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THE
DA AND FILING CHARGES |
In Texas and most states, the District
Attorney is the one who makes the decision
whether to charge a person with a crime.
Usually this is done based upon a Peace
Officer's sworn complaint based upon either
the Officer's personal knowledge or a citizen's
report.
On occasion the District Attorney's office
will take a charge directly based upon a
citizen's complaint to their office. An
Assistant D.A. is on call twenty-four hours
a day to accept charges filed by either
police officers on the citizen's behalf
or directly by the citizen themselves.
If you wish to file charges for a criminal
offense, you should either contact a peace
officer to make a report and/or compliant
or contact the District Attorney's office
for the county in which the offense occurred.
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WARRANTS |
If you have reason to believe that a warrant
for your arrest has been issued in Harris
County, you can call our office or a professional
bondsman and ask that your information be
run through the Harris County Justice Information
Management System (JIMS) computer.
Our firm provides this service for free,
as do most reputable bonding companies.
If you have cause for concern that a warrant
in another county may have been issued,
you should contact the Sheriff's Department
of that county to verify if a warrant exists.
Your inquiry will not trigger any action
that would not otherwise occur. The threat
of arrest and the steps needed to clear
the warrant should be your main concern.
If you believe a federal warrant has been
issued, you should seek the advice of a
reputable criminal law attorney to discuss
your options. The attorney will be better
equipped to access that information, as
well as assist you in ultimately clearing
the warrant with as little inconvenience
as possible, without jeopardizing your rights.
If a warrant has been issued and a bond
has already been set, you may post the bond
in accordance with the instructions in the
ARREST & BAIL section.
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