Probably not - From my experience I'd say that that was pretty much a 'fatal flaw.'
SEARCH WARRANTS are issued for addresses or specifically described premises. ARREST WARRANTS name a specific name. Which are you referring to? As long as a search warrant is served at the address set forth in the warrant it is immaterial what name appears on it. If it was an arrest warrant in what way was the name wrong? Spelled wrong? Gives their alias or street name? Gives a totally wrong name (i.e.: John Doe instead Jack Smith)?
Hill Street Blues - 1981 Sorry Wrong Number 7-16 was released on: USA: 3 March 1987
By changing the constitution and eliminating the provision " The right to life, liberty and property and pursuit to happiness, otherwise, you can't. --- In other words, it can't. That's a faulty warrant and has no legal merit of effect. Trying to use such a warrant to gain entry may be interpreted by a court as any of a number of criminal offenses, not limited to trespass, fraud, breaking and entry, kidnapping (if you're taken into "custody"), etc. Make your lawyer's day -- show the faulty warrant to them.
A search warrant could be faulty if it has wrong information on it. Then it would make the search warrant void. This can be the wrong name or a mistake on the address. If there is not a reasonable suspicion it could also be faulty.
Present proof to the court that the premises that were searched were NOT the address contained on the warrant.
No, not unless the error was found and corrected by the issuing judge or magistrate BEFORE the warrant was executed. If the warrant was served at the wrong address, anything found and seized could be excluded as evidence.
The date of birth should not be incorrect on an arrest warrant. A persons date of birth, social security number, and description are key pieces of information needed for an arrest warrant. However, if your social security number and description are correct, human-error on your date of birth may not totally squash an arrest warrant. I've seen warrants where a persons date of birth is 01/05/1970 and the warrant listed 05/01/1970, but the social security, and physical descriptions were dead on.
It does not matter because as long as the warrant has the persons name on it somebody in the law will find them, it will just take longer.
No, it is just a clerical error, but it must be corrected before the warrant can be served.
No. If the search warrant is invalid and they illegally searched you or someone you know (like without reasonable cause, or without the warrant) then they can't use any evidence against you. To the best of my knowledge, anyways. I don't know how many ways a search warrant can be wrong though...if they were searching for like, pot, but found cocaine, they CAN use that though. Or a gun, or something like that. If they have the warrant, they can use it. If they searched without the warrant, its invalid and inadmissible 100%.
Riding a CVC bicycle the wrong way on a one-way street can lead to accidents, collisions with other vehicles or pedestrians, and legal consequences such as fines or citations. It can also increase the risk of injury to yourself and others on the road.
Unable to answer without more specific information on the circumstances.