on bail or on the defendant's personal recognizance. If the defendant initially files a notice of appeal when the sentence is pronounced, but elects to waive release and to begin serving the sentence, and thereafter requests that the sentence be suspended, whether to grant bail is left to the discretion of the trial court. There are no cases on this point, and there has been some question whether the trial court retains jurisdiction over the defendant, since the defendant will have already begun serving the sentence. However, it is preferable that the trial court make the release decision, since that court is more familiar with the case, the record is usually still with the trial court, and any witnesses would be more readily available to that court.
Committee Comments to Amendment to Rule 7.2
Effective March 16, 2023
Rule 7.2 has been amended to reflect changes effected by recent amendments to Art. I, § 16, Ala. Const. 2022, and § 15-13-3, Ala. Code 1975. Rule 7.2(a) has been expanded to address offenses that are not "bailable as a matter of right." The first sentence of Rule 7.2(a)(1) tracks the language of § 15-13-3(a), and Rule 7.2(a)(2) references the procedures applicable under § 15-13-3(b) before a trial court can make a determination as to whether to set bail for a defendant who has been charged with an offense listed in § 15-13-3(b)(1).
The "Bail Schedule" contained in Rule 7.2(b) has been amended to reflect that, in addition to capital murder, murder and the other offenses listed in § 15-13-3(b)(1) are now offenses for which bail is no longer available "as a matter of right." The minimum bail amount for "Offenses listed in § 15-13-3(b)(1) (other than murder)" has been set at $10,000.
Finally, the footnote to the "Bail Schedule" has been removed from the rule. The minimum bail amount reflected in the schedule for "violation and misdemeanor cases" is $300, in accordance with § 15-13-105, Ala. Code 1975.
Note from the reporter of decisions: The order amending Rule 7.2(b), effective January 14, 2022, is published in that volume of Alabama Reporter that contains Alabama cases from __ So. 3d.
"Note from the reporter of decisions: The order amending Rule 7.2(a) and Rule 7.2(b), Alabama Rules of Criminal Procedure, and adopting the Committee Comments thereto, effective March 16, 2023, is published in that volume of Alabama Reporter that contains Alabama cases from __ So. 3d."