Unless it is a person being sought in the search, rather than items of evidence, the only names that appear on a search warrant are those of the person filing the affidavit in support of the warrant, and the judge that signed the warrant.Search warrants are usually for places, not people.
a search warrant Also- I believe a Game Warden does not need a warrant.
A warrant to search a residence does not need to state the name, or names, of any resident. Although the warrant may state the name of an individual believed to be located upon that property. It only needs to be issued to the address or description of the property upon which it is to be served. However, incorrect information contained within a warrant is potential cause to exclude evidence obtained during the search based upon that warrant. The defense would have to show that the incorrect information was included by law enforcement in bad faith.
While it isn't uncommon to have a dead person named in a warrant, the warrant will need to be amended or altogether "quashed" if the person named on the warrant is dead. Last I heard, you can't arrest a corps!
In general, you do not need a search warrant when conducting a search with the voluntary consent of the person being searched.
A search warrant will specifically set forth the address or the property which may be searched. The legal name of the occupant need not necessarily be named.
No. As the arrest warrant for a person is simply that in & of itself -- to arrest the person. There should not be a need for a search warrant unless the authorities wish to search through one's personal property.
Yes. Enforcement officers do not need a search warrant in a variety of instances. If there is consent to a search, you do not need a warrant. If something is in plain view, you do not need a warrant. Also, warrants are not needed in emergency situations when the public safety is in danger.
They already have a warrant for the arrest of a person so they do not need another one to entire the residence of the named person. However, they do need a search and seizure warrant to search the premises for anything or anyone not included in the "outstanding" warrant.
not if you let him search it
no they do not have to show you all they need is the search warrant. But what you should have done is to see the warrant. Sorry
They must provide a judge with probable cause to do a search.
Yes, police generally need to show a search warrant before conducting a search, unless there are specific circumstances that allow for a search without a warrant, such as consent or exigent circumstances.