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I’m not exactly sure what your question is, but I’ll try some general information and hope I hit the mark. First, a bench warrant is different than most of the warrants you see on TV. You are probably familiar with Police getting a judge to sign a warrant for arrest or search. A bench warrant is initiated by a judge and has a little different status. It is probably most common to see them issued for “Failure to Appear.” If you or someone you know has a bench warrant, get your personal business in order and go to the Creek County Sheriff’s Office in Sapulpa, Oklahoma and turn yourself in. You won’t be able to bail out as easily. Most bail bondsmen will not cover a bench warrant if it is for failure to appear. You have already set precedence for not showing up and they loose money if you don’t show. However, if you turn yourself in, stand before the judge and apologize for your foolish actions, there is a good chance the amount of bail can be minimized. Turning yourself in will go a LONG WAY at showing the judge you will show up again when he tells you to.

Overall, bench warrants are much more limiting. For whatever reason, the judge himself has decided he wants to see you in his court. You don’t want to tick off the judge. He holds your freedom in his hands. Swallow any pride you have and become the most humble person you can think of. You don’t have to like him, but you DO have to respect his authority.

2006-11-11 13:36:54 · answer #1 · answered by R_SHARP 3 · 0 0

1

2016-04-28 21:03:45 · answer #2 · answered by In 3 · 0 0

Creek County Warrants

2016-11-07 02:10:09 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Get a No Cost Background Check Scan at https://bitly.im/aOgl8

Its a sensible way to start. The site allows you to do a no cost scan simply to find out if any sort of data is in existence. A smaller analysis is done without cost. To get a detailed report its a modest payment.

You may not realize how many good reasons there are to try and find out more about the people around you. After all, whether you're talking about new friends, employees, doctors, caretakers for elderly family members, or even significant others, you, as a citizen, have a right to know whether the people you surround yourself with are who they say they are. This goes double in any situation that involves your children, which not only includes teachers and babysitters, but also scout masters, little league coaches and others. Bottom line, if you want to find out more about someone, you should perform a background check.

2016-05-21 06:38:13 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

http://www.odcr.com/

This is the Oklahoma District Court Records...Creek County is included in this. If there is a warrant, it should say so next to the persons name.

2006-11-12 15:49:20 · answer #5 · answered by Shawna 3 · 2 0

Ok, it appears you have a question, about a bench warrant,

in oklahoma, and is that a county in OK. or what. and what do you want to know about them.

2006-11-11 11:34:22 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Nobody is going to come looking for you for that piddly misdemeanor warrant. Just go to the courthouse at 8:00 on Wednesday.

2016-03-19 05:02:18 · answer #7 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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