No.
Yes, in some jurisdictions a Justice of the Peace may have the authority to issue and sign arrest warrants, search warrants, and other court-issued documents. This authority may vary depending on the specific laws and regulations of the jurisdiction.
First of all - the police do not issue warrants - only the judicial system can issue warrants on which the police then act. (e.g.- A Magistrate, a Justice of the Peace - a Judge - etc). The person may have appeared before court and swore under oath that their report was true.
judicial, executive
They do not issue warrants, they file tax liens against the property in question.
Anti war organizing. Vegetarianism.
Depending on the charge specified in the warrant: A Justice of The Peace - a Magistrate or - a Judge.
Yes Child Protective Services can issue warrants to detain and/or interview children. They must be signed by and Judge and must show probable cause.
The 4th Amendment states that no search warrants shall issue but upon probable cause.
To issue search warrants
Just because you know some words doesn't mean you can throw them together and make a sensible question. Here are some reasons the answer is "no", no matter what you were actually trying to ask: Lawyers don't issue warrants, judges do. Judges do issue warrants, but they do not issue "warrants for judgement". The phrase "from a collection" doesn't make any sense as used here.
Warrants are ISSUED by a judge or by the police
Search warrants, in the U.S., are provided by a judge or magistrate.