Generally, yes.
Yes, you are not necessarily required to be present.
Police officer with a search warrant can search any home regardless of the situation.
FBI with warrant. It is your wife or husband.
Yes. The occupant/resident need not be present at the time the warrant is executed.
search on the internet
Actually the police don't necessarily have to show the warrant to anybody. In fact, to execute a search warrant it isn't even necessary for a resident or occupant of the premises to be present.
It's YOUR home isn't it? Did somebody break into your home and leave their contraband there??? PUHLEEZ!
If the police have a valid search warrant, they can enter your home regardless of whether the person on probation is present or not. The search warrant allows them to search the premises for specific items or evidence related to the drug possession case.
A constable may search an arrested person, in any case where the person to be searched has been arrested at a place other than a police station, if the constable has reasonable grounds for believing that the arrested person may present a danger to himself or others.
Yes, an occupant or resident is not required to be present when a search warrant is served.
No. You can be present in the house, but you cannot follow them around as they conduct their activities. As a matter of fact, you don't even have to be home when they serve the warrant.
The present participle of search is "searching."