18 U.S.C. § 3062

General arrest authority for violation of release conditions

Read at: OLRCuscode.house.gov CornellLII GovInfogovinfo.gov JustiaTitle 18 CasesGoogle Scholar

A law enforcement officer, who is authorized to arrest for an offense committed in his presence, may arrest a person who is released pursuant to chapter 207 if the officer has reasonable grounds to believe that the person is violating, in his presence, a condition imposed on the person pursuant to section 3142(c)(1)(B)(iv), (v), (viii), (ix), or (xiii), or, if the violation involves a failure to remain in a specified institution as required, a condition imposed pursuant to section 3142(c)(1)(B)(x).

Notes of Decisions
Cited in 2 cases, 1986–1987 · leading case: United States v. Robert Christopher Ingraham A/K/A Arthur Robert MacKeil
United States v. Robert Christopher Ingraham A/K/A Arthur Robert MacKeil (1987) ca1 “In this beseechment, Ingraham stresses his view that the enactment of the Bail Reform Act of 1984 (Act), 18 U.S.C. §§ 3062 , 3141-3150 (1984), and the Act’s endorsement of pretrial detention in a broadened array of cases, see 18 U.”
United States v. Howard Perry, Glen Hagen, James Geran, Kevin Dorr. United States of America v. Howard Perry and Gary Mo (1986) ca3 “1976 -87 (to be codified at 18 U.S.C. §§ 3062 , 3141-3150), was facially unconstitutional, both substantively and proeedurally.”
Annotations are extracted automatically from the opinions in the Syfert caselaw corpus and ranked by authority, recency, and treatment. Dots show Syfertize treatment of the citing case itself.