Bail is the question of whether a person who has been charged is released, on conditions, while their matter moves through the courts, or is held in custody until it is finished. In Victoria, bail decisions are made under the Bail Act 1977, and the decision can have a significant effect on how a person is able to prepare and answer the charge.
A bail decision can be made by police, by a bail justice after hours, or by a magistrate or judge in court. The Bail Act 1977 sets a tiered framework. Every bail decision involves the unacceptable risk test: bail must be refused if the decision-maker is satisfied there is an unacceptable risk that, if released, the person would fail to appear, commit an offence, endanger a person, or interfere with a witness. For more serious charges, the Act adds a further hurdle the applicant must meet first.
For offences listed in Schedule 2 of the Act, the applicant must show a compelling reason why their continued detention is not justified. For the most serious offences, listed in Schedule 1, bail is only granted where there are exceptional circumstances. Identifying which test applies to a particular charge is the starting point, because it shapes the entire application.
A bail application is won on preparation. It meets the risk concerns directly: with a concrete proposal about where the person will live, what conditions they will accept, and, where it helps, a surety who will stand behind the grant. Tringali Lawyers treats bail as urgent. Where the Magistrates' Court is not the right forum, a bail application can be made to the Supreme Court of Victoria.