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Report on New Jersey Bail Bond Industry

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State of New Jersey
Commission of Investigation

INSIDE
OUT
Questionable and Abusive Practices
in New Jersey’s
Bail-Bond Industry

May 2014

State of New Jersey
Commission of Investigation

INSIDE
OUT
Questionable and Abusive Practices
in New Jersey’s
Bail-Bond industry
SCI

28 West State St.
P.O. Box 045
Trenton, N.J.
08625-0045
609-292-6767
www.state.nj.us/sci

State of New Jersey
COMMISSION OF INVESTIGATION
28 WEST STATE STREET
PO Box - 045
TRENTON, NEW JERSEY 08625-0045
Telephone (609) 292-6767
Fax (609) 633-7366

Patrick E. Hobbs
Chair

Joseph F. Scancarella
Eric S. Pennington
Commissioners

Philip James Degnan
Executive Director

May 2014

Governor Christopher J. Christie
The President and Members of the Senate
The Speaker and Members of the General Assembly
The State Commission of Investigation, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 52:9M, herewith submits its
final report of findings and recommendations stemming from an investigation of bail-bond
practices in New Jersey. 1

Respectfully,

1

Chair Patrick Hobbs resigned from the Commission effective May 16, 2014.

New Jersey Is An Equal Opportunity Employer ~ Printed on Recyclable Paper

TABLE OF CONTENTS
Executive Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Introduction .

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

Jailhouse Bail Runners .

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

Discount Bail, System Fails.
License to Disobey.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43

Bail Forfeitures: Lax Recovery.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . 52

Referrals and Recommendations
Appendix

. . . . . . . . .56

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .A-1

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Bail is a central element of the criminal justice system. Enshrined as a constitutional right,
it is intended to strike a balance between shielding criminal defendants from excessive pretrial
detention while simultaneously holding them accountable to attend required court proceedings.
The accused may gain release by posting cash and/or property directly with the court or by paying
a percentage of the total bail for a surety bond through a licensed commercial bail-bond agency.1
Much is at stake in maintaining the integrity of a properly functioning bail process, including
public safety, the credibility of law enforcement and judicial institutions and the appropriate
administration of justice.
Against that backdrop, the State Commission of Investigation examined the bail-bond
system in New Jersey and found it highly prone to subversion by unscrupulous and improper
practices that make a mockery of the public trust. Operating in the shadows of poor government
oversight, the system is dominated by an amalgam of private entrepreneurs who profit from the
process but are subject to weak controls easily manipulated or ignored with little or no
consequence.
The Commission found instances in which bail-bond agencies are operated by unlicensed
individuals, some with extensive criminal records. These include former agents who forfeited
bail licenses or registrations for engaging in illegal or improper activity but returned to the
business using various subterfuges. In some cases, these unlicensed agents have been operating

1

All persons except those charged with a crime punishable by death are entitled to bail. N.J. Ct. R. 3:26-1(a).

in the industry for years, continuing to engage in the same abuses that led to their expulsion in
the first place.
The investigation also revealed that bail agents, seeking an edge on their competitors,
often make arrangements that have the practical effect of circumventing and undercutting courtimposed bail set by judges. Out of view of the court, some agents routinely cut deals that enable
clients to get out of jail for the cash equivalent of as little as 1 percent or less of the total bail – a
down payment substantially below the standard bond “premium” of 10 percent. The remaining
premium balance is then owed by installment over time with no effective guarantee that it will
ever be paid. This means that a criminal defendant held on $50,000 bail for a serious offense can
gain immediate release for as little as a few hundred dollars, far less than the standard premium
of $5,000. Beyond subverting judicial intent – and doing so with no transparency – these
arrangements put dangerous offenders back on the street for minimal cash and make it nearly
impossible for prosecutors to verify the true source of the bail funds.
Perhaps most disturbing is that bail agencies have come to rely heavily on accused
criminals in the form of county jail inmates to drum up business and gain customers – a practice
that, strikingly, is not a crime here as in other states. Indeed, the Commission found that in New
Jersey it is quite common – and has been for years in some instances – for bail-bond agents to
recruit prisoners as freelance subcontractors acting at their behest and to offer cash and other
incentives to those who steer new clients to them. These arrangements, sometimes initiated via
flyers mailed directly to inmates, are maintained through the jail telephone system with agents
openly striking deals with those who agree to serve as “runners” behind bars. This occurs even
though it is a regulatory violation for non-licensed individuals to solicit bail and despite the fact
2

that both parties to such conversations are on notice that their phone traffic may be monitored
and recorded by jail authorities. Commission investigators reviewed scores of such recordings
obtained from 14 county jails – more than half of all county correctional facilities in the State –
and found clear evidence of this practice virtually across the entire sample spectrum.
This investigation, in part, was an outgrowth of the Commission’s examination of the
impact on New Jersey’s state prison system of the burgeoning population of inmates linked to
organized criminal street gangs.2 The findings in that matter included widespread evidence that
gang-affiliated and other inmates have found ways to exploit various state prison operating
systems, including the prison phone system, in order to communicate and deal with criminal
cohorts on the outside. In one such ploy, known as a “three-way call,” an inmate places a call to
one individual, who then surreptitiously forwards the call or otherwise connects the inmate to
one or more other parties whose phone numbers and identities remain hidden. The county jail
system is vulnerable to similar abuse because three-way calls are a key element of the rewards
package offered by bail agents to inmates who do their bidding.
Exacerbating these questionable and improper business practices and outright abuses is
a diminished and archaic government regulatory apparatus that treats New Jersey’s bail system
like a bureaucratic afterthought. Even though bail is an inextricable component of the criminal
justice system, regulation of bail-bond agencies, agent licensing and other aspects of the business
is housed within the state Department of Banking and Insurance (DOBI). This is so because
elements of the insurance industry underwrite the risk and financial exposure assumed by bail
agents when they issue bonds, thus accepting responsibility for the full amount of bail if a client

2

See SCI report, Gangland Behind Bars, May 2009.

3

absconds. Oversight of bail, however, has long been a lower-tier priority at DOBI, and few
resources are devoted to it. Apart from lax oversight, there is little in the way of effective
deterrence against unscrupulous activity because the laws and regulations that govern the bailbond process are weak, and violations carry minimal penalties. Furthermore, the Commission
found instances in which fines imposed by DOBI against violators went uncollected.
The Commission also found that New Jersey’s counties collectively are failing every year
to capture tens of millions of dollars in forfeited bails they are legally entitled and empowered to
recover after defendants fail to appear for required judicial proceedings. Despite guidelines
issued by the Office of the Attorney General a decade ago to tighten procedures and improve the
recovery rate, bail forfeitures typically are negotiated and settled for pennies on the dollar. In
2004 and, again, in 2007, the Office of the State Auditor noted persistent inconsistency in the use
and application of these forfeiture guidelines, resulting in significant and widespread recoveryrate disparities among the various counties. Such disparities prevail to this day.
During the course of the investigation, prosecutors, judges and jail personnel expressed
mounting frustration with the distorted state of affairs that characterizes New Jersey’s current
bail system. Indeed, in the absence of meaningful systemic reforms, they have begun to take
matters into their own hands. In one instance, the Presiding Judge of the Superior Court in
Bergen County put bail agents on formal notice that 1-percent bail-bond installment deals would
no longer be tolerated in her courtroom. Another Superior Court Judge stopped permitting the
release of defendants from custody until all installment payments on a bond premium were
fulfilled. Meanwhile, some county jail personnel, cognizant of the institutional security threat
posed by rampant jailhouse bail solicitations, cash payoffs and three-way phone calls by inmates,
4

have taken the initiative to curtail the practice. Such individual actions are laudable, but they
beg the need for wider reforms.
Based on these findings, the Commission recommends a series of statutory and
regulatory measures to provide stronger oversight of the bail industry, particularly related to the
licensure of bail agents and agencies and the operation of those businesses.
At a minimum, given the longstanding improper activity by unlicensed and unscrupulous
individuals as detailed in this report, the Legislature and Governor should consider legislation
making it a criminal offense for any individual not licensed as a bail-bond agent to solicit,
negotiate and/or write bail. Likewise, any bail-bond agency that uses unlicensed persons to
solicit business should face similar criminal prosecution, as well as immediate administrative
action to cause license revocation. Legislation should also be enacted making it a crime to
facilitate three-way telephone calls for incarcerated inmates, with license revocation mandatory
for any bail agent who orchestrates or otherwise knowingly participates in such arrangements.
Furthermore, the terms and conditions of any privately negotiated bail-bond
arrangement that enables a criminal defendant to gain release by posting less than 10 percent of
the total amount of bail should be made subject to review by the court and disclosure to the
appropriate prosecutorial authorities. Also, to the extent that such arrangements allow for
payment of premiums in installments over time, the fulfillment of such terms should be made a
condition of whether or not the defendant’s release is continued.
These and other recommendations cover significant areas in need of reform, but they
should not be addressed in isolation to other problematic matters involving bail that already have
received considerable attention apart from the issues targeted in this investigation. It is well5

documented, for example, that substantial numbers of criminal defendants – many of them
charged with minor drug violations and other nonviolent offenses – remain behind bars at
taxpayer expense pending court proceedings because they cannot afford to pay even nominal
bail. One study completed in the spring of 2013 found that, while most county jail inmates in
New Jersey are awaiting trial rather than serving actual adjudicated sentences, nearly 40 percent
have the option to post bail but lack the financial resources to do so.3 At the same time, one
serious consequence of the system’s inconsistency and porosity – the ability afforded violent
repeat offenders to return to the streets by overcoming high bail requirements through
discounted installment plans and other means – has aroused serious public-safety concerns,
prompting calls for a constitutional amendment allowing judges to deny bail for any defendant
deemed a threat to society.
Thus, through this report, the Commission brings a new body of facts to the broader
discussion of what is wrong with the State’s bail system and what should be done to fix it. While
it could be argued that, at its foundation, the current system is functional, this is true only in the
narrowest sense of that word; that is, generally speaking in New Jersey, most defendants
released after posting bail do return for trial and other required court proceedings, if only to
avoid forfeiture. But when it comes to the larger issues – issues involving operational integrity,
credibility, security, fairness and oversight – that system is plainly open to subversion, abuse and
other consequences that will only worsen over time in the absence of proper and appropriate
remedial action.

3

See report, New Jersey Jail Population Analysis – Identifying Opportunities to Safely and Responsibly Reduce the
Jail Population, provided by Luminosity in partnership with the Drug Policy Alliance, March 2013.

6

INTRODUCTION
Handled properly, the setting and posting of bail is an orderly process that balances the
rights of defendants with the requirements of the criminal justice system.
Any person accused of committing a non-capital crime is entitled to bail under New
Jersey’s Constitution, and state law requires that bail be set within 12 hours of the issuance of a
criminal complaint.4 Immediate responsibility for setting bail typically rests with a Municipal
Court Judge, but bail can also be established by a designated court administrator.5 If a defendant
is unable to post bail and remains in jail, that defendant may request a bail reduction hearing
during which a Superior Court Judge may revise the conditions of release and lower the bail
amount.
Although judges generally have wide latitude in determining the magnitude and
conditions of bail, court rules require they take into account a number of specific factors,
including the nature and gravity of the offense, the defendant’s personal and criminal history and
any previous record on bail.6 A defendant with no criminal record and/or strong community ties
may be released on his/her own recognizance with no bail. On the other hand, those accused of
certain serious crimes, such as murder, face mandatory bail requirements as do defendants with

4

N.J. Const. art. I, para. 11: “All persons shall, before conviction, be bailable by sufficient sureties, except for capital
offenses when the proof is evident or presumption great.”
5
Bail for murder, kidnapping, manslaughter, aggravated manslaughter, aggravated sexual assault, sexual assault, an
arrest in an extradition hearing or for arrests under N.J.S.A. 2C:29-9(b) for violating a restraining order must be set
by a Superior Court Judge. N.J. Ct. R. 3:26-2(a).
6
State v. Johnson, 61 N.J. 351, 364-365 (1972). The eight factors considered are the seriousness of the crime, the
apparent likelihood of conviction and the extent of punishment permitted; the defendant’s prior criminal record, if
any, and previous record on bail, if any; the defendant’s reputation and mental condition; the length of defendant’s
residence in the community; the defendant’s employment status, employment record and financial condition; the
identity of responsible members of the community who would vouch for the defendant’s reliability and any other
factors that would indicate defendant’s mode of life, or ties to the community or bearing on the risk of failure to
appear.

7

two or more pending indictable offenses or two or more prior convictions for first- or seconddegree crimes or a prior conviction for murder, aggravated manslaughter, aggravated sexual
assault, kidnapping or bail jumping.7 If the accused fails to comply with the conditions of the bail,
he/she may be re-arrested and the bail revoked. When the defendant appears again before the
court, a judge decides whether to reinstate the bail or set a new one. In instances where the
defendant flees and becomes a fugitive, any bail payment deposited with the court is forfeited.
Bail may be posted with the court in the form of cash, property or corporate surety bond.
Sometimes a combination of payment methods may be used. With the exception of cases that
trigger mandatory bail restrictions, defendants in most instances may fulfill their obligation by
depositing the cash equivalent of 10 percent of the full bail with the court. 8 Under this so-called
10 percent “option,” the defendant is released from custody once that amount is paid and a
recognizance for the remaining 90 percent is executed. This option is presumed when the judge
initially sets bail, unless ordered otherwise.9
Defendants who cannot afford or choose not to post money or property directly with the
court may obtain a corporate surety bond through a commercial bail-bond agent, who, in
exchange for a fee, posts the bond with the court. Bail agents are licensed by the State
Department of Banking and Insurance and serve as representatives of insurance companies that
provide surety bonds. A surety bond essentially is a contract between the court and the
insurance company in which the insurer agrees to cover the full amount of the bail if the
defendant fails to appear. Typically, relatives and/or friends of the accused agree to put up

7

N.J.S.A. 2A:162-12(a), (c).
N.J. Ct. R. 3:26-4(g).
9
State v. Casavina, 163 N.J. Super. 27, 31 (App. Div. 1978)
8

8

money or assets to secure a surety bond. Under these arrangements, the bail-bond agency
charges the purchaser a percentage of the total bail – the industry standard, like the court option,
traditionally has been 10 percent – in exchange for posting a promissory note for the entire
amount with the court. This percentage fee, known as a premium, is paid to the bail agency for
the risk that it and the insurance company assume on the defendant’s behalf. However, unlike
the cash option deposited directly with the court, which is returned at the conclusion of the legal
proceedings if the defendant attends all court appearances, any money paid to a bail
agent/agency is not refunded.
In New Jersey, there are approximately 844 licensed agents who specifically have the
authority to write bail bonds and 187 licensed businesses which operate under similar
authority.10 These entities range in size from small single-location outlets to a handful of larger
multi-branch commercial operations that tend to dominate the bail marketplace in various
counties or regions of the State. Beginning about two decades ago, business opportunities
surged within the industry with enactment of a statute that effectively eliminated the 10 percent
cash option in court for defendants charged with first- and second-degree crimes. Individuals
accused of these serious offenses were now required either to pay full cash bail or post a surety
bond or a bond secured by real property to cover it.11
This shift was one of a number of circumstances that coincided with the widening
proliferation of questionable and unscrupulous practices detailed in this report. In the contest
for customers, some bail agencies began to rely heavily on unconventional methods to draw

10

Insurance producers licensed under the casualty line of insurance also have the authority to write bail bonds but
typically do not do so.
11
N.J.S.A. 2A:162-12(b).

9

business, including using and compensating jail inmates to recruit clients behind bars. Further,
in an effort to gain a larger share of prospective customers from among criminal defendants,
including those now barred from pursuing the 10 percent cash option through the courts,
enterprising bail agents seized the opportunity to undercut the traditional bail premium fee.
Rather than being constrained by a fixed percentage that was not required by law, they offered
– and even began to advertise – sharp discounts, requiring as little as 1 percent down with custom
installment plans but no guarantee that the balance due actually would be paid. Those who have
conducted business in this fashion include individuals operating flagrantly without proper
licensure.
All of this has unfolded largely out of view and beyond the control of any meaningful or
effective oversight mechanism whether through the court system, the regulatory community or
law enforcement. The result is a disorderly process driven by private profit rather than public
interest and one that is dangerously out of balance when it comes to both the rights of
defendants and the requirements of the criminal justice system. While not all bail-bond agents
or agencies in New Jersey engage in the practices described in this report, the Commission found
that such activity is sufficiently widespread at this point as to constitute an endemic condition
across the industry.

10

JAILHOUSE BAIL RUNNERS
With fierce competition a hallmark of the bail-bond industry, commercial bail agencies
employ a variety of marketing strategies to gain an edge. Beyond conventional media and Yellow
Pages advertising, they circulate handouts, distribute business cards, maintain websites and use
Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and other social media via the internet. For some bail entrepreneurs,
however, limiting their promotional repertoire to a handful of legitimate tools and techniques
like these is not sufficient in the scramble for new fee-paying customers. Instead, they follow a
far more direct path to the targeted clientele, and the money: They recruit and compensate
accused criminals who pitch bail on their behalf behind bars, treating New Jersey’s county jails
like branch offices, exploiting a captive audience of potential patrons and attaching a profit
motive to going to jail.
Paying inmates to drum up business is an extension of the longstanding unsavory practice
by which some elements of the bail industry augment their ability to solicit customers on the
street by hiring touts known as “runners.” Typically unlicensed, these individuals hang around
outside courthouses, handing out cards and talking up the presumed merits of particular bailbond agencies. During this inquiry, investigators discovered a busy commerce by such runners,
notably outside the Hudson County Central Judicial Processing Court in Jersey City and the City
of Paterson Municipal Court. Witnesses told the Commission of circumstances in which heated
arguments and sidewalk altercations have broken out between bail runners vying for potential
customers.

11

Running bail on the street is one thing, but bringing actual inmates into the mix – in effect,
taking the game inside – has added a sharply disturbing dimension to the practice.12 Jails, by
definition, are dangerous places. Authorities are on constant guard against violence, the
intrusion of weapons, drugs and other contraband and a host of related security threats. On the
best day, it is a hostile, volatile environment – even absent what essentially constitutes a blackmarket bazaar of bail referrals, complete with aggressive jockeying for business among inmates
retained by competing bail agencies. Furthermore, it is sustained and facilitated by a central
component of the various county jails’ communications infrastructure – their pay-telephone
systems. Worse still, the business of this bazaar is conducted so flagrantly that the deal-making,
including the various perks and benefits offered to inmates who agree to sign up with a particular
bail agency, is easily discoverable by anyone who cares to listen.
In some venues, it has been going on for years. For example, in a letter dated June 5,
1996 – more than 17 years ago – the Middlesex County Counsel’s Office called on the then-state
Department of Insurance “to investigate what appears to be unlawful inducements, splits of bail
commission and coercive acts within the Middlesex County Correctional facility.”13 Citing
information from inmates who said they were being solicited by agents of a company called Lucky
7 Bail Bonds to make bail referrals, County Counsel Bruce J. Kaplan warned the State that, left
unchecked, the situation could trigger “an immediate danger to all involved in the correctional
facility.” The letter further stated that “it has come to our attention that gangs within the

12

County jails throughout the state provide non-promotional information on bail agencies to new inmates in a
variety of ways. Some post a list of bail bond agencies with telephone numbers at a location within the facility visible
to inmates. Others provide such information on request.
13
At the time, the Department of Insurance was in the process of merging with the Department of Banking to form
DOBI.

12

community are being recruited for the purpose of [bail] referral . . . . As you can imagine, if one
gang gets involved, and another comes in to compete, a gang war could ensue causing harm in
the community.”14
Kaplan’s letter also alleged that Lucky 7 was providing bail under unusual circumstances
to individuals with a high risk of flight and consequent default, and that “this type of activity . . .
has started to spread to Union and Monmouth County (sic). This may mushroom into a Central
Jersey issue or possibly a statewide problem for all involved with the judicial system.” The letter
urged the then-Department of Insurance to suspend or revoke Lucky 7’s license “immediately...
until it investigates further this potentially explosive situation.” The department’s subsequent
investigative process took seven years to complete and ultimately, in 2003, resulted in fines and
license revocation for Lucky 7’s owner, John Ostrander.15
Notwithstanding DOBI’s response to this complaint, the Commission found dozens of
instances in recent years through 2013 in which multiple bail-bond agencies – including another
entity operated by the yet-unlicensed Ostrander – have continued to recruit and use inmates at
the Middlesex County Jail as a conduit for referrals.
But Middlesex is not alone. Indeed, in some respects, the County Counsel’s 1996 letter
warning of potential statewide ramifications proved prophetic.

During this inquiry, the

Commission found that the practice of recruiting and compensating jail inmates for the purpose
of bail referrals has become prevalent in county jails across New Jersey. Investigators were able
to reach this conclusion based, in part, upon information provided by confidential informants and

14

Kaplan went on to serve two terms as Middlesex County Prosecutor until January 2013.
For a more detailed account of Ostrander’s problematic history in New Jersey’s bail-bond industry, see p. 44 of
this report.

15

13

jail personnel, but more importantly, by listening to a broad sample of hundreds of recorded calls
placed by inmates from pay telephones within each of 14 of the State’s county correctional
facilities.16 Of more than 800 inmate calls scrutinized by the Commission overall during the
period 2009-2014, nearly two-thirds involved substantive discussion with representatives of bailbond agencies of matters involving bail solicitations and referrals emanating from within the jail.
Here is how it works: Bail agencies that engage in this practice covertly establish a link
with someone inside, preferably an inmate who can reach a large number of prospective clients
on a regular basis. In particular, anyone who serves in the capacity of “inmate-trusty” – an inmate
selected and vetted by correction officers to assist in the kitchen, library or other menial aspects
of the facility’s operations – is a favored point of contact because an individual in that position
has wide access to the general jail population, especially those freshly arrived at the intake unit
with limited options for immediate release. Referrals then are arranged via collect calls placed
by the trusty/runner or by the newly recruited inmate/client to the bail agency representative.
The telephone system used by county jails automatically records most calls placed by
inmates. To listen to the tapes of these conversations is to tune in to the workings of an
underworld. Inmates and their bail agency contacts can be heard discussing instructions on how
and when to approach prospective bail clients. Multiple phone numbers are provided for easy
access. Methods of payment are discussed under terms of quid pro quos typically dictated by the
bail agents. In exchange for providing business, inmates might be offered any of a variety of
inducements, including cash. In some instances, the amount paid is based upon a formulation

16

The Commission analyzed inmate telephone calls from jails in Middlesex, Hudson, Monmouth, Camden, Mercer,
Morris, Atlantic, Burlington, Cumberland, Union, Bergen, Somerset, Essex and Cape May counties.

14

equal to 1 percent of a new customer’s total bail package. Thus, if the bail is $25,000, the share
paid to the referring inmate would be $250. Aside from money, cooperating inmates sometimes
are offered special discounts through the agency on their own bail-bond arrangements. In other
instances, the bail agency representative may offer the services of an attorney. One of the most
popular gratuities is a three-way collect call orchestrated by the agent at his expense. This puts
the inmate in direct contact with anyone of his choosing without exposing the third party’s phone
number or identity to jail authorities. In effect, it enables inmates to avoid dialing a new call
through the jail’s telephone system. This not only deprives the counties of pay-phone revenue
but it can pose a serious impediment to criminal investigations because it serves to shield the
identity of the third party, according to jail officials and other law enforcement authorities.
Occasionally, inmates and bail representatives can be heard arranging to cloak certain
matters in a rudimentary form of code – for example, using terms like “credit” or “minutes” when
talking about money or other compensation. Sometimes, they disguise their names by using
initials or other expedients. For the most part, though, the deals are cut with minimal discretion,
as evidenced by the fact that despite the periodic interruption of calls over the jail phone system
by a message stating, “This call may be recorded or monitored,” the conversations generally
proceed without missing a beat.
Although it is a violation of state Department of Banking and Insurance regulations for
any unlicensed individual, such as a jail inmate, to solicit bail, or be retained to solicit bail, this
practice is not a criminal violation in New Jersey. By contrast, at least nine other states have
adopted statutes making it a crime to pitch bail without a license and/or to engage in bail

15

solicitation on jail grounds and/or to use inmates in that endeavor. 17 Meanwhile, at the local
level here, attempts by the counties themselves to control and regulate such activity pursuant to
the operational integrity of their own jails have been weak, inconsistent and largely ineffectual.
Only one of New Jersey’s 21 counties – Monmouth – has established a written policy explicitly
prohibiting bail solicitation by incarcerated inmates. Similarly, just six counties have set forth
written rules prohibiting or otherwise addressing unauthorized access by inmates to three-way
calls. Other counties rely on their telephone service provider to detect and terminate such calls,
a method the Commission found is not always successful. Despite such policies, procedures and
rules, the Commission found that, as presently constituted, they do not present a serious or
meaningful impediment to the recruitment and use of jail-based bail runners.
The following transcribed and edited excerpts of recorded telephone conversations
between county jail inmates and bail agency representatives around New Jersey are emblematic
of these findings:

“When you get out, wouldn’t it be nice to have a nice $5,000 piece of change?”
On the afternoon of March 25, 2013, an inmate at the Morris County Jail placed a collect
call to a representative of AAA Bailmaster Bail Bonds, an agency based in Mt. Arlington.
Accepting the charges was Wilbur Figueroa, a AAA employee who identified himself as “Anthony”
Figueroa. Possessing an extensive criminal record and a former resident of the Morris County
Jail himself – indeed, he spent part of his time there as an inmate-trusty and worked as a runner
for AAA – the unlicensed Figueroa (A.F.) went into considerable detail describing to the receptive

17

Criminal statutes outlawing these practices have been adopted in California, Connecticut, Florida, Maryland, Ohio,
Oklahoma, North Carolina, South Dakota and Texas.

16

inmate how to go about referring new clients to the agency and how much money he could make
doing so on a regular basis:
A.F. My name is Anthony Figueroa, I don’t know if you were there when I was there.
Inmate Yeah, I know you. . . . You’re a runner. I remember you.
A.F. Sorry, man, I can’t picture your face, bro.
Inmate Yeah, I remember you, man . . .
. . .
A.F. Well I’ll tell you what . . . you have my cell phone number now. You know what,
when I was a trusty there, bro . . . they extradited me to Vermont. In Vermont they gave
me a bail of $200,000, lowered it to $100,000. But you know what, with what I was doing
there . . . let me just put it to you this way: I forked out $10,000 cash to bail out.
Inmate Damn . . . That’s what’s up.
A.F. Yeah.
Inmate If anyone comes in wanting a bail man I’ll just f---ing hop on the phone and call
you.
A.F. Well, you know what, that’s what I’m telling you, bro. You know what, we have to
be very discreet, if you know what I’m saying, you know what I mean?
Inmate I got you, one hundred percent.
A.F. When we talk . . . (begins speaking in Spanish).
Inmate No.
A.F. You don’t speak Spanish? . . . Well, . . . check this out. How long are you supposed
to be in there for?
Inmate Pending grand jury right now.
A.F. All right, well, listen, while you’re in there you may as well . . . You saw how I was
always in a . . . good mood, right?
Inmate Hell yeah . . .
A.F. And you know why? ‘Cause I was banking . . . you know what I mean?
Inmate Absolutely, I hear you.
A.F. Big time. Let me just put it to you this way. I walked out of there with $32,000 and
change on me.
Inmate That’s serious. Serious, serious, serious.
A.F. Yeah, man. I’m not even f---ing playing, bro. Take my cell. . . . When a new inmate
comes in, you know what, this is the way I did it. . . .“Hey how you doing . . . my name is
Ant. I’m the trusty over here, you know, if you have any questions . . . you have any
problems, just ask me.” And the COs [correction officers] like that . . . I keep basically all
the new guys that come in ‘cause it means less yelling for them, you know? Basically . . .
you get them talking and so how much is your bail? You know, you could get out of here
with such and such, before you call anyone else, you know, call me. Let’s say, for example,
somebody has a $50,000 bail . . . they need $5,000 to get out. Out of that $5,000 . . .

17

Interrupted by the following announcement audible to both parties:
“This call may be recorded or monitored.”
A.F. When we talk, when we talk about money, we’re going to talk in minutes, okay?
Inmate Okay.
A.F. So out of that you make 500 “minutes” ($500).
Inmate That’s what’s up.
A.F. You know what I’m saying?
Inmate Yeah.
A.F. Once the person gets out, and I’ll know it was from you because basically anytime
anybody calls me on my cell phone from Morris I know it was you already. You know what
I’m saying?
Inmate Yeah.
A.F. So when they call me on my cell phone . . . I’ll go to bat for them and I’ll call 24/7 for
them, and I’ll make sure, you know, try my best. They can call collect on my phone, no
problem. . . . But I’m going to go ahead and write a list in my book, and then, you know,
basically if you need a three-way [call] or whatever, you know, I’ll hook that up for you.
And then, you know, your minutes will be acquiring. (sic) So at least, bro . . . when you get
out, wouldn’t it be nice to have a nice $5,000 piece of change or something, you know?
Inmate That would be beautiful. Beautiful.
Five days later, the two spoke again, and Figueroa sweetened his offer:
A.F. Let me ask you a question.
Inmate What?
A.F. Give me a couple of bails; I got an attorney that will take care of you.
Inmate Really?

.

.

.

“I want you to find me a bail inside that jail!”
Several weeks later, in April 2013, Kevin Walsh, the licensed owner of AAA Bailmaster Bail
Bonds, fielded a collect call from a Morris County Jail inmate who asked for help contacting his
family to raise money for bail. Walsh (K.W.) suggested he could arrange a three-way call but
only on the condition that the inmate go to work for him referring prospective clients:
K.W. Bail Bonds.
Inmate Hi, sir, we got disconnected. It’s Kevin?
18

K.W. Yep.
Inmate Yeah, I’m sorry about that, sir, I don’t know what happened. I am working, too.
I’m working part time. . . . I can definitely get you the money. Not a problem, sir. . . .I just
can’t get in touch with my family. I don’t know what to do.
. . .
K.W. All right. Now here’s the issue with this, okay? If I’m gonna help you, you’re gonna
help me.
Inmate Okay, all right. No problem, sir, you got it.
K.W. This is how it’s gonna go. . . . [Y]ou need somebody to come there with two hundred
fifty bucks and get you out of there, okay?
Inmate Okay.
K.W. Now, if you want me to be making phone calls for you and spending time . . . then
what’s in it for me? Nothing. Zero. Okay? Now if you get me a bail in there then I’ll put you
on three-way with your people. . . . [T]hat’s the deal. ‘Cause what am I getting out of this?
Inmate What I thought is . . .
K.W. I’m making phone calls, you know what I mean, you understand what I’m saying?
Inmate I do understand what you’re saying.
K.W. I’m making phone calls going out of my way to help you here, but if I’m getting
nothing out of it, then why do it?
Inmate All right, so then what do you want out of it, sir . . . ? Whatever you want.
K.W. I want you to find me a bail inside that jail! Get me a bail, and, once I get the bail
then I’ll – you do it in the next five minutes and someone’s ready to go for a bail. . . I’ll put
you on three-way with your people and then you can bail out.
Inmate Wait a minute, I’m lost. What do you mean ‘get a bail . . .?’ That’s what I don’t
understand, sir.
K.W. Yeah, find me somebody in that jail that needs to be bailed out.
Inmate Oh, you want somebody else to get bailed out.
K.W. Yeah. How am I supposed to get paid? . . . Am I going to do this all for nothing? Just
to help people? . . . If you’re helping me, I’m helping you. . . .
Inmate You need someone to get bailed out, that’s what you’re asking? Okay, hold on
one minute, okay?
K.W. Go ahead.
“This call may be recorded or monitored.”
Inmate No, I can’t find nobody, sir.
K.W. All right, well, you will. You go in there and find somebody, and you get them on
the phone with me, and then I’ll take care of that bail and put you on three-way with your
family.

AAA Bailmaster’s various jailhouse bail solicitations came to the attention of Morris
County officials last year when they received a subpoena from the SCI for records, a circumstance
19

that prompted an investigator in the jail’s Internal Affairs Unit to listen to recordings of phone
calls between Walsh and various inmates. Although the Sheriff’s Department, which administers
the jail, determined that the solicitations presented a security threat, subsequent attempts to
curtail the practice became entangled in bureaucratic confusion. In a June 17, 2013 letter to
Walsh, the County Counsel’s Office described the inmate solicitations as being “in contravention
to the established procedures” of the jail and instructed Walsh to “be guided accordingly.” It was
subsequently discovered, however, that the county has no procedure, rule, regulation or policy
governing the solicitation of inmates by bail agencies. In light of that gap, the Internal Affairs
Unit investigator told the Commission that the county reached out to the state Department of
Banking and Insurance for guidance on how to proceed in the matter but that calls to DOBI were
not returned.

.

.

.

“You tell me how you want it, and that’s how you got it.”
Last October, a Middlesex County Jail inmate who apparently was shopping around his
bail-running skills placed a call to Speedy Bail Bonds, based in Woodbridge. During the
conversation, the inmate quizzed a Speedy bail agent about whether the agency would “work
with” potential customers inside the jail to offer discounts reducing the 10 percent premium
down-payment typically required of those seeking bail. On the matter of compensation for
referrals, the inmate asked for a raise from “five” ($500) to “six” ($600) and for different payment
arrangements from the terms he was currently working under with a Speedy competitor. In
response, the bail agent cautioned him to choose his words carefully:

20

Inmate . . . I’m getting paid by the week right now. But, you know, this guy –
sometimes, you know, he pays me on time, sometimes I got to wait a few days. So that’s
why I’m calling. . . You know Georgie G . . . ?
Agent Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Inmate He told me to call you guys. I don’t know how you want to do this . . . . I’m going
to be here for a year, bro. I’m fighting right now.
Agent You tell me.
Inmate . . . You guys do like bro . . . What percentage? . . . Ten?
Agent What?
Inmate I’m talking about the bail-bonds . . .
Agent Yeah. . . We charge . . .
Inmate Ten percent? Right? You guys work with the people?
Agent Yeah, I would take as low as 3 percent down.
Inmate Yeah? And what do you want to do? You want to do it weekly? You want to do
it . . . I don’t know. You tell me man.
Agent Weekly, whatever you want, buddy. You just tell me how you want it. That’s it.
Inmate Because this . . .
Agent You tell me how you want it, and that’s how you got it.
. . .
Inmate . . . Friday, like, pay me every . . . Friday. Don’t make me, you know . . . What do
you want to give me every week? Tell me, man . . .
Agent . . . [L]isten – numbers. I can’t talk over the phone like that, you know what
mean?
Inmate Yeah.
Agent You gotta understand that . . . . What do you want?
Inmate Man, let’s do this, bro. Why don’t you talk to Frank . . . and whoever they tell
me and say, look, this is what we got for you . . . . [W]hat do you think?
Agent Yeah, but you’re not making anything easier, bro. I told you we can’t say . . .
Inmate Yeah, well, right now I’m getting every week, you know? But, like I told you,
man, sometimes . . . he tell me to wait another week. I mean, I do get paid for both
weeks but, you know, I want my money . . . every week, you feel me?
Agent Yeah.
Inmate What do you want me to do? You want me to call you back?
Agent So basically you want five a week?
Inmate No, no. That’s what I’m getting right now. I was . . . I don’t know. I was going
to ask you for six, man.
Agent All right, I’ll talk to the guys and see what they tell me. Call me tomorrow.

.

.

21

.

“I can help you, you can help me.”
A month later, on November 14, 2013, another inmate – who identified himself only as
“Q” – introduced himself over the phone to a Speedy bail agent named Jay and offered his
services as a runner. Again, it is noteworthy that this agent cautioned the inmate against being
too open – “talking reckless” – about the business they are transacting, reminding him that the
call is recorded by jail authorities:
Q . . . I’m actually a trusty in the unit – in N unit in the reception. I wanted to know . . . if
we can, you know, I’ve been seeing other guys do things with bails. I heard you guys were
pretty good, you know? I don’t like to talk too much over the phone, but if you catch my
drift. I’m real smart, you know what I’m saying? You know, maybe I can help you, you can
help me.
Later that same day, in another call, their conversation resumed:
Q Am I speaking to Jay?
Agent This is Jay. What’s up?
Q Hey, Jay, man, I was speaking to you earlier, you just hung up on me.
Agent You was talking reckless, brother.
Q I was talking reckless?
Agent Of course. You know, this . . . is being recorded, and you’re . . . here talking about
all this stuff like you’re on the streets.
Q All right, well, I apologize. . . .
Agent . . . All you gotta do is to say I’m going to, you know . . . and we already know.
Q All right. Look, Jay, I wanna, you know, do what I do.
Agent . . . Do what you got to do, brother. Say no more . . . you know what I’m saying?
Q All right, so just remember my name, and then we’ll take it from there.
Six days later, Q was back in touch and ready to “bring some business”:
Q Hey bro, this Jay?
Agent Yeah, who’s this?
Q This is Q, man. Remember, we were talking previously, man. The trusty in N unit.
Agent Okay, yeah, what’s up?
Q All right, man, you got a pen and paper, man? I’m ready for you, man. I told you I
was gonna bring ‘em, bring you some business.
Q then is heard providing the agent with information on four inmates as possible referrals.
22

These calls and others like them within recent months involving representatives of Speedy
Bail Bonds are notable because the company had already been caught and penalized – more than
four years earlier – for recruiting and compensating Middlesex Jail inmates for bail referrals.
County authorities at the time banned the company from underwriting bail for anyone at the
facility pending an internal investigation. Within days, however, despite clear evidence of
widespread jail bail-running at Speedy’s behest, the company was reinstated after threatening
legal action to reverse the ban. The circumstances that allowed the company to resume business
as usual reflect blatant weaknesses in official control and oversight of the system. This is
particularly troubling given Middlesex County’s experience with this activity going back at least
to 1996 and the fact that the jail has banned solicitation “for any purpose.”
Speedy’s activities were first discovered by Middlesex authorities early in 2009 when an
attorney complained that one of his clients had been approached and threatened inside the jail
by an inmate-trusty. According to the complaint, the trusty told the inmate that if he did not use
the company’s bail services, the charges against him – child endangerment and aggravated sexual
assault – would be revealed to other inmates and he would suffer bodily harm. The investigating
officer, Sgt. Paul De Amicis, now-head of Internal Affairs Special Investigations for the county’s
Department of Adult Corrections, listened to tapes of phone calls placed by the trusty and quickly
found a pattern of bail referrals to Speedy in exchange for compensation, including three-way
calls prohibited by jail policy. Testifying before the Commission during the present investigation,
De Amicis described the trusty’s calls to Speedy agents:
. . . [H]e would . . . tell them, ‘I got six for you’ or whatever, and he would read off
the inmates’ names, their MC number, which is their identifying number in our
facility, and what their bail [amount] was, and then he would proceed to give them
23

contact numbers for the inmates’ family members or friends that were going to
sign for the bail or put the money up for bail.
De Amicis also listened to a sampling of calls by other inmates at the time of the attorney’s
complaint and found that they were acting internally as runners for Speedy as well.
Summoned to a meeting with jail officials in late February 2009, Speedy’s owner, Jose
Taveras, and two of his agents acknowledged a relationship with the trusty and admitted granting
him three-way calls in exchange for referrals. They agreed to stop providing those calls, and
Taveras offered to reimburse the county for revenue lost to it through circumvention of the jail’s
pay-telephone system. But according to a memo authored by De Amicis at the time, the Speedy
representatives were non-responsive when asked about telephonic evidence suggesting the
company was offering other forms of compensation as well, especially given the fact that some
inmates could be heard on the tapes demanding “credit” for referrals. The agency officials were
told the matter would be referred to the Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office and that, pending
completion of the jail’s investigation, Speedy would not be permitted to handle any new bails at
the facility.
During a second meeting a week later, however, attorneys for Speedy stated they were
prepared to take legal action against the county if it continued to bar the agency from doing
business at the jail. On subsequent advice from the County Counsel’s Office, the ban was lifted.
According to De Amicis’s sworn testimony before the Commission, the county
Prosecutor’s Office determined the matter was beyond its jurisdiction and advised him to contact
DOBI instead. De Amicis testified that he called a DOBI investigator and was told to forward the
information. He memorialized this contact in a letter dated March 26, 2009, stating, “We have
found, through our research, activities that we feel are improper, and it is our understanding that
24

your department is responsible for governing the manner in which bondsmen conduct business.
Your anticipated assistance in this matter is greatly appreciated.” Over the course of three pages,
he provided a detailed account of the jail’s investigation and its findings. He also enclosed copies
of recorded inmate phone conversations with Speedy personnel. De Amicis told the Commission
in sworn testimony he never received a response from DOBI. Documentary material obtained
from DOBI yielded no record of the department ever having received this letter.
In a follow-up memo nearly two months later on May 13, 2009, De Amicis told thenWarden Edmond C. Cicchi that “the investigation into the dealings of Speedy Bail Bonds in this
facility has revealed that the bond company has resumed activities that they were specifically
told were prohibited. There are several recorded phone calls placed to their office per day where
three-way calls are permitted. Some of the calls contain as many as four three-way call attempts
during one call. [On] other calls agents are heard telling inmates to eliminate any competing
bondsmen’s advertising drawn up by inmates in the unit.” De Amicis also told the Warden that
in “listening to the calls it is evident that tension is created between inmates who are working
for Speedy and inmates who are choosing to use other bondsmen.”
Ironically, an attorney for Speedy confirmed in writing that the three-way call is a primary
tool used in the competition for bail business in the Middlesex Jail. In a letter to the County
Counsel dated August 3, 2009, this attorney stated, “My client has received information that
other bonding company’s (sic) still conduct these calls. As a result, my client has suffered
considerable financial loss.” The attorney further wrote:
As agreed, my client will continue not to conduct 3-way telephone calls with
inmates, but would appreciate if the Warden would prohibit them for all other
bondsman (sic) as well. As agreed, perhaps notices or other warnings could be
25

disseminated to other bonding companies. If 3-way calls are now permitted, kindly
advice (sic) so my client may resume this practice.

Several weeks later, the following official notice from then-Deputy Warden Frank Masone was
posted in the jail:
IT HAS COME TO OUR ATTENTION THAT BAIL BONDING COMPANIES HAVE BEEN
GIVING INMATES 3 WAY TELEPHONE CALLS. THESE CALLS ARE PROHIBITED AND
A SECURITY BREACH.
THIS PRACTICE MUST CEASE IMMEDIATELY.

Notwithstanding that notice, De Amicis – who told the Commission he has witnessed
fights between inmates running bail for competing agencies – testified that currently, based upon
what he has seen and heard around the jail, most, if not all, bail agencies doing business at the
facility are involved in recruiting inmates to solicit clients in exchange for three-way calls. In an
effort to counter this activity, De Amicis stated he has taken it upon himself to transfer inmatetrusties out of the jail’s intake unit on a regular basis. However, he has found that some of these
inmates will commit minor infractions that cause them to be transferred back to intake for
reclassification – and resumption of bail solicitations.

.

.

.

“I look you out with free calls, and you look me out with the new guys that are
getting locked up.”
Aaron Bail Bonds is the largest commercial bail-bond agency in New Jersey, with
approximately 114 employees – of which only a handful are licensed – and locations in Jersey
City, Paterson, Freehold, Mays Landing, Perth Amboy, Newark, Fairfield, Hackensack and Toms

26

River. The agency also takes a decidedly high-tech approach in its dealings with inmate bail
runners. In an initial call to Aaron, an inmate typically is offered one free three-way call to discuss
bail with a friend or family member. The inmate is warned that this “courtesy call” must be about
bail or it will be disconnected. An agent then explains that, going forward, the inmate must refer
a client to receive a three-way. When an inmate does refer a customer, the referral is noted in
the agency’s computer system to keep a running tally of how many free calls are owed. With
every subsequent contact, the inmate simply provides his name and date of birth, which enables
the responding agent to instantly retrieve information about that inmate’s referral and threeway-call history.
In the following phone conversation on October 5, 2013 with an experienced inmaterunner at the Essex County Jail, an Aaron agent sought to make sure his contact was doing
everything possible to recruit new business, including signing up clients on weekends. The agent
also offered an incentive – a two-for-one deal on three-way calls – if the inmate could connect
him with a jail trusty:
Inmate . . . [Y]ou see how many I done referred already.
Agent Oh yeah, I know you do your thing.
Inmate . . . The thing is, over here, that this pod just opened where we at . . . we’re waiting
for new people to come in.
Agent And is there activity on Saturdays or no?
Inmate At who?
Agent Are – Is there activity on Saturdays? Do they bring new people in on Saturday?
Inmate Oh.
Agent Do they bring new people in on Saturday?
Inmate Yes, everyday. Saturday, Sunday, every day of the week.
Agent . . . I’ll tell you what . . . if you can also refer me a trusty, which is the guys that
work in the kitchen or the law library.
Inmate Uh huh.
Agent If you’re able to refer me those guys, I will give you two free calls for each one of
them . . . .
27

Inmate puts agent on hold. Call then resumes with trusty on the line (Inmate2).
Inmate2 Hello?
Agent How you doing, sir?
Inmate2 All right.
Agent All right, thank you for your time, man. The only thing why I asked [the other
inmate] to bring . . . a trusty to the phone was for the following: Um, I’m going to give him
two free calls so he can speak with his family or what not. And the only thing I’m going to
ask you is just for your name, nothing more. And I’m gonna also give you two free calls .
. . at no charge or none of that.
Interrupted by a warning that the call will be disconnected in five minutes.
The only thing in return I’m going to ask from you is if you see the new guys coming in so
you can just refer them to me, to Aaron Bail Bonds. In other words, I look you out with
free calls, and you look me out with the new guys that are getting locked up. Would you
be willing to do that?
Inmate2 Yeah, sure.

.

.

.

“You can beg, cry, scream, kick – I don’t care. You have to refer a client
to get a call.”
Less than two weeks later, on October 16, 2013, an Essex County jail inmate pleaded with
an Aaron bail agent to place a three-way call for her based upon a variety of things she had done
to boost the agency’s profile, including removing the contact phone numbers of competing bailbond agencies from an official posting inside the jail. In response, the Aaron representative
bluntly set forth a fundamental agency rule that three-way calls are arranged solely in exchange
for client referrals:
Agent Do you have any referrals for me? Are you referring a client or . . . ?
Inmate No, actually I was checking to see if you could place, make a quick phone call for
me actually.
Agent . . . Not without a client.
Inmate What?
Agent You know, we need clients. You want a three-way? We need clients.
Inmate I wrote all your numbers up here for you and everything like that.
28

Agent Nah, you need to refer clients to get three-ways.
Inmate Yeah, I can’t even come out. I have like an hour out, that’s it.
Agent . . . Nope, not without a client. We don’t make three-way calls . . . for any inmate
without a client. You have to refer a client.
Inmate . . . try to get you clients. Can you do, like, a two-second call really quick for me,
please? I wrote your number like all over the phone and everything, for real. Please?
Agent Writing the phone numbers really doesn’t matter. You need to put somebody on
the phone who is not in our system who needs help with their bail.
Inmate Yeah, but I did it for you, and I took off the other bail bondman numbers. Please.
You could do that for me for two seconds?
Agent . . . I just told you. You have to refer a client to get a call. That’s it. You can beg,
cry, scream, kick – I don’t care. You have to refer a client to get a call.

.

.

.

“Every person you refer to us we’ll mark in the computer in your file . . .”
In a phone conversation last October with an inmate at the Cumberland County Jail, an
Aaron agent briefly explained how the agency maintains a record of referral activity by its runners
and a tally of what they are owed as payment in the form of complimentary three-way calls. She
also reminded the inmate that keeping the referrals flowing is vital because placement of threeways costs the agency money:
Agent . . . [D]o you have our four phone numbers?
Inmate Yeah, I got ‘em.
Agent All right. Make sure that you try to refer new people to us, okay? ‘Cause every
person that you refer to us we’ll mark in the computer in your file to give you a free phone
call.
Inmate All right, I got . . .
Agent So that you can, you know, so that you can at least . . .
Inmate Explain better . . .
Agent . . . Yeah, exactly, exactly . . . It sounds better coming from you. It’s just that we
can’t make phone calls for . . . everyone who’s locked up constantly ‘cause it costs us
money.
Inmate I feel you.
Agent So at least if you refer people to us it’s like . . .
Inmate A possible bail out.
29

Agent Exactly, exactly.
Inmate . . . I get you.
Agent Yeah, you know.
Inmate Yeah.
Agent So just really try to refer people. ‘Cause like I said, we’ll get you those phone calls
that help and get you out.

.

.

.

“If I get paid, we all get paid.”
On October 26, 2013, an inmate at the Monmouth County Jail offered to refer potential
bail customers to Aw-Rite 24 Seven Bail Bonds, an agency located in Perth Amboy. In response,
the agency representative urged the inmate to continue the referral arrangement despite his
pending transfer to the Ocean County Jail. He also told the inmate to make sure the individuals
he referred mentioned his (the inmate’s) name so he could be properly paid:
Agent . . . If you could do me a favor, man, put my name around, tell people, you know,
call up this guy . . . he’s all right.
Inmate I’m waiting for two other people to come in. They’re going to need bails, too. So
I’m gonna forward you that, too. So I got you.
Agent All right. Even when you go to Ocean. Help a brother out, you know? I’ll look you
out. If I get paid, we all get paid.
. . .
Agent Do me a favor: Refer me some people. Just tell them, hey . . . Jarrell told me to call
to make sure they tell me that so I can, you know, credit you. . . .
Inmate All right, well, thank you, man. I appreciate it.

Aside from illustrating recent bail-running activity inside the Monmouth County Jail, this
call is significant because a principal of Aw-Rite 24 Seven Bail Bonds, Benny Machado, was fined
$5,000 three years ago after county and state investigators found that another of his agencies,
24 Seven Bail Bonds, had earlier engaged in the same improper jail solicitation. Indeed, the
findings in that matter prompted the Monmouth County Sheriff’s Office in 2010 to adopt new
30

rules and procedures expressly prohibiting the employment of jail inmates to solicit business.
Notwithstanding the fine and the change in policy, the Commission found during its inquiry that
not only have bail entities owned and/or operated by Machado continued to flout the rules but
also that at least four of his competitors have followed suit.
Machado’s efforts to recruit runners and clients inside the jail first came to the attention
of Monmouth authorities in 2009 and, again, in the spring of 2010 when an officer assigned to
the mailroom took note of multiple envelopes bearing identical return addresses, all postmarked
with the same date but addressed to different inmates. Each contained a flyer from 24 Seven
Bail Bonds soliciting business and providing a contact phone number. Confiscated and turned
over to the Investigations Unit, these materials triggered an inquiry by staff Investigator Selma
Morris, who soon discovered additional evidence of jail solicitation. In one instance, a female
inmate – a known member of the Five Percenters, an organization linked to gang-related criminal
activity – was found to be recruiting inmates for the 24 Seven agency by sending them letters
within the jail. In one such letter, an inmate was told:
The flyer that you got is going to help you make money. Call the number collect
and let them know you got the flyer from me. Also let them know your (sic) trying
to make some money. If your account is messed up, you can have them put money
in somebody else (sic) account, you trust. Or they’ll hold the money ‘til you get out.
Or either you can work for them to bail yourself out. It’s basically up to you on how
you wanna do it.

Inv. Morris brought the matter of the jailhouse solicitations to the attention of the Department
of Banking and Insurance, and, together with a DOBI investigator, reviewed recordings of the

31

female inmate’s phone calls.18 The review showed that she attempted to call the 24 Seven
agency 96 times over a seven-week period and that some of the discussion involved bail referrals
and payment arrangements for such referrals.
Based upon the findings of that investigation, DOBI on November 14, 2011 ordered
Machado to pay a $5,000 fine for having “engaged an inmate, who was not licensed as an
insurance producer, to solicit bail bonds while incarcerated in a correctional facility,” in violation
of state regulations. Prior to that action, in August 2010, the Monmouth County Sheriff’s Office
– prompted in large part by Inv. Morris’ findings and recommendations – put all bail-bond
agencies on formal notice via letter that rules governing the operation of the county jail had been
amended expressly to prohibit the employment of inmates for the purpose of bail solicitation. In
addition to citing security concerns, the letter stated the new policy was part of an effort to
ensure inmates are free from harassment, threats and coercion when seeking agents to post bail.
The letter further stated that any bail agency found in violation would be reported to DOBI and
barred from writing any bail for those held at the institution for a period of up to three years.
Since that policy took effect in 2010, multiple bail agencies have attempted on various
occasions to skirt it by continuing to mail solicitation flyers directly to Monmouth County Jail
inmates. These include Aw-Rite 24 Seven Bail Bonds of Perth Amboy, Ace Bail Bonds of Asbury
Park, Aaron Bail Bonds of Perth Amboy and Speedy Bail Bonds of Freehold.

18

Morris also brought this matter to the attention of the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office, which responded
that its jurisdiction was limited to matters involving potential violation of criminal statutes. As investigators began
tracking this inmate’s activity, she was transferred from the Monmouth County Jail to the Edna Mahan Correctional
Facility for Women in Clinton, Hunterdon County. The review included phone calls placed by her from the Clinton
facility.

32

.

.

.

“I just got your letter in the mail . . . and I can bring you some sales tomorrow.”
On April 4, 2013, an inmate in the female wing of the Burlington County Jail placed a call
to Second Chance Bail Bonds of Mount Holly after receiving a written solicitation from the
agency. Over the phone, she immediately began negotiating for three-way calls and offered to
recruit customers from among a newly arriving group of inmates:
Agent Bail bonds.
Inmate Yes, um, I just got your letter in the mail from the Burlington County Jail.
Agent Uh, hold on . . .
Agent picks up a ringing phone, then returns to the call.
Agent What’s your name?
Inmate Um, my name is Frances . . . Listen, if I work with y’all, all right . . . I usually run
bails, right? If I work with y’all, right, can I get a free phone call? ‘Cause there’s 18 girls
coming over tomorrow, and I can bring you some sales tomorrow.
Agent Yes, yes I got you, Frances . . .
. . .
Agent Okay, um, I’ll tell you what, just tell them . . . when they call [us] just, you know,
say Frances told me to call . . . and then that way I’ll know.
Inmate I’m gonna do the calling . . . .
Agent Oh, you’re gonna to do the calling?
Inmate Yes . . .
Agent Okay, okay, good . . . .
Inmate Listen, can you do me a favor today, though? Can I get a phone call today? . . .
I’ll be on it (referring other inmates) tomorrow ‘cause I do keep to my word.

.

.

.

“I’m making money with him while I’m in here.”
On April 3, 2013, an inmate at the Union County Jail in Elizabeth contacted Rapid Bail
Bonds of Perth Amboy to redeem three-way calls he was owed under a customer referral

33

arrangement with the firm. The agent he spoke with quickly obliged, and the inmate
proceeded to brag to the third party how well he was doing working for the agency:
Inmate Hey, what’s up, big guy?
Agent What’s up, man? Give me the number real quick.
Inmate I found out I go to court on Friday. I just want to make two calls to my family.
Agent Give me the number, give me the number.
The inmate recites a phone number, and the agent puts him on hold to place the threeway. During that call, the inmate says:
I’m calling you through the bail bondsman, through a three-way.
. . .
No, I don’t have any bail, baby. If I had a bail, I would have been out . . . . [T]hey my
friend. I’m making money with him while I’m here. I told you . . . I’m working with the
bail bondsman getting him bails while I’m in here so he gives me calls. You know what I
be doing. I made a couple bucks already.

34

DISCOUNT BAIL, SYSTEM FAILS
Shop around and you can easily find a way to post substantial five-figure bail in New Jersey
for far less than you might imagine – as little as a few hundred dollars – even if you are a repeat
criminal offender with multiple felony convictions and a history of jumping bail.
Case in point: Hanif Thompson.
Last December 11, Thompson was released from the Essex County Jail after an arrest on
charges stemming from a Newark burglary. His bail, initially set at $50,000, was reduced by more
than half to $20,000, but even that number had no particular bearing on reality. Nor, it turns
out, did $2,000, the cash equivalent of a 10 percent premium option a defendant typically is
required to pay if posting bail directly with the court.
Instead, Thompson cut a private deal with Aaron Bail Bonds, a large commercial bail-bond
agency. Legally, but out of view of the court – and despite the fact that he had jumped bail on
three prior occasions – Aaron offered a bond covering his release for an initial charge of just 1
percent down – $200 – with the balance of the premium to be paid in $100 installments over 18
weeks. His girlfriend and brother signed as co-indemnitors, and the $200 down payment plus a
$30 fee were charged to a credit card. With that, the defendant was free to go.
Four days later, according to Essex County prosecutors, Thompson and three other men
with extensive criminal records confronted a couple inside a parking garage at the Short Hills
Mall. During the ensuing carjacking, the husband, a Hoboken attorney, was killed with a gunshot
to the head. Records show that one of Thompson’s alleged cohorts – Karif Ford – also was out
on bail at the time on a similar discount installment plan. Arrested in Newark in March 2013 for

35

unlawful possession of a handgun, Ford had been released on $60,000 bail after paying $1,200 –
an amount equal to one-fifth of the full 10 percent premium of $6,000 – to a branch of Ace Bail
Bonds in Jersey City and agreeing to pay the difference at a rate of $250 a month.
Facing murder charges, Thompson, Ford and their co-defendants are back in custody, this
time on $2 million bail each with no 10 percent option.
The Short Hills carjacking shocked and outraged the public and the political community,
but it was not widely known until publication of this report just how handily Thompson and Ford
were able to escape the grip of law enforcement in the first place. Furthermore, egregious as
this case is on its face, the circumstances suggest that it may also be emblematic of a broader
systemic dysfunction spurred by the wide availability and popularity of discounted bail-bond
premiums and no- and low-money-down bail installment plans across New Jersey. Advertised
and offered by bail-bond agencies as a way to attract clients, these incentives also can serve as
hinges on a revolving door of crime.
During this investigation, the Commission found that bail-bond agencies have developed
an array of customized payment plans. All work to the advantage of criminal defendants but
none – in contrast to what judges typically consider in setting bail – take into account an
individual’s criminal history, the seriousness of the offense charged or the possibility that he or
she is or has been delinquent in making payments to other bail-bond installment plans for earlier
offenses. In some instances, bail agencies offer flat discounts with upfront fees set several
percentage points or more below the typical 10-percent premium amount. In others, agencies
offer to charge a minimal percentage of the full bail upfront – often, as in Thompson’s case, as

36

low as 1 percent, and sometimes for no money down – with the balance of the 10 percent
premium amount due in regular installments over time.
Proponents of these practices consider them legitimate business development tactics for
small businesses struggling to remain viable in a highly competitive marketplace. Others argue
that without discounted bail premiums and installment payment plans, many more low-income
defendants would remain behind bars for extended periods before trial because they could not
afford the standard bail-bond premium option.
On the other hand, these types of customized bail payment arrangements typically are
crafted with no outside regulation and little or no transparency. There is no requirement that
the terms of such a deal worked out privately between a bail agent and a defendant be reported
to law enforcement or to the court, often leaving judges in the dark when the magnitude of bail
they have ordered is effectively diminished. The Commission also found that there is no
guarantee that defendants and/or their indemnitors will make good on the required bail-bond
payments even under the terms of generous installment plans. Indeed, in many instances
examined by the Commission, investigators found that criminal defendants and/or responsible
indemnitors generally stopped making the payments after one or two installments. Case in point,
again: Hanif Thompson. Records show that, prior to his recent arrest for murder, Thompson
himself made no payments on his pending installment plan with Aaron. Likewise, available
payment records for Ford show that he has an unpaid balance of $3,600 on the Ace Bail Bonds
installment plan that opened the door for his release on a firearms charge early last year.

37

During this investigation, the Commission examined these and numerous other instances
involving discounted and installment plan bail-bond arrangements, including the following
examples:

 Fararhd Gunter
A member of the G-Shine set of the Bloods, New Jersey’s largest and most
notorious criminal street gang, Gunter was a career criminal with nine felony
convictions when he was arrested in Newark on March 14, 2013 on drug and firearms
charges. Held on $100,000 bail, he gained release after his wife paid Aaron Bail Bonds
$1,500 – 1.5 percent of the total bail – with a credit card and agreed to an installment
plan with weekly payments of $200 to cover the balance of the $10,000 premium.
Two months later, on May 17, 2013, Gunter allegedly was one of three individuals
who approached a man walking with his 12-year-old son along Rutgers Avenue in
Jersey City, according to prosecutors. Gunfire erupted, both father and son were shot,
and the boy later died from his injuries. Gunter’s connection to this incident came to
light in August 2013 when he was arrested on charges stemming from a motor vehicle
incident during which he fled the scene tossing packets of heroin and crack cocaine.
Taking Gunter into custody, police discovered an outstanding warrant issued by the
Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office charging him with the child’s murder. He is
currently incarcerated. There is no evidence that any payments were made to satisfy
the premium balance remaining on the Aaron Bail bonds installment plan.

 Ronald Daniels, Jr.
Also a member of the Bloods, Daniels has made prolific use of bail-bond
installment plans in recent years. Charged in August 2012 with resisting arrest in
connection with an outstanding warrant, he was released on $6,000 bail after
relatives posted $300 cash with Ace Bail Bonds as part of a deal that called for $50
monthly payments to cover the full premium. Also charged with threatening an
officer, Daniels was held on $35,000 bail but gained release after $700 cash was
38

posted with Ace by one of the same relatives who agreed this time to pay monthly
installments of $150 toward the full premium. In September 2012, Daniels was
arrested yet again, charged with receiving stolen property and various weapons
offenses. Held on $100,000 bail, he was released after relatives paid $3,000 cash to
Ace and agreed to monthly installments of $150.
In December 2012, while out on this third bail, Daniels was among 52 people
arrested and charged with drug-trafficking in an investigation of the heroin trade in
Monmouth and Ocean counties. Authorities described him as a ringleader of that
enterprise. Two months later, while incarcerated, Daniels was additionally but
separately charged in the shooting death of a man in Asbury Park dating back to
September 1, 2012 – an incident that occurred while he was free on two bail-bond
installment arrangements.



Jaron Flowers
By the time he finally pled guilty and was sentenced to 11 years in prison in
October 2013, Flowers spent a full year committing multiple drug-related crimes while
out on various bail-bond installment plans. Indicted seven times between January
2012 and the end of that year mainly on charges involving heroin and cocaine
distribution, Flowers utilized the services of three different bail agencies that in most
instances charged him no more than a 2 percent premium upfront on bail amounts
ranging as high as $50,000. In most cases, records show, the bulk of the remaining
balance owed through installments went unpaid.
In one instance, no down payment was required prior to his release from jail. That
occurred in May 2012 when Flowers, already free on three separate bail installment
plans, was arrested for drug manufacturing and for distribution on school property in
New Brunswick. Ordered held on $50,000 bail with no 10 percent cash option through
the court, Flowers worked out a deal with Bail Monsters Inc., a bail agency in Elizabeth
which called for weekly installments of $250 to pay down a premium of $5,000. The
bail agency’s records, obtained via subpoena, show no payment was made prior to his

39

release. Flowers went on to be arrested three more times prior to his ultimate guilty
plea.



Taurean Houston
In May 2010, Houston was arrested and charged with attempted murder and
aggravated assault and ordered held at the Camden County Jail on $175,000 bail.
Records obtained by subpoena from ABC Bail Bonds of Camden show that
approximately one month later that agency posted a bond to secure Houston’s
release under the terms of a discounted premium and installment payment plan. A
down payment of $8,000 – 4.6 percent of the total bail instead of a 10 percent
premium of $17,500 – was made by his aunt with the balance subject to a $350-permonth payment schedule.
Six months later, on January 20, 2011, Houston was charged in the shooting death
of an innocent bystander in Camden during what police described as a territorial
dispute over narcotics distribution. Held this time on $750,000 bail, he is currently
incarcerated in East Jersey State Prison, facing murder and weapons charges.
Meanwhile, court records show that the balance owed ABC Bail Bonds was never paid.
The agency filed suit against Houston and five indemnitors who signed promissory
notes on his behalf, but the case was disposed via default judgment in January 2012.



Terell Sandifer
On October 30, 2012, Sandifer was arrested and charged with burglary, theft and
obstruction when Jersey City police caught him in the act of looting a retail athletic
shoe outlet during a power blackout in the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy. At the
time, Sandifer, charged in a separate matter with drug possession with intent to
distribute, was free on $30,000 bail under an installment plan with Ace Bail Bonds that
had required $700 down – little more than 2 percent of the total bail – and monthly
payments of $100. A review of records obtained from Ace via subpoena turned up no
evidence that any installments were ever paid. For the Sandy-related charges,
40

meanwhile, Sandifer was ordered held on $75,000 bail. He gained release early in
December, however, through an installment deal arranged with an Ace competitor,
Aaron Bail Bonds. An amount of $750 – equal to just 1 percent of the total bail and
10 percent of a $7,500 premium – was posted by a friend while she and other friends
and family members agreed to act an indemnitors on a payment plan of $200 per
week for the balance. A review of Aaron’s records showed no payments beyond
January 15, 2013.
In April 2013, Sandifer was again arrested on drug charges but remained
incarcerated. In August he pled guilty under a global plea offer resolving all pending
charges against him and was sentenced to five years in prison.



Joseph Fallo
Fallo’s criminal record of two dozen arrests and eight felony convictions, including
six for aggravated assault, was no impediment to his gaining quick release from jail in
June 2013 on charges stemming from the beating of his girlfriend. Charged in that
case with aggravated assault with a weapon, making terroristic threats and other
counts, Fallo was ordered held on a combined bail of $120,000. In an installment plan
worked out with John’s Bail Bonds, however, two family members acting as coindemnitors made a down payment of $7,798 – 6.5 percent of the total bail – toward
the full $12,000 premium and agreed to weekly payments of $100 to cover the
difference.
In late July, little more than a month later, Fallo was arrested again in connection
with an attack on his now-former girlfriend. Held this time on $75,000 bail, he was
charged with multiple felonies, including aggravated assault, criminal mischief,
unlawful possession of a weapon and resisting arrest. The same two family members
returned to John’s Bail Bonds and arranged a credit-card down payment of $2,500 on
the $7,500 premium and agreed to monthly installments of $500 to pay off the
balance. Less than two weeks later, Fallo was charged with violating a judicial
restraining order by attempting to contact his ex-girlfriend.

41

It is noteworthy that one of Fallo’s bail indemnitors was the target of a lawsuit filed
in 2005 by another bail agency for defaulting on an earlier installment plan. The other
co-signer is an individual who receives Social Security disability. On the two bails
detailed above, the combined monthly payments total $900 a month.

42

LICENSE TO DISOBEY
On paper, New Jersey’s regulation of the bail-bond industry and, in particular, the
licensing process required for prospective bail agents, appear to provide a substantial bulwark
against intrusion by dishonest and unscrupulous operators. By law, applicants must undergo
criminal background checks, submit to an electronic fingerprint scan, complete ten hours of
training on bail procedures and pass a licensing exam. While there are no automatic disqualifiers,
there are circumstances – such as certain felony convictions or the commission of certain
fraudulent acts – that can prompt the Department of Banking and Insurance to deny an
application or to suspend, revoke or refuse to renew an existing license.
The problem is that, in reality, this entire licensing and regulatory structure can be ignored
and circumvented with impunity. That’s because scant resources are devoted to oversight,
DOBI’s posture toward bail matters is predominantly reactive, and the bail-bond industry has
evolved to be largely self-policing.
The Commission found instances in which bail agents, despite having been caught and
penalized for employing unlicensed personnel, soon resumed the same activity virtually without
interruption. Further, not only are unlicensed runners widely used to solicit business but some
individuals acting as bail agents themselves solicit, negotiate and sell bail bonds without a license.
These include individuals who were booted from the industry for engaging in illegal, unethical or
improper conduct but who returned to the business through various subterfuges, such as using
a spouse, relative or other close associate as a seemingly legitimate front. Some have continued
to operate in this kind of surreptitious fashion for years.

43

Operating without a license is not a crime in New Jersey but rather a regulatory violation
punishable by civil penalties such as fines. Evidence suggests this is not an effective deterrent.19
Indeed, according to numerous individuals familiar with the workings of the bail-bond industry
who were interviewed by Commission investigators, the involvement of unlicensed personnel is
hardly uncommon.
In one case, a former agent who had been fined and whose license had been revoked for,
among other things, using jail inmates to solicit business nonetheless continued to offer his
services, openly lying about possessing proper credentials on the internet website of a bail-bond
agency owned by his wife. More systemically, the Commission found that many employees of
New Jersey’s largest bail agency, Aaron Bail Bonds, actively participate in the negotiation and sale
of bail bonds even though only a handful are actually licensed by the State to do so.
The following examples illustrate how certain individuals have continued to profit from
the bail system in defiance of state oversight and regulation:

 John Ostrander
Known in the business by the nickname “Johnny O,” Ostrander, as referenced earlier in
this report, lost his bail credentials in 2003 after DOBI found that he was recruiting jail inmates
to solicit business and that he and his girlfriend/partner failed to refund money to a client whose
bond was never posted with the court. DOBI also imposed fines totaling $15,000. The
Commission found no evidence that the fines were ever paid or collected. More significantly,

19

At least eight other states have enacted legislation making it a crime punishable by prison for anyone convicted of
soliciting or selling bail bonds without proper licensure. They are Connecticut, California, Florida, Oklahoma, North
Carolina, South Dakota, Ohio and Texas.

44

despite his license revocation, Ostrander for years continued to function as a bail agent and to
use inmates to gather new customers.
Ostrander first registered with the State in 1994, the same year he opened Lucky 7 Bail
Bonds in Perth Amboy.20 In March 1996, his business practices were called into question when
an inmate at the Middlesex County Jail told a corrections officer that he had made a deal with
“John from Lucky 7” to solicit bail business in exchange for money to pay off his own bail. A
subsequent county investigation found evidence that at least six inmates had referred
prospective customers to Lucky 7, including some who said cash compensation was funneled
through others to disguise the connection to Ostrander’s agency.
Shortly after the county launched its investigation, Ostrander, in what would soon be
revealed as a transparent ploy to throw the authorities off track, issued a memo to his own
employees declaring that paying jail inmates for referrals would not be tolerated and that any
individual involved in such activity would face termination. About the same time, Middlesex Jail
officials met with Ostrander and the principals of other bail agencies and told them that agents
who solicited inmates could be banned from business involving criminal defendants housed at
the facility. Within a month, despite Ostrander’s assurances that his agency was no longer
engaged in the practice, jail officials found evidence that Lucky 7’s inmate contacts had resumed,
according to an internal report.
Concurrently, DOBI opened a separate inquiry after receiving letter from the then-County
Counsel warning that use of inmates by bail agents posed a potential security threat, particularly

20

Prior to 2004, bail agents were only required to be registered with the State as limited insurance representatives.
A formal licensing requirement was introduced in phases under provisions of the New Jersey Insurance Producers
Act of 2001. The license is technically known as an “insurance producer’s license.”

45

in connection with rival gang involvement in the bail process. In 1999, while the State’s
investigation proceeded, Ostrander sold Lucky 7 and opened a new firm, Quick Bonding. Within
two years, however, DOBI’s case expanded when a Quick Bonding client complained that
Ostrander and his then-girlfriend (now-wife) Silkia Rios, a registered bail agent, failed to return
$50,000 after the agency refused to secure a bond.
Ostrander never responded when DOBI attempted to accommodate his request to
schedule an administrative hearing to dispute the charges. In 2003, the department issued a final
order revoking the registrations of both Ostrander and Rios and jointly fined them $5,000.
Ostrander separately was fined an additional $10,000 for recruiting inmates. Ostrander and Rios
both told the Commission under oath that they never paid the fines.

Rios stated she was

unaware of the fine against her and that she was told by her attorney at the time that he was
handling the matter. Likewise, Ostrander told the Commission he was unaware of the details of
the case and that his attorney told him “he took care of it and that everything was okay.”21 A
review of DOBI’s files turned up no evidence that the fines were ever collected by the State.
Despite these regulatory sanctions, Rios applied for a new bail license and DOBI granted
it in 2009, the same year she opened Rapid Bail Bonds in Perth Amboy.22 Although she is recorded
as Rapid’s legal owner, the Commission determined that Ostrander – functioning behind the
scenes without a license – is in charge of the agency’s day-to-day operations, working out of the
main office and at another Rapid location in Linden. Rapid also maintains offices in Atlantic City

21

It should be noted that Ostrander’s attorney was disbarred in 2006 on various grounds, including failure to keep
clients reasonably informed.
22
Under provisions of N.J.A.C. 11:17D-2.7(a), an agent whose license has been revoked may reapply after five years,
but DOBI has the option to reject the renewal.

46

and Freehold. Rios serves as the managing agent at both of these locations, but they are
operated by other individuals who share profits with her under arrangements brokered by
Ostrander. The Commission also found that Ostrander’s involvement with Rapid extended to the
hiring of three individuals to perform bounty hunting services without proper licensing. In March
2013, the three were arrested by the State Police and charged with illegal weapons possession
and bounty hunting without a license.
Not only did Ostrander negotiate and execute bail-bond arrangements during this
investigation, but recordings of jailhouse phone calls reveal that he also continued to work with
inmates on customer referrals. For example, in an April 26, 2013 phone conversation with an
inmate at the Union County Jail, Ostrander can be heard discussing a bail bond arrangement for
another inmate. Ostrander explained that he had already negotiated a deal with the inmate’s
father:
Inmate Hey listen, I got this kid here . . . . I’m taking this kid under my wing. He’s a good
kid. His bail is $275,000. He’s got 7-5 . . .
Ostrander Yeah, yeah.
Inmate $7,500 and . . .
Ostrander No, no. I talked to his father . . . I made a deal with his father.
Inmate You made a deal with his father?
Ostrander He said he was going to call me back.
In sworn testimony before the Commission, Ostrander denied involvement in bail-bond
matters and stated that his responsibilities at Rapid are limited to maintenance and promotional
activities. Rios also testified that her husband does not get involved in handling bails or dealing
with clients. At the same time, however, she acknowledged that the individual speaking in the
jailhouse recordings is that of John Ostrander.

47

 Ronny Morales
At Mr. Lopez Bail Bonds in Linden, the individual who operates the office and conducts
business there is known as “Mr. Lopez.” But there is no Mr. Lopez at this small agency, only
Ronny Morales, a convicted felon without a valid bail-bond license who has no problem letting
customers believe he is the business’s namesake.
Morales has a colorful history in New Jersey’s bail-bond industry. He has been active in
the business for decades. In the mid-90s, he was the office manager of Lucky 7 Bail Bonds in
Perth Amboy, the agency then-owned by Ostrander. When Ostrander sold the business in 1999,
the new owner demoted Morales, precipitating an altercation that ended with Morales shooting
his new boss in the shoulder. Charged with aggravated assault and possession of firearms for an
unlawful purpose, Morales was convicted and served seven years in state prison.
Mr. Lopez Bail Bonds was established in 2011. Although Morales’ wife, who does possess
a valid bail license, is recorded as the official owner, the Commission found that Morales himself
is the primary operator, routinely negotiating and handling transactions there, despite the fact
that DOBI has no record of his ever holding a license. During a surveillance of the agency in
August 2013, investigators witnessed Morales on the phone agreeing to meet a potential bail
client. Further, a former customer told the Commission in sworn testimony that she obtained
bail bonds on behalf of her criminal-defendant son on two occasions through an individual she
identified as Morales. The witness said Morales came to her home, filled out the appropriate bailbond paperwork and accepted a check for the premium. After the bond was posted in one of
those instances, Morales picked up her son from jail and returned him to her home.

48

Appearing under oath before the Commission, Morales initially denied the allegations
before admitting that he does negotiate bail-bond deals and performs other bail-related tasks on
behalf of the Mr. Lopez agency. He also admitted that he has signed his wife’s name on bail
documents, which require the signature of a licensed bail-bond agent.

 Thomas Dobrek
Visitors to the office of Atlantic Bail Bonds in Mount Holly last year said they met with a
bail agent identifying himself as “Tom,” who took their down payments and provided paperwork
for installment plans to pay off the various bonds the agency would issue. One client said Tom
even accompanied him to the Burlington County Courthouse to confirm the amount of bail.
Unknown to these customers, however, was that Tom – Thomas Dobrek – was operating without
a license. DOBI had revoked it six years earlier for multiple violations and then later rejected his
application for a new one, concluding that he was “unfit” for the industry.
Dobrek was first registered to conduct bail business in 1999 when he became the majority
owner of a firm called Mr. Lucky Bail Bonds with offices in Mount Holly, Asbury Park, Camden,
Atlantic City and North Brunswick. He sold that firm a year later, and in 2003, after his wife
Weiran received her bail license, the couple opened Atlantic Bail Bonds in Mount Holly.
Over the course of the following four years, however, customer complaints about
Dobrek’s activities while at Mr. Lucky drew DOBI’s attention and triggered an investigation. In
2007, the department pulled his license, finding that he had misappropriated $10,000 in
collateral posted by a client, charged excessive and/or discriminatory bail-bond premiums and
made false statements on an application to work as an agent for an insurance company. DOBI

49

also imposed fines and penalties totaling $21,175 and ordered Dobrek to refund the
misappropriated collateral and pay more than $18,000, plus interest, in customer restitution.
The department stated in writing at the time that his “conduct was at best incompetent and, at
worst, dishonest. His low standards of operation demonstrate that he is unfit to hold an
insurance producer’s license.”
Notwithstanding that observation and his failure to pay any of the fines or restitution
levied against him, Dobrek, at his earliest possible legal opportunity, approached DOBI
approximately five years later and asked that his license be reinstated. The application was
denied. In a March 25, 2013 letter, the department told him that, aside from the unpaid
penalties, Dobrek was now additionally in violation of New Jersey’s insurance laws because his
post-revocation employment included data entry and other office work at Atlantic Bail Bonds,
now owned by his wife.23 Another factor in the denial was that Dobrek and his wife, in a separate
matter, were facing insurance fraud charges stemming from their involvement in questionable
circumstances surrounding a 2007 motor vehicle accident.24
Despite the revocation of his bail-bond license and the denial of its renewal, Dobrek
continues to work as a bail bond agent. Two former customers of Atlantic Bail Bonds who had
separate unrelated dealings with the agency in 2013, both identified a photograph of Dobrek as
the person who handled their bail transactions. One of these individuals told the Commission in
sworn testimony that Dobrek identified himself as a bail agent, accepted a down payment and

23

Under N.J.A.C. 11:17D-2.5 (e), insurance producers, including bail agent, whose licenses are revoked are prohibited
from employment in any capacity by another licensed producer.
24
In 2009, Weiran Dobrek entered into a Consent Order with the New Jersey Office of the Insurance Fraud Prosecutor
to resolve the charges but still faces potential loss of her bail-bond license. If Dobrek himself is found in violation of
the Insurance Fraud Act, he may face fines of up to $15,000 per violation.

50

provided paperwork for a plan to pay off the remainder of the bond premium. Later in the day,
this client met with another Atlantic Bail Bonds representative who actually signed the
documents executing the bond. The other customer, a former inmate at the Corrections and
Work Release Center in Burlington County, testified that Dobrek was the Atlantic Bail Bonds
employee with whom she spoke in recorded jailhouse phone calls and, later, with whom she met
to sign paperwork at the agency’s office.
Questioned under oath about whether it is his voice on the jailhouse recordings, whether
he conducts bail transactions without a license and whether he ever misrepresented himself as
Weiran Dobrek in order to conduct bail business, Dobrek invoked his Fifth Amendment
constitutional right against possible self-incrimination and refused to respond substantively.

51

BAIL FORFEITURES: LAX RECOVERY
While most criminal defendants released on bail return for required court appearances,
some do not, and that is a phenomenon which triggers a process called forfeiture. Under such
circumstances, a judge typically issues a warrant for the fugitive’s arrest, the bail is revoked and
any bail money posted is relinquished to the court. At least that is how it is supposed to work.
In practice, however, the forfeiture process is anything but clear-cut, especially when the money
is tied up in a surety bond obtained through a bail agency.
As an outgrowth of this inquiry, the Commission reviewed forfeiture outcomes in each of
New Jersey’s 21 counties and found that the amount of bail imposed by the court is rarely, if
ever, collected. In fact, only pennies on the dollar are recovered when a defendant fails to appear
and a judgment is entered for the full amount of the bond. This picture is further complicated by
the fact that the methods used by counties to craft bail forfeiture settlements are plagued by
wide disparities that impact collection rates. As one former County Prosecutor told the
Commission, “the public would be appalled” if it knew how little of the forfeited bail owed was
turned over by the surety companies that provide bail bonds.
During 2013 alone, 1,836 bail forfeiture cases were resolved through negotiated
settlements. Of the $51.7 million worth of outstanding judgments due to the court, only $6.5
million was collected. The average negotiated settlement was approximately 12.5 percent of the
original bond amount. In 2012, the average statewide collection rate was less than 9 percent.
Here is how the process works: If a defendant with a bail bond misses court, a bail agent
is given a 75-day grace period, from the date of the official notice, to recover the fugitive. If the
grace period expires and the defendant is not located and/or returned, the court can enter a
52

judgment of default against the surety and bail agency.25 Once the fugitive is captured, the surety
usually files a motion to vacate the judgment. This filing may include a recitation of the steps
taken by the bail agency and expenses incurred in the effort to apprehend the fugitive. Next,
negotiations occur between the surety and the County Counsel, acting as a representative of the
Office of the Attorney General, to determine a remission settlement. A judge is required to sign
off on the terms of whatever agreement is finally reached. In virtually every case, the negotiated
amount winds up significantly lower than the value of the original bond.
There are numerous elements that may influence the final settlement. When deciding
the amount of forfeited bail that should be collected, the court, based upon a complex set of
remission guidelines established by the Attorney General, considers factors such as the degree
of the surety’s supervision of the defendant, the length of time the defendant was a fugitive and
whether the defendant committed another crime while a fugitive. Further, while balancing those
factors, the court is authorized to provide an incentive to the surety to recapture a fugitive
defendant and provide substantial remission in order to not deter the surety from posting future
bails.
Complicating the collection rates further is the fact that some counties have developed
unique policies and procedures for handling certain forfeiture matters. While most County
Counsel use the remission guidelines established by the Attorney General as a starting point in
negotiations, some County Counsel do not become involved in the actual process until a formal
judgment is rendered (after 75 days). Others utilize the guidelines immediately upon a

25

A surety that fails to satisfy judgments may be precluded from writing bails by the Clerk of the Superior Court.
Also, any bail agent or agency that executes a bail resulting in an unsatisfied judgment shall be placed on the
preclusion list by the Clerk of the Superior Court. N.J.S.A. 17:31-11(a) and N.J. Ct. R. 1:13-3(e)(2).

53

defendant’s return. In certain instances, sureties are permitted to factor in costs incurred while
capturing a fugitive. However, this is not a universally accepted practice. As a result, forfeiture
collection rates vary from county to county with some doing better than others.
This is not a new problem. Deficiencies in the collection of bail forfeiture monies were
noted in reviews conducted by the Office of the State Auditor in 2004 and 2007. Following the
2007 audit, the Attorney General’s Office submitted a written response agreeing to work with
the counties to ensure consistent application of the guidelines throughout the State. Since then,
however, the issues of inconsistency among the counties and low collection rates have only
worsened. Last year’s statewide average collection rate for bail forfeiture settlements was 12.5
percent, significantly below the 18 percent rate reported by the Auditor for 2007.
The challenge of recovering forfeited bail, of course, is not unique to New Jersey. For
example, Connecticut has adopted different strategies aimed at improving the collection process.
During the 1990s, Connecticut incorporated its bail forfeiture system into law with key provisions
designed to streamline the process and strike an effective compromise between the State’s
collection obligations and the interests of the bail-bond industry. As in New Jersey, bail agents
and sureties are entitled to rebates depending on how soon the defendant is returned, but unlike
New Jersey, which gives sureties/bail bond agencies four years or more to recover a fugitive and
collect some percentage rebate, any opportunity to seek such remission expires after one year
in Connecticut. Furthermore, all rebates of forfeiture payment there are governed by a precise,
clearly delineated schedule based upon the number of days a defendant was at large at the time
of return. Unlike New Jersey, where such remissions are subject to negotiation and can vary
widely by county, Connecticut requires statewide adherence to the rebate schedule. Thus,
54

centralization of the entire bail forfeiture process in Connecticut, including rebates, advances
consistency regarding how bail forfeitures are handled.

55

REFERRALS and RECOMMENDATIONS
The Commission refers the findings of this investigation to the following agencies of
government for whatever action is deemed appropriate:


New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance



Office of the Attorney General of New Jersey



Offices of the Prosecutor, Sheriff and appropriate Corrections authorities in each
of New Jersey’s 21 counties

.

.

.

Evidence developed during this investigation amply demonstrates that regulation of New
Jersey’s bail system – a public system vulnerable to worsening abuse and manipulation by
unscrupulous private interests – requires wholesale strengthening and reform. If the State, as a
matter of policy and practice, is going to continue to allow commercial bail-bond agencies to
operate within that system, it must establish appropriate and effective statutory, regulatory and
administrative controls to hold those entities accountable through proper licensing and
oversight. Moreover, the rampant recruitment and compensation of criminal defendants by bail
agencies to drum up business – in effect, attaching a profit motive to going to jail – constitutes a
threat to institutional security and public safety. It has made a mockery of official regulations
prohibiting solicitation by unlicensed individuals and should be outlawed by statute with
appropriate criminal penalties for violators. Furthermore, to the extent that the widespread,
loosely regulated and non-transparent practice of discounting bail premiums serves to create a
revolving door for violent offenders to commit more crime, as detailed in this report, it should
56

be curtailed immediately. Finally, action should be taken by the State to compel improvements
in the processes used by county governments to capture millions of dollars lost to taxpayers each
year as a result of unrecovered bail forfeitures.
As noted at the outset of this report, while these recommendations cover significant areas
in need of reform, they should not be addressed in isolation to other problematic bail matters
that have received considerable attention apart from the issues targeted in this investigation.
This is particularly important in the context of crafting a sensible long-term strategy to deal with
the full ramifications of discounted bail premiums and bail installment plans. While it is plainly
in the public’s best interest to prevent violent repeat offenders from circumventing high bail
requirements to gain easy immediate release from jail, imposing severe limits on discounts or
eliminating them altogether with no alternative would likely pose a separate set of undesirable
consequences. It is well-documented that substantial numbers of bail-eligible criminal
defendants – many charged with minor drug violations and other nonviolent offenses – already
remain in jail at taxpayer expense for unreasonable periods of time because they cannot afford
even nominal bail. Taking any steps that would have the effect of diminishing their release
options still further would serve to undermine the whole purpose of bail and exacerbate jail
overcrowding with all the attendant costs and security problems associated with that
phenomenon. Thus, any solution will require striking a careful balance between efforts on one
hand to bolster public safety and, on the other, to contain costs, safeguard institutional security
and ensure constitutional access to bail.

57

The Commission’s reform recommendations stemming from this investigation are set
forth in greater detail as follows:

1. Reorganize Licensing, Oversight and Enforcement
Responsibility for licensing and oversight of bail-bond agencies and their personnel, as
well as for the enforcement of applicable laws and regulations, should be moved from the
Department of Banking and Insurance (DOBI) and assigned to the Department of Law and Public
Safety.
Historically, the difficult task of maintaining the integrity of the bail system’s operational
components in the private sector in New Jersey has been assigned to the State’s insurance
regulator because bail at its most basic is a form of insurance – that is, money and/or property
posted against the possibility that a defendant released from custody will flee. In that context,
DOBI does perform an appropriate role – to a point – by regulating surety companies and other
elements of the insurance industry that underwrite the risk and financial exposure assumed by
bail agencies when they issue bonds. But giving DOBI exclusive purview in this area blurs the
significant fact that, aside from insurance considerations, bail is an inextricable part of the
criminal justice system. It is a nexus of daily interaction among criminal defendants, defense
attorneys, prosecutors, judges, corrections personnel – and the private bail-bond entrepreneurs
who profit from that interaction.
More significantly, this investigation has revealed that questionable and unscrupulous
activity is rife within key segments of the commercial bail-bond industry – and has been for some
time – and that the current system for policing that industry simply is not up to the task. One of

58

DOBI’s key responsibilities is to ensure proper licensing of bail-bond practitioners and yet the
industry continues to be infiltrated by individuals who operate blatantly without a license, not to
mention the scores, perhaps hundreds, of unlicensed criminal defendants who continue to solicit
bail inside county jails across New Jersey. Moreover, DOBI itself acknowledges that its bail
regulatory functions are spread thin across multiple offices and that those functions are comingled with standard insurance regulatory matters. It is also a fact that at least one key bailbond oversight responsibility – criminal background checks on license applicants – already is
performed by law enforcement, in this case the State Police, which is entirely appropriate.
Indeed, DOBI should not be expected to carry out that or any other function which necessarily
involves the criminal justice system, especially the enforcement of criminal laws such as those
proposed in the recommendation that follows herein.
Thus, the Commission recommends that responsibility for licensing and oversight of bailbond agencies and their personnel be transferred to and consolidated within the Department of
Law and Public Safety and administered as a unit by a dedicated in-house team of investigators,
auditors and ancillary personnel supervised by an attorney knowledgeable about the appropriate
statutes and regulations. By concentrating and enhancing oversight in this way, the State will be
able to investigate and audit the activities of bail-bond licensees, and enforce sanction against
violators, on a more consistent and effective basis. Furthermore, DOBI would not be removed
from the picture entirely. The Law and Public Safety bail unit would work in concert with DOBI

59

personnel, who would retain jurisdiction over bail-related entities, such as surety firms, that
operate strictly within the regulated insurance sector.26
In order to defray the taxpayer cost associated with this move and to make the State’s
regulatory machinery more self-supporting, the Commission also recommends that licensing and
renewal fees for bail-bond agents and agencies be increased. The current schedule includes a
relatively modest initial licensing fee of $75 with renewals required every two years at a rate of
$75. If the initial fee were increased to at least $300 and renewals made mandatory on an annual,
rather than semi-annual basis, at a rate of at least $250, more than $200,000 in additional
revenue could be generated each year.27

2. Criminalize Violations of Licensure
Under New Jersey’s current statutory structure, N.J.S.A. 17:22A-40 empowers DOBI to
take a range of civil disciplinary action against individuals and entities that violate regulations
governing the terms of their bail-bond licensure, or who perform bail-bond activities without a
valid license. These penalties include fines, probation, license suspension and/or revocation and
refusal to issue or renew a license. There are no criminal sanctions in this arena, however, not
even for operating without a license or for using or employing unlicensed individuals to solicit
bail-bond business. By contrast, a number of states, including California and Florida, have

26

Precedent for this bifurcated approach toward regulating an industry exists in the structure of New Jersey’s A-901
system for licensing and regulation of the solid waste industry. The two state agencies charged with protecting the
integrity of that industry and with licensing and monitoring the activity of its participants are the Department of
Environmental Protection (DEP) and the Department of Law and Public Safety through the Division of Law and the
State Police.
27
Given that there are more than 1,000 currently licensed bail agents and agencies in New Jersey, most of the new
annual revenue would derive from license renewals.

60

concluded that administrative penalties alone are insufficient deterrents against unlicensed and
unscrupulous bail-bond operations and have enacted laws making such activity a crime. Various
states to varying degrees also have made it a crime to solicit bail-bond business within or on the
grounds of a jail or prison and to employ or otherwise compensate inmates for that purpose. The
findings of this investigation dictate that New Jersey should follow a similar course.
Thus, legislation should be considered to amend the State’s Criminal Code to make it a
felony to perform the acts of a bail-bond agent or agency without a license or to employ,
compensate or otherwise use unlicensed individuals to solicit bail-bond business. Such activity
should also result, where relevant, in immediate administrative action to cause license
revocation. It should also be a felony punishable by similar sanctions to solicit bail-bond business
on the grounds of or within a jail or prison or any other place where criminal defendants and
incarcerated inmates appear and/or are confined, or to employ, compensate or otherwise use
an inmate or inmates to solicit bail-bond business. Furthermore, legislation should also be
enacted making it a crime to facilitate three-way telephone calls for incarcerated inmates, with
license revocation automatic for any bail agent or agency that orchestrates or otherwise
participates in such arrangements.

3. Reform, Regulate and Require Disclosure of Discount BailBond Deals
There is increasing recognition in New Jersey that something must be done to effectuate
a better and more equitable balance between the rights of criminal defendants and the
imperatives of public safety and security. As the Supreme Court’s Joint Committee on Criminal

61

Justice recently reported, the current bail structure “presents problems at both sides of the
system: some people are held on less serious crimes, with little risk of flight, only because they
cannot pay relatively minor amounts of bail; others who pose a significant threat to the
community and a substantial risk of flight must be released if they can afford to post bail.”28 The
panel recommended a sweeping overhaul centered on the adoption of a “risk-based” approach
in which judges could rely on objective factors to assess a level of risk posed by a defendant and
then impose appropriate conditions, including but not limited to the posting of money bail, for
pretrial release. Similarly, legislation has been introduced in the Assembly and Senate to
implement a state constitutional amendment providing for a system of non-monetary bail
alternatives for release under certain circumstances and for mandatory pretrial detention under
others.29
The salient point in the context of this investigation is that adoption of these proposals in
part or in full will not eliminate or rectify problems plaguing the bail-bond system. Monetary bail
will remain a significant option for some criminal defendants, which means that questionable,
hidden and ill-advised discounts and installment payment plans of the sort detailed in this report
likely will persist unless explicitly addressed and brought under control by state regulation.
Thus, the Commission recommends that legislation be enacted to require that the
premium charged by bail-bond agencies be no less than the 10 percent option available through
the court, unless a judge determines that, in either case, charging a lesser percentage of the full
bail and/or offering a special installment plan is appropriate to the circumstances at hand. Also,

28
29

See Report of the Joint Committee on Criminal Justice, March 10, 2014.
A-1910 (Burzichelli, Coleman, Wimberly, Spencer and McKeon) and S-946 (Norcross, Scutari and Barnes).

62

to the extent that such arrangements allow for payment of premiums in installments over time,
the fulfillment of such terms should be made a condition of whether or not the defendant’s
release is continued. Finally, bail agents should be required, as a matter of regular practice, to
disclose to the court and to the appropriate prosecutorial authorities the terms and conditions
of any such customized bail-bond payment arrangement that departs from the standard 10percent rule.30

4. Establish Uniform Bail-Agent Access Rules for County Jails
New Jersey’s county jails maintain weak and wildly inconsistent policies governing access
by commercial bail-bond agents to their inmate populations. Only one county in the State –
Monmouth – has established written rules explicitly prohibiting solicitation of inmates for bail
purposes. Just six of the counties whose practice were examined by the Commission – Atlantic,
Hunterdon, Middlesex, Ocean, Passaic and Warren – have written policies prohibiting three-way
calls. Moreover, as this investigation has revealed, even among those jails that have taken action
to control and regulate bail-agent access, enforcement of the rules has been spotty and
haphazard. Thus, the Legislature should call upon an appropriate statewide organization, such
as the New Jersey Jail Wardens Association, to develop a uniform set of best practices in this area
that could be adopted by every county jail in the State. These rules and procedures should be
backed up by reasonable sanctions, including a schedule of access suspensions for violators and
access revocation for repeat offenders. Also, to the extent that they have not already done so,

30

Failure to have the court and prosecutor apprised of the bail payment arrangements could otherwise be used,
among other things, to circumvent the purpose of the bail source hearing. Bail source hearings are necessary, in
certain instances, to ensure that illicit funds are not used for bail.

63

jail administrators should designate personnel responsible for monitoring and enforcing
compliance.

5. Streamline Bail Forfeiture Recovery Process and Provide
Stronger Oversight
Bail forfeitures represent sizable financial obligations that rightfully are owed to and
equally shared by the State and it counties. Based upon the summary findings presented in this
report, it is plain that New Jersey could do more to maximize its forfeiture collection process,
which is currently governed by a complex set of non-statutory guidelines subject to varying
degrees of practical application at the county level. The Commission recommends that the
Legislature examine the forfeiture collection experience in other states, notably Connecticut’s
remission process, which has been streamlined and strengthened with clear-cut rules. In
particular, Connecticut’s rules include non-negotiable rebate amounts on forfeiture payments
depending on the length of time a defendant has been a fugitive.

Incorporating such

requirements into law, rather than leaving them within a set of remission guidelines subject to
interpretation, would enable the forfeiture process to be applied consistently in all the counties.
Furthermore, the State should reconsider the wisdom of ceding virtually all responsibility
for the handling and execution of forfeiture matters to the various offices of County Counsel in
each of the 21 counties. To ensure the process is handled uniformly and consistently, centralized
oversight may be more appropriate. Thus, the Commission recommends that the new Bail Unit
within the Department of Law and Public Safety – proposed in the first recommendation of this
report – have direct supervision of bail forfeiture settlements and collections.

64

6. Enhance Consumer Protection in the Bail-Bond Industry
During this investigation, the Commission found multiple instances in which criminal
defendants seeking bail, or relatives and/or friends seeking to post bail on their behalf,
unwittingly entered into bail-bond arrangements with unlicensed individuals who were able to
hide or otherwise misrepresent their lack of requisite credentials. In order to safeguard the
legitimate interests of consumers doing business with elements of this industry, it is
recommended that all bail agents, as a condition of licensure, be required to possess and display
identification cards bearing their photograph, license number and other appropriate information.
Similarly, all bail agencies should be required to display such licensing information in a prominent
location within each of their offices. The Commission also recommends that steps be taken, as
necessary, to ensure that all courts and county jails in the State utilize the bail registry as a means
of determining which bail agents and agencies have been barred from writing and executing bail
bonds in New Jersey.

65

APPENDIX

A-1

N.J.S.A. 52:9M-12.2 provides that:
a. The Commission shall make a good faith effort to notify any person whose
conduct it intends to criticize in a proposed report.
b. The notice required under subsection a. of this section shall describe the
general nature and the context of the criticism, but need not include any
portion of the proposed report or any testimony or evidence upon which the
report is based.
c. Any person receiving notice under subsection a. of this section shall have 15
days to submit a response, signed by that person under oath or affirmation.
Thereafter the Commission shall consider the response and shall include the
response in the report together with any relevant evidence submitted by that
person; except that the Commission may redact from the response any
discussion or reference to a person who has not received notice under
subsection a. of this section.
d. Nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent the Commission from
granting such further rights and privileges, as it may determine, to any
person whose conduct it intends to criticize in a proposed report.
e. Notwithstanding the provisions of R.S. 1:1-2, nothing in this section shall be
deemed to apply to any entity other than a natural person.
The following material was submitted pursuant to those statutory requirements.

05/0S/2014

22:13

(FAY.)

RESPONSE TO SCI

I, Jose Taveras, being duly sworn according to oath, do hereby state:
On behalf of Speedy Bail Bonds, in February, 2009, I voluntarily attended meetings
with authorities at the Middlesex County Jail. I was truthful IUld cooperative with them. I

denied offering "other fonns of compensation'' to inmates and no such proof was ever
provided to me by the jail allthorities. 1had no knowledge this matter was ever referred to
the Middlesex County Prosecutors Office; even if it was that was over five years and no
action has ever been taken by them. I voluntarily agreed not write bails at the jail for a

very short period oftime, but began writing again and have been writing bails ever since.

I hereby certify that the foregoing statements made by me are true to the best of my
knowledge and belief. If any oftb.e statements are wilfully false I am aware I am subject
to punishment.

~
Jose Taveras
Sworn and subscribed before me
on this 7th.day ofMay, 2014

··,Attorney at Law for the
State of New Jersey

P.002J002

State of New Jersey
Commission of Investigation