My question involves civil rights in the State of: California.
How can I be "made Whole" after the dismissal of an arrest in the interest of justice, which resulted in economic and property losses?
My question involves civil rights in the State of: California.
How can I be "made Whole" after the dismissal of an arrest in the interest of justice, which resulted in economic and property losses?
It depends on the totality of the circumstances which we don't have. If you have used your real name as your username, I would counsel you not to share them. You would be better served consulting a few attorneys to see if you have any grounds for legal action as a result of whatever happened.
The truth is you will never really be "whole" again. It's highly unlikely, absent egregious conduct by law enforcement or the prosecutor, that you will ever recover any and all losses that may have occurred. Then there are the mental losses from stress, etc... dealing with the issue.
Note that a dismissal in the interest of justice doesn't necessarily mean there was a problem with how the case was handled. It can be something as simple as "Yeah, he broke the law but it's not worth going to trial".
Free9man: remove the space between the first and last name, reduce to all lower case and check the post hx.
...with a pretty weird reputation. He has one agenda and no matter how far removed it may seem now, that agenda will rear its head eventually.
Proceed at your own peril.
I am now going out to buy the popcorn.
You're on. You like butter and salt on yours or just plain? What do you want to drink?
Why do you explain what "dismissal of arrest" means and tell us a bit about what happened?
Just because you are found innocent doesn't entitle you to damages. Damages only result when there was some egregious failure in the arrest process, such as a total lack of probable cause. Arrests pursuant to a warrant almost never qualify unless there is intentionally false statements made to support the application.