A phone call from 725 W Arrow Hwy is the last thing any family expects. When it comes, timing matters more than anything else — LASD San Dimas Station typically hands arrestees to Inmate Reception Center in downtown LA (men) or Century Regional in Lynwood (women) within hours. We pick up, verify the booking, and walk the Los Angeles County bail paperwork into the station while you're still tying your shoes to drive down.
What to do in the first hour after a San Dimas arrest
The LASD San Dimas Station booking desk completes intake in an hour or two on weekdays, faster on weekends. If we file paperwork during that window, we're first in line when the bond can be posted — that's the difference between a same-day release and a next-day one.
Even a partial packet helps. Tell us what the arresting officer said on scene, the Los Angeles County jail your loved one is in, and what you know about the charge. We cross-reference the current bail schedule before you're off the first call.
We drive the paperwork to the LASD watch deputy, walk it through the acceptance process, and wait at the station until your loved one is released. You review and sign the indemnitor agreement by phone — most San Dimas families do this from home.
Charges we post bonds for at LASD San Dimas Station
Below are the charges that come across the 725 W Arrow Hwy booking desk most often. Each has a specific Los Angeles County bail schedule entry — we know the number before you finish reading the report.
Families panic over "the 72-hour rule" that doesn't exist in California DV law. Once LASD San Dimas Station finishes booking — usually within hours — a surety bond can post on any PC 273.5 or 243(e)(1) charge. Restraining-order terms are handled by the Pomona Courthouse on Mission Blvd judge at arraignment, not the jail.
We see HS 11377 possession and HS 11550 "under the influence" charges weekly from Raging Waters or the Village shops off Bonita Ave. The difference in scheduled bail between those two codes is significant — we don't quote until we've read the booking charge, because the wrong assumption costs hundreds in premium.
First-DUI bail in Los Angeles County is $5,000 unless there's an aggravating factor. A priors stack or VC 23153 injury changes the math fast. We pull the charge off the booking sheet and tell you the bail amount before you ask. Pomona Courthouse on Mission Blvd handles the arraignment.
Battery and assault charges from Raging Waters or the Village shops off Bonita Ave area share a booking desk at LASD San Dimas Station but have very different bail amounts. $20,000 for 242, $50,000 for 245(a)(1). If the booking slip shows a "with great bodily injury" enhancement, the number climbs again.
We write bonds up to $500,000 out of LASD San Dimas Station. For felony cases above $50K, collateral (usually a Glendora home's equity line) backs the indemnitor agreement. No equity pulled at signing — just held as security until the court case closes.
A probation hold, ICE detainer, or other-county warrant stapled to the booking slip is a stop sign. LASD San Dimas Station won't release even with bail posted. We read every hold on the report and explain the sequence — what clears when — before quoting.
Why Angels Bail Bonds
Since 1958, Angels Bail Bonds has been writing surety bonds for Los Angeles County families — three generations, one phone number. We built the book of business on referrals out of San Dimas and Glendora, not on billboards or SEO. What you get on the first call: a licensed agent who reads the charge code, quotes the right premium on the Los Angeles County schedule, and doesn't add fees that weren't disclosed up front.
Learn Our StoryLocal Coverage
LASD San Dimas Station at 725 W Arrow Hwy is where we spend most of our San Dimas-area time. The nearby cities below all share the same booking desk and the same Pomona Courthouse arraignment calendar — so the process of posting a bond is identical from any of them.
725 W Arrow Hwy
(909) 450-2700
Pomona Courthouse
The San Dimas booking timeline, start to release
Booking at LASD San Dimas Station means the charges are compared to the current Los Angeles County bail schedule. A bondsman posts a surety bond (a contract between us, our insurance underwriter, and the court) guaranteeing your loved one shows up to every Pomona Courthouse on Mission Blvd date. The 10% premium is the price of that guarantee — CA Insurance Code § 1800.4 caps it.
If every scheduled court appearance happens, the bond exonerates — written off, no further payment. If an appearance is missed, we go looking. That's why the indemnitor (usually a family member) signs alongside the arrestee: the indemnitor is on the hook if the defendant vanishes.
Meet Your Bail Agent
Three generations have answered this phone number. Our family opened Angels Bail Bonds in 1958, CA Insurance License #1K06080, and we've written bonds for Los Angeles County families through every change in state bail law since. People v. Humphrey (2021), the schedule revisions of 2020 and 2023, the elimination of cash-bail proposals — we've tracked each one so our clients don't have to. When you call about a San Dimas arrest, you're getting knowledge that's been refined continuously for 67 years.
Disclaimer: This website provides general information about bail bonds and is not legal advice. Every case is unique. Consult a licensed attorney for legal counsel specific to your situation.
A Glendora family we recently helped
"My son got pulled over coming home from Mt. Baldy on a probation warrant he didn't know was active. Booked into the Arrow Hwy station around 11 p.m. I called Angels and Dave had eyes on the hold within fifteen minutes, told me straight up we had to wait for the warrant to clear before the bond could post. That honesty saved me a premium I would've paid into thin air. He called me back the moment the warrant cleared and posted right away."
— J. Ortega, Glendora (verified client, 2025)
Questions San Dimas families ask on the first call
Usually only for the first few hours. After that they get transported to Inmate Reception Center in downtown LA (men) or Century Regional in Lynwood (women). If we post the bond before that transport leaves 725 W Arrow Hwy — typically early morning — your loved one is released directly from San Dimas and never moves to the larger facility. That's why the first-hour phone call matters.
Yes — you can pay the full bail amount in cash directly to LASD San Dimas Station or the court, and it's returned (minus administrative fees) when the case closes, regardless of outcome. Few San Dimas families have $5K to $50K liquid for a surprise arrest. That's what a bondsman solves: you pay 10% nonrefundable instead of 100% held for a year.
The court declares a bail forfeiture. We have roughly 180 days to locate the defendant and bring them back — that's when recovery agents work. If we don't, the bond pays out in full, which is why the indemnitor signed a joint agreement. We call the indemnitor the moment a hearing is missed — almost always something fixable in the first 48 hours.
From your phone call to your loved one walking out of LASD San Dimas Station, the realistic window is 60 minutes to 4 hours — almost entirely jail-processing time. The surety bond itself takes 10 minutes to write. LASD San Dimas Station controls release pace after we post. If booking isn't complete yet, we often wait on-site so we're first to file.