Bail Bonds for Attempted Murder Charges
Attempted murder is not charged under the homicide chapter alone. In Florida, it is built from the law of criminal attempt and the underlying murder statute. That means the charge combines Florida Statute 777.04, which governs attempt, with the applicable murder provisions in Chapter 782. This is important at the bond stage because the court is not dealing with a routine assault allegation. It is dealing with a violent felony built around the claim that the defendant intended to commit murder but the death did not occur.
That distinction makes attempted murder bond hearings more serious than many other violent felony hearings. Judges typically focus on the alleged intent, the method used, the degree of injury, whether a firearm or other deadly weapon was involved, and whether the facts suggest premeditation or a spontaneous act. Even though the completed homicide did not occur, the court often treats the danger analysis very aggressively because the charged intent is so severe.