An arrest can be legally made with an arrest warrant. The Fourth Amendment stresses the importance of having an …show more content…
They sound just as they are observational probable cause is what an officer sees, like being high on drugs, suspicious conduct, running away, and many others are included, while the informational probable cause is what an officer is told, including "communicating with official sources, such as wanted posters, statement from the victims, and information from informants (Hess, Orthmann, Cho, 2014, pg.85). With probable cause an officer may not always have time to go to a judge to get a warrant due to not having enough time to get one due to the possibility for the offender to get away with the crime. There are several incidences where it is allowable to make an arrest without a warrant, such as: a felony arrest in a public place, searches incident in lawful arrest; which permits an officer to search a suspect's person, clothing, and anything in suspects immediate reach, an automobile under reasonable suspicion and articulable suspicion, and exigent circumstances ( The Fourth Amendment Reasonableness …show more content…
" Almost every state limits police authority to arrest, especially without a warrant – even when the officers have probable cause. Some of these statutory limitations are complicated, allowing arrest at certain time, with various jurisdictional limitations, and for particular crimes, and many of the statutes are peppered with a number of exceptions" (Spector 2008, 12). Although it's preferable to have an arrest warrant, its not required to arrest a suspect on probable cause in a public place or in a "hot pursuit" of an offender when they flee to his or her own residence; and in these situations may lawfully arrest suspect without a warrant. Two other exceptions to this warrant requirement are consent and emergency situations (Hess, Orthmann, Cho, 2014,