No, not unless the error was found and corrected by the issuing judge or magistrate BEFORE the warrant was executed. If the warrant was served at the wrong address, anything found and seized could be excluded as evidence.
Yes, if the warrant specifies that home or location.
if drugs are involved
An arrest warrant doesn't care where it is served, the address is not important. A search warrant is valid for the address or premise listed in the warrant. Whether it is your address or not will not change the validity of the warrant.
A search warrant could be faulty if it has wrong information on it. Then it would make the search warrant void. This can be the wrong name or a mistake on the address. If there is not a reasonable suspicion it could also be faulty.
A search warrant will specifically set forth the address or the property which may be searched. The legal name of the occupant need not necessarily be named.
If the warrant is valid it is.
A search warrant is a legal document issued by a judge that authorizes law enforcement to search a specific location for evidence of a crime. It typically includes the address of the location to be searched, the reason for the search, the items or evidence being sought, and the date and time the search warrant is valid.
Ten Days
There is no consent needed from anybody when there is a valid search warrant in play. The court gives the police the right to search by granting the search warrant.
Yes, the officer may search. Police may search a building if they reasonably believe a valid search warrant has been issued. They do not have to possess the search warrant.
There has to be reasonable cause that the search warrant is not valid. For the most part once a Judge approves the search warrant there is nothing that can be done. Your home will be searched either way.
A search order must be signed by a judge to be valid. Police cannot conduct any search for which a search order is needed if it does not have a valid signature.