If someone you love is inside the Lew Sterrett Justice Center, you want two things: accurate information and a bond posted fast. This guide covers what families actually face at the Dallas County jail — and why proximity matters when choosing a bondsman.
Finding Out Where Things Stand
Before a bond can be posted, the person must be booked and bail must be set by a magistrate. If you call a bondsman before bail is set, a good one will monitor the case and act the moment the amount posts rather than making you call back repeatedly.
Why “Near the Jail” Actually Matters
Bond paperwork is physical and procedural. An office minutes from Lew Sterrett — like our Dallas location — can post quickly, respond when a document needs correcting, and read the jail’s release pace in real time. When the jail is running a heavy intake night, that local presence is the difference between hours.
What to Expect After the Bond Is Posted
- Release is not instant — the jail processes releases in batches, and times vary with volume
- The released person receives paperwork with their court information; keep every page
- Court dates are mandatory — missing one risks bond forfeiture and a new warrant
- Check-in requirements with the bondsman, if any, start immediately
One Piece of Advice Families Wish They’d Had
Write everything down: booking number, charge, bail amount, who you spoke to. The process involves several handoffs, and having the details at your fingertips keeps every call short and productive.
Practical Details Families Ask About
Is there parking near the jail?
The area around the justice center is downtown Dallas — paid lots and street parking exist but fill during business hours. If you are coming to sign paperwork, ask the bond office whether documents can be signed electronically or at the office instead of at the jail.
Can I drop off money or property for an inmate?
The jail has its own commissary and property procedures — check the county’s posted rules rather than bringing valuables to the lobby. A bondsman cannot pass items to an inmate.
Should I wait at the jail for the release?
Get a realistic window from the bondsman first. Releases process in batches, and a 2 a.m. estimate can become 5 a.m. on a heavy night. Stay reachable by phone rather than camping the lobby for hours.
What if bail hasn’t been set yet?
Then the case is still pre-magistration. That hearing generally happens within 48 hours of arrest; a bondsman can watch the record and act the moment the amount appears.
If the Case Involves More Than One Charge
Multiple charges mean multiple bonds — each with its own bail amount, each needing to post before release. Ask the bondsman to confirm every pending charge and quote the total across all of them upfront; discovering a second bond requirement after the first posts is a frustrating and avoidable delay.
Ready to start? contact A-EZ Out Bail Bonds and a licensed Dallas agent will take it from there.