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Pretrial Release vs Detention: What Federal Defendants Need to Know Right Now

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Pretrial Release vs Detention: What Federal Defendants Need to Know Right Now

If you're reading this, you already know something went wrong. Maybe federal agents showed up at your door this morning. Maybe they arrested someone you love. And right now you're probably freaking out trying to figure out what happens next.

Welcome to Spodek Law Group. We handle federal criminal defense cases every single day, and we understand exactly what your going through right now. The confusion. The fear. The desperate need to know whether you or your loved one is coming home tonight or sitting in a cell for the next two years waiting for trial.

Heres the thing nobody tells you about federal court: There is no bail the way you think there is. Forget everything you know from state court. Forget what you saw on TV shows. In the federal system, it's totally different. You dont post bail and walk out. Period.

The Federal System Works Completely Differently Than State Court

Most people think bail works the same everywhere. It dosent. In state court, a judge sets bail at fifty thousand dollars, you call a bail bondsman, you pay ten percent, and your out. Simple. Straightforward.

Federal court? That's not how it works. Not even close.

Under the Bail Reform Act of 1984, theres no cash bail system in federal court. No bail bondsmen. No posting ten percent of anything. Instead, the magistrate judge makes a binary decision: your either released on conditions, or your detained until trial. One or the other. Nothing in between.

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And when I say until trial, I mean it. Federal cases take months. Sometimes years. Kalief Browder spent three years sitting in Rikers Island on a backpack theft accusation. Three years. The charges were eventally dropped. He never got those years back. Niether do the 740,000 Americans sitting in jails right now who havent been convicted of anything.

The 72-Hour Window That Determines Everything

The moment federal agents arrest you, a clock starts ticking. You typically have three to five days until your detention hearing. Thats it. Three to five days to prepare for argueably the most important hearing of your entire case.

And your family? There in shock. There trying to figure out what happend. There not thinking about character letters and employment records and third-party custodians. But they need to be. Right now. Today.

Because here is what practitioners know that clients dont: the pretrial services report often matters more then the charges themselves.

Before your detention hearing, a Pretrial Services Officer is going to interview you. This person works for the court, not for the prosecution, not for you. They're supposed to be neutral. But there recommendation to the judge carries enormous weight. Judges follow pretrial services recommendations most of the time.

What you say in that interview matters. And here's the kicker: many defendants walk into this interview without their attorney present. Massive mistake. Anything you say can and will be used against you later if the court decides you weren't being honest.

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Legal Pulse: Key Statistics

95%Plea Bargaining

of criminal cases in NJ are resolved through plea agreements

Source: NJ Courts Statistics

44%Bail Reform Impact

reduction in pretrial jail population since NJ bail reform

Source: NJ Judiciary 2024

Statistics updated regularly based on latest available data

At Spodek Law Group, we make it a priority to attend pretrial services interviews with our clients whenever possible. Its that important. Todd Spodek has seen too many cases where misunderstandings during that interview torpedoed chances for release.

The Presumption Flip: When the Burden Shifts to You

Here's where it gets really scary.

For most crimes, the government has to prove you should be detained. But for certain offenses, particularly drug crimes with maximums over ten years and violent felonies, the Bail Reform Act creates whats called a presumption of detention.

What does that mean in practice? It means the law presumes you should stay locked up. The burden flips. Suddenly, you have to prove you deserve to be released, not the other way around.

Think about that for a second. We are supposedly innocent until proven guilty in this country. But in a presumption case, your essentially guilty-until-proven-safe before your even had your day in court.

This is the system. This is how it works. And its stacked against you from the start.

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Todd Spodek

Lead Attorney & Founder

Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.

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Legal Scenario: What Would You Do?

Attorney Todd Spodek

Scenario

You were arrested and want to know about bail.

How does bail work in NJ?

Attorney's Answer

NJ uses a risk-based system rather than cash bail. A public safety assessment determines release conditions.

This is general information only. Contact us for advice specific to your situation.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What makes a crime federal vs. state?

Federal crimes violate U.S. laws, occur on federal property, cross state lines, or involve federal agencies. Examples include tax fraud, immigration violations, drug trafficking across states, and wire fraud.

Are federal sentences more severe than state sentences?

Generally yes. Federal sentences often require serving at least 85% of the sentence with no parole. Federal sentencing guidelines are also typically stricter than state guidelines.

Can I have a federal case moved to state court?

This is extremely rare. Once the federal government chooses to prosecute, the case typically remains in federal court. An experienced federal defense attorney can advise on all options.

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