Yes.
search warrants are issued by a judicial officer.
To obtain a search warrant, a law enforcement officer must present evidence to a judge or magistrate showing probable cause that a search is necessary to find evidence of a crime. The judge will review the evidence and, if satisfied, issue the warrant, allowing the officer to search a specific location for the specified evidence.
No, a pro tem judge cannot sign a search warrant. Only a judge with the authority to issue search warrants can do so. A pro tem judge is a temporary substitute judge who fills in for a regular judge and has limited authority.
To obtain a search warrant an officer must go before a judge and explain the reason for the search. The warrant will list the reason or reasons why they are searching, what they are looking for, and why. please refer to this link for more information, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Search_warrant
Fourth Amendment (A+)
Fourth Amendment (A+)
The date must be there on a search warrant, issued by a judge.
No, they have to actually go to the judge and present the evidence showing that the warrant is necessary. If the judge approves, he has to sign the warrant for it to be legal. The officer must then have it with them when they go to wherever the warrant is for. The warrant is also only good for 24 hours, unless otherwise specified.Added: An officer applying for a warrant does NOT have to produce evidence to the judge of the offense, he only has to swear an oath that Probable Cause exists for the search and/or arrest. Also - although an issuing judge MAY place a service time limit on the warrant, they do not necessarily automatically expire within a 24 hour time limit.
The date that the issuing judicial officer signed it would have to be on it and the officer(s) serving the warrant would sign and date it when it was served.
No a job centre compliance officer cannot search your home especially without a valid reason or a search warrant that has been signed by a official judge.
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.
They must provide a judge with probable cause to do a search.