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TRINGALI LAWYERS
CRIMINAL DEFENCE

Bail applications in Melbourne.

Whether a person answers a charge from the community or from custody often turns on a bail application. Tringali Lawyers prepares and runs bail applications, and treats them as urgent.

§The Practice
OVERVIEW

How does bail work in Victoria?

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.

§Bail in Victoria
THE FRAMEWORK

How a bail decision is made.

The Bail Act 1977 sets a tiered framework. The test that applies depends on the charge, and it shapes how the application has to be built.

Every bail decision

The unacceptable risk test

Bail Act 1977

Every bail decision involves this test. Bail must be refused if the decision-maker is satisfied there is an unacceptable risk that the person would fail to appear, commit an offence, endanger someone, or interfere with a witness. A bail application is built to address that risk.

Schedule 2 offences

Show compelling reason

Bail Act 1977

For offences listed in Schedule 2 of the Bail Act, the applicant must first show a compelling reason why continued detention is not justified. Only then does the decision-maker turn to the unacceptable risk test.

Schedule 1 offences

Exceptional circumstances

Bail Act 1977

For the most serious offences, listed in Schedule 1, bail is granted only where there are exceptional circumstances. It is the highest bar in the Act, and an application at this level has to be prepared with particular care.

Where bail is granted

Conditions and surety

Bail Act 1977

Bail is often granted on conditions: reporting, a curfew, a residence requirement, or others suited to the matter. A surety, a person who undertakes to forfeit an amount if the accused fails to appear, may also form part of the proposal.

§The Defence
PREPARATION

How a bail application is prepared.

A bail application is won on preparation. The risk concerns are met with a concrete, realistic proposal.

Identifying the test that applies

The first step is identifying whether the charge engages the unacceptable risk test alone, or also the compelling reason or exceptional circumstances test. That determines what the application has to establish, and how high the bar sits.

Addressing the risk directly

An application does not ignore the prosecution's concerns; it answers them. That means a clear account of where the person will live, what they will do with their time, and how the identified risks are reduced to an acceptable level.

Conditions and surety

Proposing realistic conditions, and a suitable surety where one will help, can be the difference in a finely balanced application. The proposal is built to be both workable for the client and persuasive to the court.

Supreme Court applications

Where bail has been refused, or the Magistrates' Court is not the appropriate forum, an application can be made to the Supreme Court of Victoria. Whether that step is available and worthwhile is assessed on the matter.

OUR APPROACH
A bail application is won on preparation. You meet the risk concerns with a concrete proposal, not an assurance.
Talia TringaliPrincipal
HOW WE WORK

Three steps when bail is in issue.

  1. Move quickly

    Bail is time-critical. The first call establishes the charge, where the matter stands, and whether an application needs to be made urgently. Call 0432 651 326 directly.

  2. Build the application

    We identify the test that applies, gather the material that addresses the risk, and prepare the conditions and any surety so the application is ready to put.

  3. Appear and apply

    We appear and make the application, and if bail is refused, advise on whether a further application, or an application to the Supreme Court, is available.

FAQS

Common questions about bail in Victoria.

Bail is the release of a person who has been charged, usually on conditions, while their matter moves through the courts, rather than being held in custody until it is finished.

When a person is charged with an offence, a decision has to be made about whether they are released into the community while the matter is dealt with, or held in custody. Bail is that release, and it is almost always granted on conditions. The question is decided under the Bail Act 1977 by police, a bail justice, or a court. Being on bail allows a person to keep working, stay with their family, and prepare their matter properly, which is why a bail application matters.

URGENT

Is bail in issue?

Bail matters are urgent. If someone has been charged and is in custody, call 0432 651 326 directly so the application can be assessed and prepared straight away.

Or email talia@tringalilawyers.com.au