Arrest Warrant In Criminal Justice

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In this episode, the detectives main suspect is Ryder, the husband of the dead woman, Lois. They need to search his car and look for anything linking lois’ death to Ryder. They do get a warrant to search the car and find fibers of lois’ clothes. What took place is what would happen in real life. The detectives would get a warrant from a judge, than they would be able to search the car. But cars are not always the same because during a traffic stop, if any contraband is in plane view than the officer can detain the occupants of the car and search the car. There was a guy named henry later in the movie that had a key connection to Ryder and Lois’ murder. The detectives went after Henry and found him. They were at the door and knocked it down and arrested him. Though this is correct in real life, we do not know if they obtained an arrest warrant from a judge for Henry. The correct method is to get that arrest warrant, than go after him legally. Without that arrest warrant, a whole bunch of problems will arise from that. Though this did not happen in the episode, it is worth to talk about. The detectives knocked on the door for Henry, announcing to him that they were there. If they wanted to break the door in unannounced, they would need a no knock authorization from a judge. While this is usually to stop the suspects from …show more content…
His bail was set at five hundred thousand dollars. It was so high because the judge said he was able to afford the set amount. Ryders bail would be reasonable in a real hearing. Bail is given on a few factors depending on the person's earnings and how much of a flight risk they are. If someone was a suspected murdered though, their bail would most likely be revoked because of the crime committed. While having a very high income will land you a very high bail, being the accused can afford it with little to no problems. Differing from a very poor person, they would get little to sometimes no