Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Czech courts may issue an arrest warrant when it is not possible to summon or bring in for questioning a charged person and at the same time there is a reason for detention (i.e. concern that the charged person would either flee, interfere with the proceedings or continue criminal activity, see Remand in the Czech Republic).
Capias pro fine are writs or warrants issued after the defendant fails to comply with a court's order to pay a fine. [1]The writ is considered outstanding until paid in full. The recipient usually must remain in jail until fees and/or costs have been satisfied by time served or the fees and/or costs have been paid in ful
However, people can always turn themselves in at the court where the outstanding warrant or capias was issued, or after regular court hours, at 24-hour courts in each county: Justice of the Peace ...
In the common law legal systems, capias ad respondendum (Latin: "that you may capture [him] in order for him to reply") is or was a writ issued by a court to the sheriff of a particular county to bring the defendant, having failed to appear, to answer a civil action against him.
Warrants of Arrest, Alias, Search and Capias Profine are issued. Protective Orders can be issued and result in jail time if violated. Several administrative matters are heard including the finding of a Dangerous Dog, Occupational Drivers License and tow hearings. Many writs are issued such as writs of re-entry to apartments, possession of ...
The International Criminal Court (ICC) has issued an arrest warrant for Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu over alleged war crime during the conflict in Gaza.. The conflict in Gaza was ...
The court also issued an arrest warrant for Mohammed Deif, a senior Hamas commander referred to by the ICC as Mohammed Diab Ibrahim al-Masri. Deif, born in 1965, is the highest-level commander of ...
Capias is of several kinds: [1] Ad respondendum, to have the body in court to answer the plaintiff. [1] Ad satisfaciendum, to take the body in satisfaction of the debt. [1] Utligatum, to apprehend an outlawed person. [1] In withernam, where a distress is carried out of the county and an equal amount of the distrainor's goods are to be taken ...