A judge, magistrate, or commissioner
The only authority: the Government, whether local, state, or federal, by virtues of the authority of their respective law-enforcement agencies.
A repo man can not issue a warrant for your arrest. Only a judge can issue an official arrest warrant.
A "bench warrant" is a warrant issued by a judge on his sole authority. Only the judge who issued the warrant can vacate the warrant. If he had to issue one to get you to court to testify, you probably won't be released until after your necessity in the court action is ended.
No, a pro tem judge cannot sign a search warrant. Only a judge with the authority to issue search warrants can do so. A pro tem judge is a temporary substitute judge who fills in for a regular judge and has limited authority.
A judge has more legal authority and can preside over more serious cases, while a magistrate typically handles less serious cases or preliminary matters. Judges are appointed or elected to their position, while magistrates are usually appointed and may serve on a temporary or part-time basis.
Then you could be extradited to the county that issued the warrant.
another word for warrant is a violation
reason for bench warrant?
Ive heard of police with a search warrant finding something non-related to the search warrant, and then issuing a new search warrant on the spot regarding the new issue.
Parole Agents/Officers do not possess that power. Only judges and magistrates have the pwer to issue a warrant. However, the agent/officer can present an affidavit for a warrant to the court to support a request for the issuance of a warrant.
No, a police officer cannot issue a warrant for your arrest only a judge or court magistrate can do that.