A peace bond is a court order used to keep you from committing (or recommitting) a crime. It requires you to agree to specific conditions to keep the peace. A peace bond can also be brought against you while you are in a correctional centre for a previous offence. The formal legal name for a peace bond is “810 recognizance”.
The court can order a peace bond even if you have not been charged or convicted.
A peace bond imposes conditions you must follow. Conditions a judge can impose include:
According to section 810 of the Criminal Code:
If you do not obey the conditions of a peace bond, you could be charged with a criminal offence and may be placed on probation for up to three years, fined up to $5,000 and/or sentenced to jail for up to two years. An order placing you on a peace bond is not a criminal conviction, but criminal charges may be laid if you do not follow the conditions.
Check our alphabetical list of criminal justice terms along with their definitions.