The Air Force. There is a provision for the Secretary of the Air Force to appoint Warrant Officers - however, the Air Force simply does not. The Air Force stopped appointing Warrant Officers in 1959. The last Warrant Officer in the active duty Air Force retired in 1980, and the last Warrant Officer in the Air Force Reserve retired in 1992.
Because Warrant Officers fall right below the lowest Officer and right above the highest Enlisted serviceman. Warrant Officers are commissioned by the head of their branch of service. Officers are commissioned by the President of the US.
no
A Warrant Officer salutes any Warrant Officers senior to themselves, and all commissioned officers.
No, they arresting officers do not have to have the warrant in their possession, only the knowledge that it exists.
It depends which armed forces you are a member of.Generally you do not salute warrant officers. Salutes are reserved for commissioned officers.A commission is only granted by the head of state. Such commissioned officers grant warrants, hence the name.Countries have different rules regarding warrants and warrant officers. Some you salute, depending on rank and other criteria.
No
There are no warrant officers in the chaplain corps. There are chaplains, which are commissioned officers, and chaplain assistants, which are enlisted. No warrants.
A Warrant Officer is an "officer." If the Military Policeman is enlisted or of a lower rank then, yes, the "Warrant Officer" does outrank him. However, when the Military Policeman is enforcing the law (UCMJ) then it does not matter what the rank of the other service member might be. If they are violating the Law, the Military Policeman must do his or her duty regardless of rank. Warrant Officer are commissioned outside of the normal process of selecting Officers. Usually those who are given Warrant Officer status possess training, skills or other knowledge that the Military needs at that time. In VietNam many helicopter Pilots were Warrant Officers. In the dawning age of computers many IT guys in the Military were commissioned as Warrant Officers and served for a specified time.
Gentlemen
Yes, for the United States. In order of rank from highest to lowest is Commissioned Officers, Warrant Officers, Non-Commissioned Officers (NCOs or Sergeants are "enlisted"), and then the remainder of the "enlisted" service members.
warrant officers only wear the warrant officer emblem which looks like a wreath
In many states, probation officers are sworn law enforcement officers so, yes, they can arrest you on a properly issued warrant.