Quote:
Originally Posted by delimex007
Dont know Shyster- some counties here in West Texas issue an arrest warrant for not taking care of weeds/trash/shrubs on your property. I found that very ridiculous. How can they issue an arrest warrant for that ?
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I'll assume you're leaving out a step or steps:
- A code violation officer issues a citation and coveys it to the alleged violator (by mail, hand delivery, sticking on their door, etc.). The citation has an answer date (aka "court date").
- The alleged violator does not file an answer to the citation or appear in court on their court date. An arrest warrant (called an "alias" warrant) may be issued.
- The alleged violator commits to the judge to do something regarding the citation (for example, pay a fine), but does not. An arrest warrant (called an "capias" warrant) may be issued.
So while a city code violation is a Class C misdemeanor that's punishable by a fine only and can't be punished with jail, if the defendant is charged with a code violation AND ignores it or doesn't follow through on their commitment, an arrest warrant may be issued and the person may be jailed.
btw, in Texas, alias warrants are bondable but capias warrants are not.