It is possible that if the police were there at the time the drugs were sold then an exigent circumstance exception could apply.
However that is not normally the case. Most often the information about drug sales are presented to a magistrate and a warrant is obtained. The police may then do a controlled buy to confirm drugs are in the house immediately prior to the warrant service.
Police Officers can search you and your home if:
1) Drugs are viewed in plain sight.
2) If they have a search warrant.
Yes, it is illegal. It is illegal all over the European Union.
If you are a visitor in a parolee's home during a home visit by corrections, you can be searched if there is reasonable suspicion that you are engaged in illegal activity or possess illegal items. Corrections officers must have a valid reason to search you and should follow proper protocols during the search. It's important to comply with their instructions during the search.
Need more information in order to answer. Searched your home for WHAT, or for WHO? Under what circumstances? Did they arrest anyone or seize and remove anything? Serched my home for drugs, They found a small amount of drugs, arrested me and my husband, seized our savings in a safe, cameras, 2 guns that weren't loaded and had no history
the Fourth Amendment
I don't know! I searched the answer but this is what it shows!
Poccession of a controlled substance means you were either searched or a piece of property you own was searched and they found narcotics IE: Meth, Crack, Heroin Or Other Drugs.
I don't know! I searched the answer but this is what it shows!
The Fourth Amendment guarantees against searches conducted without probable cause. Probable cause, in this context, would be information that would cause a reasonable person to believe there are unlawful drugs in the home. This information can come from many sources--informants who may have been in the home and seen the drugs, officers who have watched drugs being delivered to or sold out of the home, tips received from neighbors, etc. Although a home may be searched on probable cause alone, in most cases officers will apply for a search warrant before searching a home. Issuance of the search warrant is dependent on the judge signing the warrant agreeing that the information supplied by the police is sufficient to support probable cause. When the judge does agree and signs the warrant, he is saying he believes the police have "solid evidence" to search the home.
His house was searched by police and they found drugs and cocaine so they put him in jail for a $125,000 bond
Yes. They have probable cause. Cops can do just about anything they want to.
Rarely (but yes) and with an order from court.
It depends on the wording of the specific warrant.
If no drugs were found and you were aquitted completely, then they are liable for damages.