A court appearance by an officer is an official duty that falls within his job description. A defendant is not billed for an officer showing up to work to do his job.
There are many different careers that can come from a criminal justice degree. Just to name a few: police officer, probation officer, court clerk, investigator. It's a very versatile degree.
yes
There is not really a checklist of things you need to become a police officer with or without college. You need to be able to show to any agency that you are the person they want as a police officer and you need to make yourself stand out from the crowd. There are a bunch of things you can do that will help - Volunteer with an agency is one way.
This has to be confusing for the child. Take it up with the agency that governs your custody agreement tomorrow. It may be that the father had papers stating visitation rights and you were mistaken, otherwise police should not have come to your door. Hopefully you can smooth this process out so such a eventful exchange does not happen again.AnswerNo. The police officer had no right to act regarding the visitations. The father should have brought his claim that visitations were not being followed to the court that has jurisdiction over the case. The police officer should be reported. He was likely an acquaintance of the father.
If the judge wants to see you, yes. Otherwise you will simply be arrested the first time a police officer contacts you for any reason. You may want to contact the court and resolve this minor matter before you are arrested at a bad time.
A police officer needs a search warrant signed by a judge to search your property for evidence. The officer does not need a search warrant to come onto your property if he has reasonable grounds to think a crime is in progress or if the officer is in pursuit of a suspect.
Not unless they have a police officer with them AND they have a search warrant.
Because they're grouped together under 'Police and law enforcement' questions - see related link.
All they have to prove is that it was within manufacturer's specifications and calibrated properly, so when stopped by police, they don't need to show you the radar gun, when you ask to see it. An officer does not, and more than likely, will not show you what speed you were going on there radar. That issue would come up in court.
I think they can walk the premises but i don't think they can enter your home without a warrant.
Call your local police department and tell them you want to make out an accident report. An officer will come to you and get your information. be honest, it's the best way.
Police officers come from a variety of educational backgrounds and fields. However, the most common degree is with a major in criminal justice or criminology.