英:['keɪpɪæs]
美:['keɪpɪæs]
英:['keɪpɪæs]
美:['keɪpɪæs]
ca·pi·as
keI pi s [or] kae pi s
复数:capiases
noun
a legal document directing an officer to arrest a specific person.
“writ of arrest”是指民事诉讼中法院发布的逮捕令,起源于15世纪中叶的拉丁语 capias,字面意思为“你可以拿走”(这种令状的典型首字); 该词是 capere 的第二人称单数现在虚拟语气,意为“抓住、捉住、把握”(源自 PIE 词根 *kap-,意为“抓住”)。
拘票
Middle English, from Latin, literally, you should seize, from capere to take — more at heave >entry 1
The first known use of capias was in the 15th century
1 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.
2 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.
3 Even without the capias, whether the Sheriff’s Office should have known to hold Vail remains in dispute.
4 Without a capias, jail officials had no indication there was any reason to hold Vail once the original charge was dropped, so he was freed from jail.
5 The Sheriff’s Office, which runs the jail, faulted the clerk for failing to provide a capias.
6 He was also booked on four court capias warrants, generally issued for failure to appear in court.