What's the question? If you have a distillery of whiskey you are probably regulated by your state's Division of Alcohol or similar agency. They have the right, as an agreement of your licensure, to inspect your facility, just as the highway patrol has the right, under your driver license agreement, to administer sobriety tests if they feel you're under the influence of alcohol. Like your driver license, the state's regulatory agency of your distillery can suspend your license if you refuse to allow them to inspect your facility.
Question makes no sense. A search warrant is a search warrant regardless of WHERE the premises is physically located.
Yes unless it's a car and the glovebox/trunk is locked. Premises includes all rooms
If the garage is attached to the home, yes they can search the entire premises.
A "premises" refers to a place, not a human being. Usually it is used to refer to the location used by a specific person who is suspected of committing a crime. It refers to a specific place identified by address ... example: "the premises at 49 Main Street, Anywhere, Some County, A State" ... which can be anything, a store, house, business place, etc. The search of the premises is the physical location, and it MAY include the humans there.If there is a search of a person, it is a specified individual human, identified by a name.A search warrant can be issued for a particular premises and include the humans on that premises if the humans are specifically included in the warrant. Otherwise, the officers administering the search warrant for the premises may not search any persons on the premises unless they believe a crime is in the act of being committed. A search of an alleged "drug house" can include the humans there on the suspicion that the humans are there to use, sell or buy illegal drugs - which would qualify as a "crime in progress" by the person who had the drugs on their person.
If the search warrant is for the entire premises, and you, or your belongings, are in "the premises," yes, your personal belongings can be searched.
Search warrants are customarily issued identifying the PREMISES or LOCATION or ADDRESS to be searched, and do not usually name specific individuals. If you happen to be on those premises at the time the warrant is executed you and your property can, and will, be searched.
Only the address or legal description of the premises to be searched need be identified. If the entire premises is specified and the search area is not otherwise limited in scope, then the entire location and all the people in it can be searched.
the address of the premises being searched the reason it s been searched and a signature of the judge authrising the search
A nifty website called monster.com will let you search for administrative and clerical jobs, and by area as well. That should get you on your way. Good luck!
Yes, the officer may search. Police may search a building if they reasonably believe a valid search warrant has been issued. They do not have to possess the search warrant.
due cause
Websites for job seekers and recruiters are places where administrative jobs are available to apply for; once filtering search results, administrative jobs are very easy to find.