Introduction
1: The Right to Bail
2: Surety and Security
3: Conditions other than Surety or Security
4: Failing to Surrender and Breaching Conditions
5: Renewed Applications for Bail
6: Police Bail
7: The Jurisdiction of the Magistrates' Court
8: The Jurisdiction of the Crown Court
9: Bail Pending Appeal
10: The Jurisdiction of the High Court
11: Vulnerable Suspects and Defendants
12: Custody Time Limits
13: The Role and Duties of the Advocate on Matters of Bail
Appendix
Neil Corre is a Solicitor-Advocate, consultant with City firm Sonn Macmillan, and course director of London Legal Lectures. David Wolchover is Head of Chambers at 7 Bell Yard, London, and has practiced at the criminal bar since call in 1971.
`Review from previous edition This book sets out all the material
in one comprehensive volume which no criminal practitioner can
afford to be without'
The Magisterial Officer
`Bail in Criminal Proceedings brings a fresh approach to the
question of bail. It is a thoughtful publication [which is] well
written and easy to read. It is worthy of a place in the library of
all those who are concerned with the judicial process.'
Justice of the Peace
`This is the third edition of the definitive guide to bail in
criminal proceedings, written by Neil Corre and David Wolchover.
The book covers every, and I do mean every single aspect, of bail
some familiar topics and others you probably have never even heard
of. The text is littered with relevant statutory provisions and
case law, combined with expert analysis. The introduction includes
some interesting information as to the social policy backdrop of
bail
law and policy, and chapter one covers the historical development
of bail over the ages. The book is expensive at £65 (hardback) but
worth every penny, like most things in life you simply get what you
pay
for'
Andrew Keogh
`no one actively practising or otherwise seriously concerned with
the English criminal law can hope to survive without it.... it
cannot be too highly praised for its thorough and indeed exhaustive
exploration of the intricacies as well as the principles of its
subject.'
Justice of the Peace
`Given the heightened emotions that the issue of bail often
generates, and the at times disproportionate amount of time that it
seems to take up in the life of the average case, many criminal
firms and sets of chambers may find this publication a worthwhile
investment.'
Anthony J Potter (5 Fountain Court, Birmingham), New Law Journal
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