Did the officer tell you a couple to several times to get out of the car? If so and you did not, that is why he drug you out of the car. Also, all police vehicles should be equiped with cameras mounted on the dash board that records everything that happend. Good luck and God Bless:)
Yes, that penalty is arrest and more serious charges for furnishing false identification to a law enforcement officer.
No
An officer can pull you over in another county. He can even arrest you. However, an officer from another county would have to meet with him, and be the one to do the booking.
yes, you might, it depends on what kind of violations, sometimes a person didn't pay for the citation, so the judge might issued a arrest warrant, or somethings the driver did not cooperate with the officer, which eventually might lead to the arrest.
The law enforcement agency for that location. It could be a policeman, a sheriff or a state officer.
Yes, of course. An arrest warrant is a command from a judge to arrest a person. Usually a police officer has no choice and must arrest.
The person getting cited for being at fault for the accident gets belligerent enough to the point where it warrants their arrest, and they resist the officer arresting them.
The officer can ticket you for the traffic violation, he or she can arrest you if there are mitigating circumstances.
No, Miranda Rights do not have to be read during any arrest. Miranda Rights are required prior to an interrogation but have nothing to do with an arrest.
The police officer decided to arrest the suspect after reviewing the evidence.
an officer is justified in using force in order to arrest a resisting suspect?
An arrest refers to the lawful deprivation of the freedom of an individual by a peace officer. A police officer may arrest a person if he reasonably believes a crime has been committed without a warrant.
Most detention officers have peace officer powers while they are on duty. If the detention officer was on duty, he could serve an arrest warrant.
yes
No.
A police officer making an arrest
No, a police officer cannot issue a warrant for your arrest only a judge or court magistrate can do that.