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737 Walnut St, Ste 1, Macon, GA 31201 — Steps from Bibb County Courthouse

Macon-Bibb County Civil & Magistrate Court — Bond Hearings, Warrants, and Preliminary Defense

Bond hearings, warrants, and preliminary criminal matters in Macon-Bibb County's combined Civil & Magistrate Court. Your first court appearance after most arrests happens here — and how it goes matters.

Court Information

Address

601 Mulberry Street, 4th Floor
Macon, GA 31201

Phone

(478) 621-5801
Clerk: (478) 621-5801

Jurisdiction

Bond hearings, search and arrest warrants, civil claims up to $15,000, dispossessory actions, and preliminary criminal matters in Bibb County
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What Civil & Magistrate Court Handles

Macon-Bibb County operates a combined Civil & Magistrate Court, located on the 4th floor of the Bibb County Courthouse at 601 Mulberry Street. While the name emphasizes civil work, the criminal side of this court is what most people encounter — and it’s where the earliest, most decisive moments of a criminal case unfold.

  • Initial bond hearings — after an arrest, the magistrate decides whether to set bond, deny bond, or impose conditions of release
  • Search and arrest warrant applications — judges sign warrants based on sworn affidavits from law enforcement
  • Preliminary criminal hearings — including commitment hearings for felony cases bound over to Superior Court
  • Civil claims up to $15,000 — small claims, contract disputes, property damage
  • Dispossessory (eviction) actions — landlord–tenant matters
  • Garnishments and other civil enforcement

Why the First Bond Hearing Matters

If you’ve been arrested in Bibb County, your first appearance in Magistrate Court — typically within 48 to 72 hours of arrest — determines whether you go home or stay in custody while your case is pending. The judge weighs your ties to the community, prior record, the nature of the charges, and any flight risk in setting bond. An aggressive defense attorney at the bond hearing can:

  • Argue for the lowest reasonable bond, or release on your own recognizance
  • Present mitigating evidence — employment, family ties, lack of prior record
  • Challenge probable cause when the warrant or arrest is weak
  • Negotiate conditions that allow release without an unaffordable cash bond

The difference between $5,000 and $50,000 bond — or between custody and release — often comes down to what an attorney argues in the first 10 minutes of the hearing.

Felony Cases and Commitment Hearings

For felony charges, Magistrate Court holds a commitment hearing to decide whether enough evidence exists to bind the case over to Superior Court for trial. This is one of the first chances to challenge weak cases, expose problematic evidence, and force the prosecution to put their witnesses on the record. Skilled cross-examination at a commitment hearing can shape — or end — a felony case before it ever reaches indictment.

How We Handle Magistrate Court Matters

We respond fast. When a family member calls after midnight because someone they love has just been arrested in Macon and booked at the Bibb County jail, we get the case file, prepare for the bond hearing, and appear in court — often within hours. Bond hearings happen quickly and there’s no time for a slow start.

Beyond bond, we use Magistrate Court strategically: pressing for commitment hearings, attacking warrant probable cause, and laying the groundwork for the defense long before the case reaches Superior or State Court.

Loved one just arrested in Bibb County?

The bond hearing is hours away. We answer 24/7.

(478) 203-9447
24 Hours — 7 Days a Week — Free Consultation
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