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Arrest

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Criminal procedure
Criminal investigation
Arrest warrant  · Search warrant
Probable cause  · Knock and announce
Exigent circumstance
Search and seizure  · Arrest
Right to silence  · Miranda warning (U.S.)
Grand jury
Criminal prosecution
Statute of limitations
Bill of attainder  · Ex post facto law
Criminal jurisdiction  · Extradition
Inquisitorial system  · Adversarial system
Arraignment  · Indictment
Nolo contendere (U.S.)  · Plea bargain
Rights of the accused
Right to a fair trial
Presumption of innocence
Jury trial  · Speedy trial
Habeas corpus  · Bail
Exclusionary rule (U.S.)
Self-incrimination  · Double jeopardy
Verdict and sentencing
Acquittal  · Conviction (law)>Conviction
Not proven (Scot.)
Mandatory sentencing
Suspended sentence
Parole  · Probation
Tariff (UK)  · Life licence (UK)
Dangerous offender (Can.)
Cruel and unusual punishment
Capital punishment  · Execution warrant
Related areas of law
Criminal law  · Evidence
Civil procedure
Portals: [[Portal:Law|Law]]  · [[Portal:Criminal justice|Criminal justice]]
The Chicago Police Department arrests a man
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The Chicago Police Department arrests a man

An arrest is the action of the police, or person acting under the color of law, to take a person into custody so that they may be forthcoming to answer for the commission of a crime. In many legal systems, an arrest requires mere verbal information to persons that they are under arrest; the laying of hands or restraints upon the arrested person is usually not required to effect an arrest. Also, there are certain non-criminal arrests that allow for the seizure of representatives not present in the legislative body lacking a quorum, and the forfeiture of property.

For serious crimes, the police typically take suspects to a police station or a jail where they will be incarcerated pending a judicial bail determination or an arraignment. In other instances, the police may issue a notice to appear specifying where a suspect is to appear for his arraignment.

While an arrest will not necessarily lead to a state sanction such as imprisonment, the arrest itself may have serious ramifications, such as a loss of a job due to inability to pay bail, loss of public housing, and social stigma. Such effects are termed the collateral consequences of criminal charges.

Legal cautions

The reading of the Miranda warning or similar "caution" to an arrestee advising them of their rights is not legally required upon arrest. A legal caution is only required when a person has been taken into custody and is interrogated. Legal cautions are mandated in the US, most Commonwealth and other common law jurisdictions, and countries where the right to legal counsel, the right to silence, and the right against self-incrimination have been clearly established.

In the United Kingdom a person must be 'cautioned' when being arrested unless impractical due to the behaviour of the arrestee i.e. violence or drunkenness. The caution required in England and Wales states, "You do not have to say anything. But it may harm your defence if you do not mention when questioned something which you later rely on in court. Anything you do say may be given in evidence". The person must also be told what crime they are being arrested for and why it is necessary to arrest them. In R v Fiak (2005) EWCA 2381, the police found the appellant sitting in the driver's seat of a stationary BMW car. He was alone, leaning out of the front door, vomiting into the roadside. When challenged, the appellant denied that he had been driving and walked towards his adjacent house inviting the officers to confirm that he had been home all night. The officer said, "You are being detained in order for us to establish whether an offence has been committed. Now stay where you are." When the appellant's wife finally opened the door, he attempted to force his way in. There was a struggle. Only later were the words of the caution administered. The defence argued that the only power to arrest arose under s4(6) Road Traffic Act 1988, which provides, "any constable may arrest anyone he has reasonable cause to suspect of having committed the offence of ... being in charge of a vehicle when under the influence of drink or drugs." and that, until the appellant was lawfully arrested, he was at liberty to resist any unlawful attempt to restrain him. The general rule flowing from Holgate-Mohammed v Duke (1984) AC 437 is that an arrest takes place when an individual is taken into custody, and words or actions restrain him from moving anywhere beyond the control of the person effecting the arrest.

"Whether a person has been arrested depends not on the legality of his arrest but on whether he has been deprived of his liberty to go where he pleases."
Thus, Fiak was arrested when the officer told him in unequivocal terms that he was being detained and that he should stay where he was, and physically sought to prevent him from going into his home. At that time he knew precisely why she had given him that instruction, but she was willing to check his story that he had been in his home all evening, and as he asserted, neither driving nor in charge of his vehicle. If it was true, that would have been the end of the incident. There would have been no need to remove the appellant to the police station with the appropriate statutory procedure to follow. The appellant could simply have returned to his home, without any inconvenience to anyone. But if it was untrue, then the implementation of the statutory procedure would continue to its proper conclusion. Arrest can thus be considered to have been a continuous process from the moment of detainer to the pronunciation of the formal words of the caution.

Non-criminal arrests

If a legislature lacks a quorum, many jurisdictions allow the members present the power to order a call of the house, which orders the arrest of the members who are not present. A member arrested is brought to the body's chamber to achieve a quorum. The member "arrested" does not face prosecution, but may be required to pay a fine to the legislative body.

Ordinarily only human beings can be arrested, but recent and somewhat controversial changes to criminal codes have allowed for the arrest not only of the usual "contraband, evidence, fruits, and instrumentalities" of crime, but also of inanimate objects such as money, automobiles, houses, and other personal property under asset forfeiture.

Origin of \"arrest\"

The term is Norman in origin and is related to the French word ArrĂȘt, meaning "stop".

See also

External links

 


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