1860
Added: Unless the original contributor can supply a reference for their infomration - it should be treated as unconfirmed. Even as far back as the American Revolution the British were issuing versions of the search warrant
I strongly believe that the answer to this question cannot accurately be known.
No. No warrant that has been issued ever expires until it has been served.
Not automatically. A Motion to Recall Warrant can be heard in court, but only if a bench warrant was issued, not an arrest warrant on a new charge.
Yes
pay any thing you can every day. When ever you pay the warrant is vacated for that day.
Unless there was a filing error or some other mistake (highly unlikely), you will have a warrant out for your arrest.
A bench warrant can be issued for a person with a judgment if they fail to comply with the terms of the judgment, such as failing to pay fines or appear in court as required. The bench warrant allows law enforcement to arrest the person and bring them before the court to address the violation.
A police officer has 72 hours to execute a search warrant. ADDED: It can depend upon the jurisdiction and the court's order. No 'open-ended' search warrants are ever issued, but there may be exigent circumstances under which a warrant may not be served until the circumstances are 'right' (e.g.- the contraband had not yet arrived or returned - the activity (whatever it is) only occurs sporadically and at irregular intervals - etc.).
In 1950, by Diners Club.
Nope,but they had a guy in mind but released him after a search warrant at his home didn't produce the murder weapon.
It is called the penny black for obvious reasons.
contained 300,000,000 names
for the internet that would be yahoo