James, why would you want to drive a car for a year and NOT pay on it?? Are you nuts?? LOL Turn the car in and this will go away. take it to a dealersip and leave it. When they call again, tell them you "saw" it at such and such dealership. Give them the name of the dealership so they can confirm that its there. Simple???
NO they cannot arrest you. This is a civil matter not a criminal matter. If they have no court order then you cannot be arrested for refusing to turn in the car. If you keep the car hidden they then can go to court and get ajudgement on you. Then you must return the car. In that case failing to do so is violating both the civil law (which you cant be arrested for) and the criminal code (contempt of court...in laymens terms not doing what the judge or sherriff tells you to do after they obtained a judgment).
Mark D: ever heard of a "Writ of Replevin"? The sheriff goes after the car or YOU. One or the other. I'm serving one Monday. Wanna watch a truck magically appear?
Ya know, I haven't made a car payment in a year n 4 months either. And I'm glad to say the car is now mine. Thanks to the repo dike who had no clue on the repo laws, and screwed up by committing a Breach of Peace. Now I have made a civil suit against them all. Learn your rights. Because of the repo lady I am now Evan more disabled than I was before and to top it off, the police dept. would not give her the car, they told her to leave.
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You can file a report at your local police department.
When you do report to your parole officer, he'll arrest you.
You, as an individual, can not obtain an arrest warrant. The most you can do is make a report of the offense to the police and, if upon investigation, they determine that the suspect you name is the perpetrator they will either arrest them or THEY will apply for a warrant for their arrest. In some jurisdictions, if you witness an offense you may go to a Magistrate, Justiice of the Peace, or the court, and swear to an "information" which, if legally sufficient, could have the effect of having a 'summons to appear' (in court) being issued to the individual that you name.
If you test dirty yes they can. Or if you have another outstanding warrant for your arrest.
Unless there was a filing error or some other mistake (highly unlikely), you will have a warrant out for your arrest.
Depending on the state - SOME states grant PO's law enforcement arrest powers and others do not. They report the violation(s) to their office which then notifies the court. The court THEN arranges a hearing, or issues a warrant for your re-arrest, whichever is more appropriate.
Yes. If you report to court then you have a chance to be detained and extradited back to the state in which you committed the crime. But only if its an active arrest warrent you are hiding from.
Tennessee will issue a warrant for your arrest and report it to the national center. Then your license will be suspended.
The police must have probable cause, that is, base upon the known information it is likely that either a crime has been or is about to be committed. It is more than a hunch or mere suspicion, but less than complete certainty. For more see the related link below.
If South Carolina wishes to prosecute the suspect, they can issue a warrant for his or her arrest. At some point, police officers in Tennessee would discover that the suspect has a warrant, and they would make an arrest based on that warrant. Tennessee would then have the option to extradite the suspect from Tennessee to South Carolina, where the suspect would be charged and potentially convicted of the crime.
If the warrant is entered into the "system" it will generate a 'hit' on you anytime your vital information is run.