The right to detain typically belongs to law enforcement officers, who can detain individuals suspected of committing a crime to ensure public safety and facilitate investigations. In some circumstances, private citizens may have the right to detain someone if they witness a crime in progress, but this is generally limited to preventing harm and must be done in a reasonable manner. Additionally, certain regulatory bodies and agencies may have the authority to detain individuals for specific legal violations, such as immigration or health regulations.
detain
In Hamdi v. Rumsfeld (2004), the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the government could not detain a U.S. citizen as an enemy combatant without providing them the opportunity to contest their detention before an impartial authority. The Court recognized that while the government has the power to detain enemy combatants, this power must be balanced with the constitutional rights of individuals, particularly due process rights. The ruling emphasized that even in times of war, the judiciary has a role in reviewing the legality of such detentions.
Not if you are not driving. There is no obligation to "carry papers" in Canada. Only if you are driving. There is one notable exception: carry your medical marijuana card with you if you are carrying paraphenalia, buying or using.
Depends on what he or she did. If its sever then they can be there for months to years. My ex served 7 months in juvi for running away from home. I think that right there can answer your question. If it wasnt serious then weeks to months at max. if the person is 17 and its serious then he may be looking at adult time or a youthful offender camp for a year or two or more. You gotta be more specific cause i can go on and on about this for hours
4. Detain, Report, Correct, Apprehend
catch, apprehend, seize, arrest, imprison, detain, jail, incarcerate, nab, collar, bag, apprehension
capture, catch, nick, seize, detain, apprehend, take prisoner
Absolute and Unqualified
No. As a private citizen, you have no actual authority to detain anyone. If they get up and run away, you have no authority to pursue them. Detaining someone after they've put you in a situation which justified the use of lethal force can be a bit iffy. But pulling a firearm on someone for simple trespassing is going to put you in a bad way.
Sure! Could you please specify the question you would like me to answer?
The right to detain typically belongs to law enforcement officers, who can detain individuals suspected of committing a crime to ensure public safety and facilitate investigations. In some circumstances, private citizens may have the right to detain someone if they witness a crime in progress, but this is generally limited to preventing harm and must be done in a reasonable manner. Additionally, certain regulatory bodies and agencies may have the authority to detain individuals for specific legal violations, such as immigration or health regulations.
I will detain your bike. Police can not detain my car.
I'll detain you no further.
We won't detain you any further. Find a way to detain him until I get there.
Detain is the correct spelling.
No. Persecute and detain are not antonyms or synonyms.