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Recent Examples of capiasWhile traditional arrest warrants require an ascertainment that there is evidence a crime may have been committed, Peterson's capias warrant stems from his failure to appear in court over the issues.—Gord Magill, Newsweek, 20 Dec. 2024 She was arrested and jailed on a civil order called a capias for repeatedly refusing Moukawsher’s orders requiring her to cooperate with a trustee appointed to close her law practice and prohibiting her from withdrawing money from a client account.—Hartford Courant, 6 June 2022 Videos of three days worth of court proceedings obtained by cleveland.com and accompanying court records confirm that Carr issued multiple capiases -- the legal term for an arrest warrant -- and placed arrest bonds on several of them.—Cory Shaffer, cleveland, 21 Mar. 2020 Even without the capias, whether the Sheriff’s Office should have known to hold Vail remains in dispute.—Rafael Olmeda, sun-sentinel.com, 7 June 2019 Without a capias, jail officials had no indication there was any reason to hold Vail once the original charge was dropped, so he was freed from jail.—Rafael Olmeda, sun-sentinel.com, 19 June 2019 The Sheriff’s Office, which runs the jail, faulted the clerk for failing to provide a capias.—Rafael Olmeda, sun-sentinel.com, 19 June 2019 He was also booked on four court capias warrants, generally issued for failure to appear in court.—Diana Samuels, NOLA.com, 5 Jan. 2018
Task force would go beyond jail enforcement Three kinds of 287(g) agreements allow local law enforcement to partner with ICE: the jail enforcement model, the warrant service officer program and the task force model.
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Ray Stern,
AZCentral.com,
8 July 2025
The decision to issue the arrest warrants came some six months after the Chief Prosecutor applied for them.
Polls consistently show that an overwhelming majority of Americans want cleaner energy, and climate action writ large.
—
Los Angeles Times,
Los Angeles Times,
3 July 2025
The Senate included an amendment that would not only slash Medicaid writ large – as House Republicans wanted – but would also reduce the federal share of Medicaid spending for people enrolled through state-level expansions of the Affordable Care Act.
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