Yes, once trash is on the curb, it is no longer considered as "private property" and officers may search it as needed.
A Warrant Officer is a rank within the US and many other armed forces that is between the rank of a Non-Commissioned Officer (which is any of the sergeant or chief ranks) and an Officer (such as Ensign or 2nd Lieutenant) The rank of Warrant Officer was created so that individuals with certain technical specialties could be placed in a higher grade than the enlisted, but yet not have all the responsibilities of an Officer. For example during Viet Nam, many helicopter pilots were Warrant Officers. Today, many of the Army's helicopter pilots are Warrant Officers.
In the California vs. Greenwood case, the Supreme Court ruled that warrantless searches and seizures of garbage left outside a person's home are legal. This means that law enforcement can search through someone's trash without a warrant because there is no expectation of privacy once the garbage is placed outside for collection.
21%
The Incinorator
Pay the warrant.
On civil arrests - whether an actual warrant gets placed into the NCIC will depend on how thorough the local jursticition is. Most times - yes.
OFFICERS UPON CONTACT, WILL VERIFIEY IDENTITY THROUGH IDENTIFICATION OR IF NO ID THROUGH FINGERPRINTS. THE OFFICER WILL THEN CALL THE LOCAL AGENCY AND "CONFIRM" WITH WHATEVER AGENCY IS ISSUING THE WARRANT. ONCE CONFIRMATION IS MADE AND THE WARRANT IS VERIFIED AS GOOD THE PERSON IS PLACED UNDER ARREST AND TAKEN TO THE LOCAL JAIL OR TRANSPORTED TO THE AGENCY WITH THE WARRANT. Being booked on the warrant is not a given as many police agencies will set a court date and release on a notrice to appear citation. This is normally the case with misdemeanor warrants.
No, you can not place chicken skin down a garbage disposal. If you placed chicken skin down a garbage disposal you could back up your drains because the skin does not get broken up by the blades.
So the garbage does not contaminate the water supply
a warrant would be placed for their arrest... and I believe they are fined...
Yes, if an officer confirms and serves the warrant, the subject is placed under arrest and either booked into jail, or cited out on a notice to appear. Either way you have been arrested.
Yes, but only if the court has placed an arrest warrant on said person.