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It could be one. There are search warrants and arrest warrants. If you have a search warrant, the police are entitled to search your property. After executing the search warrant, if the police establish probable cause to believe that you committed a crime, they can arrest you. If you have an arrest warrant, it is only a matter of time before the police find you and execute the arrest warrant.
In many states, probation officers are sworn law enforcement officers so, yes, they can arrest you on a properly issued warrant.
A warrant is an order for an arrest issued by the court. But many arrests do not need a warrant. If you punch someone in the face, and police are called, you will be arrested without a warrant, and one will not be needed. If say, you failed to show up in court, then a warrant for your arrest will be issued, to alert all officers that you should be arrested on sight. So the warrant itself is not the thing 'allowing' you to be arrested.
the effect is many weapons were found and the Ampatuans were detained with out warrant of arrest
A search warrant has a time limit set by the issuing court, often a week or less. An arrest warrant is valid until served or cancelled. Many last for years.
The time it takes to issue a warrant varies. It may take longer if the sheriff or cop serving the warrant can't find the individual.
an arrest warrant must be served within 30 days of the missed time of the appointed court date, but it depends on the charge and how many warrants you have in the system. The warrant is in effect when you do not make another appointment within the 30 days or turn yourself into the local police station, if not stay on the move. Do the right thing.
It depends on the limitations placed on the warrant by the issuing court. Many misdemeanor warrants are limited to service in the city or county that issued the warrant. It is up to the judge.
(in the US) Usually not more than 24 hours - or in the case of jurisdictions not having 24 hour court - until the next regularly scehduled session of court.
It means that a court threw out the violation warrant as being invalid or against your rights. Many times, courts make a mistake by not processing paperwork fast enough and then realize all the requirements were met after issuing an arrest warrant. This means the judge would have to void the violation warrant.
Bad checks are a crime and yes, they can get a warrant. Depending on the circumstances they are not likely to make arrests or go that far. They want their money, not you in jail. They can absolutely arrest you in Montana. Their records are slow, and if you accidently write a check which bounces, they will arrest you and/or put a warrant out for your arrest. It happened to me, I bounced a check to the supermarket for $40. I cleared it up but they have paper records there, and they arrested me and put my "bail" at $100.