this just happened to me, you can only fight it if the source if information was false, but most cases your screwed because the police are the police and they can basically do what they want because they are the authority of the state, even if they are dirty pigs who are corrupt.
snitches get
Under most circumstances, no. The police usually need a warrant to search your house, car, property, etc. However, there are some cases in which the rule can be bent. If you are being arrested, the police may search you and your property for weapons or other accomplices for their own safety. If the police already have permission to be on your property, and they see some form of evidence that is clearly visible, they have the right to lawfully seize it. If the person who is in control of the property gives consent to the police, they may search it.
Police officers obtain a search warrant by presenting evidence to a judge or magistrate that shows probable cause that a crime has been committed and that evidence related to the crime is likely to be found in the place to be searched. The judge then decides whether to issue the warrant, allowing the police to search the specified location.
Only if you have been "dimed" out for having contraband--drugs or stolen items--in your room and a search warrant is being executed.
i need to know what a cop needs to know in order to get a search warrent
The answer is no. just like the police can not search a locked briefcase or anything else without probable cause or a warrant. they can however call the cops and the cops "could" get a warrant, very unlikely.
Unless you live in a country that does not reside under the U.N's jurisdiction then yes. But there are exception of course and loop holes in the law, for example if they have a tip off that there is a person in there kept against their will, they may enter.
Only with reasonable cause. Depending on the nature of the complaint, the complaint may or may not be.
if the cops are coming after you
Yes. What do you think a warrant is??
A search warrant is not possible to obtain in most runaway cases. Unless there is reason to believe that the juvenile is in grave danger, police may not enter a residence without the owner's permission. Contact your local police department for further information.
IF a lengthy inventory list of items was attached to, AND MADE A PART OF the warrant, as a 'supplemental page' they need not re-transcribe each and every item individually.