A good reason to believe evidece may be found
Technically they cant unless they have a search warrant not an arrest warrant.
Yes, police generally need to show a search warrant before conducting a search, unless there are specific circumstances that allow for a search without a warrant, such as consent or exigent circumstances.
NO they can not unless there has been a warrant to do so.
Not unless they have a police officer with them AND they have a search warrant.
The police need a Search Warrant to enter a private residence in order to collect evidence unless they have reasonable cause.
It keeps the police from being able to take your property or enter your dwelling indiscriminately. Meaning: under normal circumstances, a police officer cannot just take your property or come inside your house for no reason. He would have to appear before a magistrate and request a search warrant. Normally, courts will not issue a search warrant unless there is a valid reason to do so.
You are to be safe and secure in your persons, homes, papers, property blah blah Basically people can't search your property unless they have a Search Warrant. The search warrant must have a Judge's signature, probably cause, and specifically states what property can be searched. For example if the search warrant gives permission to search someone's house but does not state they can search the person's car, the police officer or whoever is searching cannot search the car.
The police cannot search a house without a warrant, unless they have blatant probable cause (like opening the door to a wall of weed smoke while your friend is ripping bong on the couch.) Depending on the detailed terms of the warrant they may or may not have access to a safe.
No, an apartment security guard cannot detain and search a person or their car. They cannot do this, unless they have a warrant.
Search warrantsSearch warrants are required under the protections of the Fourth Amendment. For a search warrant to be obtained by the police there must be:Sufficient reasons for the search: A warrant may not be issued unless there is sufficient evidence, reason or rationale for the search. Search warrants may not be issued randomly.Stated object of the search: A search warrant must specifically declare what the police are looking for.Location of the search: Search warrants must specify the areas to be searched. For example, a search warrant may include an individual's house, but a separate warrant may be needed to search the same person's garage.
Yes, police generally need to show a search warrant before entering a property, unless there are specific circumstances that allow them to enter without one, such as in cases of hot pursuit or imminent danger.
No, the police cannot legally require you to hang up your phone during a phone call unless there is a specific legal reason to do so, such as a search warrant or a court order.