Bounty hunters can do that. However, in a fresh and continuous pursuit of a suspect the police do not need a warrant to get someone without a search warrant.
Added: The questioner would like a yes or no answer, however, not enough information is disclosed with which to answer the question. MUCH may have to do with exactly what this "residiential facility" actually is. Is this a 'transient-type' facility where people come and go at will, or do they live there and actually use it as their residence?
If it is simply a "shelter" to which the public may come and go (e.g.: open dormitory-type facility - or a large open room with cots set out - etc), probably, yes, they can. If it is a hotel with individual rooms for the residents, they MAY need a warrant.
There are no cut-and-dried answers to these qustions. Every circumstance stands, or falls, on its own individual set of facts and circumstances.
kimberly turkett turer
yes you can they do not run warrant checks at the airport for flights inside stated
1month 29/30/31 days
You don't need a permit to buy a gun in Oklahoma, if you mean concealed carry permit I think it depends on what crime you are wanted for.
There are a number of wanted persons and arrests warrant listings in Oklahoma that are available to the public and totally free. There is a list of fugitive warrants from the Department of Corrections, DEA's most wanted persons, Department of Human Services child support warrants, as well as sheriff's and police warrant listings from several counties in Oklahoma. You can also contact the law enforcement official or court and ask them to check for you.
Warrants never expire. It will remain active until it is canceled by the judge or you are arrested.
Law enforcement cannot enter an addiction treatment facility without obtaining a special warrant signed by a judge. HIPPA protects client identity and personal information of persons in an addiction treatment facility. The warrant must contain language alleging that the person is suspected of a violent crime like armed robbery, sexual assault, murder, etc.
You can not put an adult in a juvenile facility! And in Florida, when you turn 18, you are considered an adult. Juvenile records are sealed. The juvenile warrant won't go away for 7 years. (Florida statute of limitations) However, a juvenile warrant will not become an adult warrant just because they child turns 18.
ALL US states and possession honor each other extradition warrants.
The usual drill is that if an individual is serving time in a given facility and a warrant is know to exist on this individual from somewhere else, the court that issued the warrant will be contacted by the agency holding the individual. That jurisdiction will be asked if they want to pick the individual up when he is released from the facility where he is currently serving time. The institution where he is currently housed will not, in general, have any authority to hold the individual beyond his release date. The jurisdiction of the area from where the warrant originated will decide if they want to send someone over to collect the person or will permit him to surrender himself (which is usually not done). If it's anything of a "serious" nature, an officer or two will meet the person at the exit sallyport of the facility from where he is being released, and they'll have a copy of the warrant. It will amount to a change of custody, and the inmate will be taken into custody as he is released. The individual will then be returned to the jurisdiction of the court that issued the warrant. He will be held pending the retention of council prior to a bail hearing, and the process of adjudication of that warrant will proceed. Best of luck sorting all that out.
Yes, a residential inspection can be refused and the inspecting agency would have to obtain an administrative warrant from a state judge, in consideration of the necessary affidavits supporting probable cause for the intrusion.
You don't have sanctuary, however are supposed to be anonymous & they are good about protecting your i.d.Addition & Clarification: The question makes no mention of what kind of "facility" is being referred to. A hospital? A 'drunk tank?" What? Your "anonymity" to law enforcement may depend on whether the facility is privately or publicly funded (i.e.: taxpayer supported). As stated above you should have no expectation of being sheltered from an arrest warrant. The only place you are totally free from having it served on you is on the grounds of a foreign embassy.