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While 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 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
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, from Latin, literally, you should seize, from capere to take — more at heave entry 1
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