No specific timeframe. If no perpetrator was immediately identified and arrested, and the offense is under investigation by law enforcement, no warrant will be applied for until such time as they have identified the probably perpetrator and prepared an affidavit for an arrest warrant. Once an affidavit is presented to a judge the issuance or denial of the warrant is almost immediate.
Yes and no. A business can accuse you of a crime, just as an individual can accuse you of a crime, but they cannot issue an arrest warrant without a judge. It depends on the business and how much pull they have with the local law.
A repo man can not issue a warrant for your arrest. Only a judge can issue an official arrest warrant.
A judge, magistrate, or commissioner
A judge can issue a bench warrant for the arrest of any dead beat parent at any time after it is reported to the judge that the parent is a dead beat parent.
Depending on the charge specified in the warrant: A Justice of The Peace - a Magistrate or - a Judge.
No, a police officer cannot issue a warrant for your arrest only a judge or court magistrate can do that.
The judge will issue a bench warrant immidiately after the indictment is made. The bail will be set in the warrant. The bench warrant will be issued on the grounds of the indictment.
Warrants are ISSUED by a judge or by the police
No, a pro tem judge cannot sign a search warrant. Only a judge with the authority to issue search warrants can do so. A pro tem judge is a temporary substitute judge who fills in for a regular judge and has limited authority.
No. A retired judge has no legal power to issue a felony warrant unless she/he has been recalled to active statuus. Generally, retired judges are limited to civil mediation and case evaluation services.
Call the court or the Sheriff's Office and ask.
In order to get a search warrant from a judge there has to be probable cause evidence of sometype that a crime has been committed or being committed unless in some states they have a thing called a good faith warrant where if an officer with his credit and training beleives there is a crime being commited or has been committed he can file an application and a judge can decide if it has any worthiness to grant a warrant or not.