Sentences with phrase «officer under arrest»

Not exact matches

The police officer replied and said «I don't know, but the law is the law and you're under arrest.»»
He was eventually arrested for suspicion of being under the influence of a controlled substance, resisting arrest, resisting or threatening an officer and violating probation.
The proconsul ordered that Cyprian be placed under house arrest that night at the home of one of his staff officers and fixed date of trial for morrow.
Utah nurse Alex Wubbels was correctly doing her job last week when she refused to give a patient's blood to a police officer who showed up without a warrant, patient consent, or proof that the patient was under arrest.
While Bratton wouldn't reveal the number of officers under scrutiny, attorneys familiar with the investigation, which late last year led to the arrest of former NYPD lieutenant Robert Sung and detective Yatu Yam, believe the case has indeed mushroomed.
Private investigator Jonathan Rees and News of the World journalist Alex Marunchak were arrested for alleged offences under section 3 of the Computer Misuse Act 1990 and sections 1 and 2 of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 by police officers working on Operation Kalmyk, part of Operation Tuleta dealing with computer hacking.
Details emerged 7 September 2011 that senior journalist Amelia Hill of The Guardian was questioned under caution but not arrest, for several hours by officers from Operation Weeting the previous week.
The claim stated that NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo and others caused Garner's death when they placed him in a chokehold, which is against departmental procedure, while trying to place him under arrest for allegedly selling loose cigarettes on July 17, 2014.
Under stop - and - frisk, a police officer could ask a person to turn out their pockets, and if they had marijuana in them, by exposing it while complying with the officer, they could be arrested — and get a police record.
Five serving police officers are among the eight people who have been arrested under the investigation known as «Operation Alice».
NEW YORK (CBSNewYork / AP)-- The Bronx district attorney's office is no longer prosecuting people stopped at public housing projects under the city's stop - and - frisk policy unless the arresting officer ensures the arrest is warranted.
«Regardless of how one feels about being stopped, once told that they are being placed under arrest, they must comply with the officer's orders,» he said of the video, which shows Grays being cuffed and led away by four cops after he allegedly told them off for nearly hitting him in an unmarked police car while he was working.
The three officers were arrested under the orders of the Regional Police Commander, DCOP Kofi Boakye.
Immigrations and Customs Enforcement officers had filed a detainer in May 2016 — under President Barack Obama — for Salvadorian national Estivan Rafael Marques Velasquez after he was arrested for disorderly conduct, a misdemeanor, officials said.
Under this bill, our police and correction officers would refuse requests from federal authorities to hold an arrested illegal immigrant unless there is a warrant from a judge and the crime he was convicted of was «violent or serious.»
«If this council is interested in really improving police - community relations, let them introduce a bill requiring the complaints to be sworn under penalty of perjury that will help to separate real complaints from flat - our harassment of arresting officers,» PBA President Patrick Lynch said.
About 10 police reserve officers have been assigned to each school and will be stationed primarily outside the school buildings during peak travel hours to and from school, and are authorized to make arrests under the supervision of police officers, police officials said.
The university police are declared to be law enforcement officers of the state and conservators of the peace and have the right to arrest, in accordance with the laws of this state, any person for violation of state law or applicable county or city ordinances when such violations occur on or within 1,000 feet of any property or facilities that are under the guidance, supervision, regulation, or control of the state university, a direct - support organization of such university, or any other organization controlled by the state university, or when such violations occur within a specified jurisdictional area as agreed upon in a mutual aid agreement entered into with a law enforcement agency pursuant to s. 23.1225 (1).
Police Presence As arrests and suspensions rise, the role of the School Resource Officer (SRO) is under scrutiny.
Tania Bruguera, with book and bird under arm, exchanging words with uniformed officer moments before the artist's arrest, May 24 (photo by Kate Flint)
In addition to stop and identify laws, some states (including Colorado) have held that failing to provide an ID on demand, under the «totality of the circumstances» can sometimes constitute obstructing a police officer and provide a basis for an arrest.
This continues until the officers place the driver and passengers under arrest and bring them to jail.
Police officers under the control of the appellant had arrested MKK and another man at an ATM machine on Oxford Street, London.
Where a person has been arrested for an indictable (formerly an arrestable) offence, s 18 (1) of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 (PACE 1984), as amended by the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005, empowers the police to enter and search any premises «occupied or controlled» by the person under arrest where the relevant officer has reasonable grounds for suspecting that he will find on the premises evidence relating to the indictable offence for which the person has been arrested, or evidence relating to some other indictable offence which is connected with or similar to that offence.
The whole purpose of administering the test under section 254 (2) is to assist the officer in determining whether there are reasonable and probable grounds to arrest the driver for a drinking and driving offence.
Section 270 (1) of the Criminal Code provides every one commits an offence who assaults a public officer or peace officer engaged in the execution of his duty or a person acting in aid of such an officer; assaults a person with intent to resist or prevent the lawful arrest or detention of himself or another person; or assaults a person who is engaged in the lawful execution of a process against lands or goods or in making a lawful distress or seizure, or with intent to rescue anything taken under lawful process, distress or seizure.
However, simply informing an individual who is under arrest that they have the right to contact a lawyer is fairly meaningless, as the detainee is usually under the control of the arresting officer, without easy access to a telephone or other means of communication.
We will also take the opportunity to subpoena all the records, question the arresting officer under oath, and do whatever possible to find holes in the prosecution's case by asking the important questions, such as:
The arresting officer is therefore under a constitutional obligation to facilitate the requested access to counsel at the first reasonably available opportunity.
It's clear, based on existing caselaw, that once a police officer has entered onto private property under an implied invitation and arrests a person, that officer can then remain on the property in order to complete the arrest even if the implied invitation is later withdrawn:
If you were to be pulled over by a police officer for any reason, they could place you under arrest, and you would be taken directly to jail.
The Ontario Court of Justice has disagreed with the notion that if an arrestee / detainee can be taken to know why they are being arrested / detained, then the officer is relieved of their obligation under s. 10 (a) to inform them anyways of those reasons for the investigation.
Officer Jeff Payne put Alex Wubbels a hospital nurse under arrest even though it was ever so blatant that she had done nothing wrong.
The officer who stopped his vehicle apparently smelled an odour of burnt marijuana, then placed Mr. Boyd under arrest.
Already, police officers are under significant pressure to make arrests when responding to domestic incidents, as the problem of domestic abuse continues to be the focus of numerous studies and media attention.
In R. v. Reeves, Justice Bloomfeld reviewed the conduct of two officers deployed under TAVIS who arrested the defendant due to the presence of firearm and drugs on his possession.
ENFORCEMENT POWERS: SS 22 - 31 • Sections 22 — 23 introduce an offence of assaulting an immigration officer together with a corresponding set of penalties, and a range of powers including a power of arrest and powers of entry search and seizure; • Sections 24 — 26 expand the power of immigration officers so that they replicate existing police powers and arrangements under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002.
For example, a criminal code might define law enforcement officer in reference to arrest power, while another statute might used the term for H.R. and licensing regulations, and a third might use a functional definition for eligibility for a certain kind of tax deduction under state law.
Designated officers may detain those they believe to be liable to arrest by a constable under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984, s 24, or are subject to a warrant for arrest at ports.
As I understand it, the law says a police phlebotomist is permitted to take a blood sample from a hospital patient if, but only if, the patient is under arrest or the officer has a warrant or the patient consents.
(c) When necessarily used by a peace officer or person acting under the officer's command and in the officer's aid: (i) To arrest or apprehend a person who the officer reasonably believes has committed, has attempted to commit, is committing, or is attempting to commit a felony
If you are driving and a police officer believes that you may be under the influence, he or she may pull you over, assess the situation, and arrest you.
Whereas resisting arrest involves an attempt to prevent an officer from making an arrest, obstruction of a peace officer covers a much broader spectrum of conduct that falls under the rubric of «hindering the enforcement of the penal law or the preservation of the peace.»
After the accident, the officer was arrested for suspicion of driving under the influence and booked into the local jail.
Under Florida law the officer may not remove you from the immediate vicinity without making an arrest, unless you voluntarily accompany the officer to some other location.
Arizona's «implied consent» law says that if you are lawfully arrested by an officer who has reasonable grounds to believe that you have been driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs, then you consent to taking a chemical test of your blood, breath, or urine for the purpose of determining your blood alcohol content (BAC).
If arrested, he can be released by the arresting officer under s. 497 on a attendance notice or by an officer - in - charge under s. 498 on a promise to appear or recognizance.
(1) Subject to subsection (1.1), if a person who has been arrested without warrant by a peace officer is taken into custody, or if a person who has been arrested without warrant and delivered to a peace officer under subsection 494 (3) or placed in the custody of a peace officer under subsection 163.5 (3) of the Customs Act is detained in custody under subsection 503 (1) for an offence described in paragraph 496 (a), (b) or (c), or any other offence that is punishable by imprisonment for five years or less, and has not been taken before a justice or released from custody under any other provision of this Part, the officer in charge or another peace officer shall, as soon as practicable,
Release from custody by officer in charge where arrest made with warrant 499 (1) Where a person who has been arrested with a warrant by a peace officer is taken into custody for an offence other than one mentioned in section 522, the officer in charge may, if the warrant has been endorsed by a justice under subsection 507 (6),
A peace officer [1] who arrests an accused person or a peace officer who is in charge of the detainee may release the accused under s. 497 or 498.
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