Yes, you can as long as there was not any probable cause. If they just walk in and start searching, that is illegal and you can press charges. If anything incriminating is found it is also inadmissible in court.
If you committed a crime and ran to the house, or a crime was committed at the house, then yes they can enter with out a warrant, and there is nothing that can be done about it.
The only way is by turning yourself in to law enforcement and facing and defending yourself against the charges against you.
A tax warrant is a kind of document which a certain department uses to form a debt of a taxpayer. A tax warrant is a kind of legal action against the owner of a property.
Nobody can press charges against you except the prosecutor, if they decide to pursue the case a warrant will be issued for your arrest.
They can issue a warrant for a repo if they have gone to court and determined that you are trying to steal the car. They would have to file theft charges against you first.
You may be able to get charges pressed against them as you normally would. A warrant can then be issued and the person either extradited or charged and tried in absentia.
Yes. However if the ticket was not resolved and it has gone to a warrant when you press charges and go to court on the other matter the warrant might be found and you will have to deal with that also.
Not if they had a key or other means to get into the house without "breaking and entering". Contact the police and report the unauthorized entry. You cannot file charges on someone for this, the police need to. If the circumstances don't warrant filing charges, they'll explain why.
"Warrant pulled from sheriff's queue" typically means that a warrant, which is an official order for law enforcement to take action (like an arrest), has been removed or canceled from the list of warrants that the sheriff's department is actively processing or pursuing. This could happen for various reasons, such as the individual being apprehended, the charges being dropped, or the warrant being deemed no longer necessary. Essentially, it indicates that the warrant is no longer in effect or active within the sheriff's department.
No, a warrant is not the same as a charge. A warrant means the authorities have enough evidence to indicate that further investigation is required or that it is reasonable that charges can be made. A warrant for arrest indicates that there is apparently enough evidence to bring charges and a judge agrees.
If the raid was lawfully conducted by means of a warrant, you have no recourse except to defend yourself against the charges in court.
Yes, charges can be amended right up to your arraignment.
Warrants never expire, contrary to popular belief/myth/legend. The prosecution has a limited amount of time to file charges against a defendant, except in the case of murder where there is no time limit to file charges. If there is a warrant out on you, that means that the court already pressed charges and the judge signed the warrant. Again, warrants never expire.