You need a judge to issue one.
You need to provide a judge with the information you are basing they need for a warrant (probable cause) and if the judge is satisfied with the information, he/she will issue the warrant.
After an investigation by law enforcement has established that probable cause exists - the officer/agent prepares a written AFFIDAVIT setting froth the results of the investigation and submits it to a judge or other judicial officer for review. If the judge agrees that the affidavit contains the necessary elements to prove the offense they will sign the affidavit and approve the WARRANT. The warrant is delivered back to the officer/agent (or his agency) for service.
sufficient and probable cause.......................attest to by investigating officer
The most logical way anyone can get a Warrant is not showing up for court; just for the court date or for paying a fine or ticket
A warrant is a demand issued by a court. An example is; an arrest warrant is a demand for someone's arrest. A foreign warrant is issued for someone in another country.
No. A warrant is issued by a magistrate or judge.
No. A 'warrant' is not the same as a 'fine.' Someone else can pay a fine for you, but a warrant is for a named individual and the court intends to "see" that individual in person.
The warrant can be issued only in the state where the offense occurred.
I heard that you can ask the police to do a free warrant search on you at any time. Can you ask them to do a free warrant search on someone else?
A White warrant is an arrest warrant that is issued typically for a probation or parole violation, or someone who absconds (flees) from supervision. Typically it is also a warrant which has ineligibility for bail.
If there is a warrant out for you and the police know where you are, they can arrest you.
what is the punishment for harboring someone with a warrant
Yes.
Only if there is a reward.
A white warrant is a term used for someone who has a parole violation. The person that has the white warrant is usually picked up by police and taken back to prison.
no