As soon as they are placed under arrest.
Yes, but only if the court has placed an arrest warrant on said person.
If a person is placed under arrest then said person is under the arresting states care and any and all medical debt while under the states care will be paid by the housing state ...
You are in police custody after you have been informed that you are placed under arrest. Until you have been informed that you have been placed under arrest, you have the right to leave whenever you wish. For Miranda rights, you are considered in police custody (and therefore Miranda applies to you) when you reasonably believe that you are being detained without the right to leave. Because of this all police have a procedure that requires the officer questioning you to tell you that you are being questioned and you are free to leave
Galileo Galilei
They are committing fraud. I would contact the authorities and have them placed under arrest.
Normally a peace officer (cop) arrests an individual. Within a short period of time, he or she is taken before a judge. Usually, but depending on the local law, the judge decides if the person will go to jail, be placed under house arrest, be released on bond, or be released, or if some other action will be taken. After an individual is convicted, a judge may make house arrest part of the sentence or due to prison overcrouding the department of corrections may use house arrest as part of or all of prison time.
He was arrested based on a Swedish arrest warrant charging him with sexual assault.
It is not clear that he was placed under house arrest. He is not under house address now, as at about 1900 GMT on 30 Jan 2011 he was addressing the crowds in Tahrir Square.
Yes, a person can be placed on house arrest for a DUI, especially if it is a repeat offense or if there are aggravating factors involved, such as injury or property damage. House arrest is often used as an alternative to incarceration, allowing individuals to serve their sentence while remaining at home under monitored conditions. The specifics can vary by jurisdiction and the circumstances of the case. Courts typically determine the terms of house arrest during sentencing.
If the circumstances surrounding a seizure would be viewed by a reasonable person as indicating that he would not be free to leave for an indefinite, or for an extended period of time, then that person has been placed under arrest. It is not the actual length of time of the detention that is the key here, but, rather, whether a reasonable person would perceive, while detained, on the basis of the totality of the circumstances (including, very importantly, the actions and representations of the seizing officers, that he is 'under arrest' as commonly understood, in that he is likely to be detained for an indefinite or extended period of time.
no. the person on house arrest needs to wear some kind of monitoring deviceAnother View: Of course you can! What do you think they did prior to their invention? The court orders the individual not to leave their property. If they do so, the consequence is to be placed in jail and/or additional time added to the sentence for being in criminal contempt of court.