Arrest warrant is a legal document issued on behalf of the state authorizing an official or any law enforcement agency to perform an arrest and detain an individual who may be a suspect or has pending case in any courts of law in the state. Arrest warrants are not only issued to people who have committed a crime but can also be issued to those who have simply failed to show up in a court appointment and other administrative reasons that are not deemed a criminal offense in nature. There are several classes of warrants and the grounds why it was issued against a person. If a person has an outstanding arrest warrant against him, it is only practical to consult an experienced attorney to provide assistance regarding the action to be taken against the said warrant. There is nothing a person can do within his power to stop the warrant being carried out except to employ the services of lawyers experienced in handling cases of this nature. The most basic conception of arrest warrants is that it is being issued to person or persons who are suspected by the law to have committed a grave offense and have failed to show up for interrogation to refute the charges against him. Most of the time when an arrest warrant is issued, official charges are more likely to follow which would require the individual to face it in the court or be imprisoned if he failed to defend himself against the accusations. Before an arrest warrant is issued by the court for criminal offenses, the police handling the case must first put together a strong case against the person in question and must merit approval from the district attorney. If the district attorney believes that there is a strong case against that person and the charges are supported with overwhelming evidence, he or she will then file an official complaint and submit it to the judge for review. If the judge sees that the case has merits, he can order an arrest warrant and require the person in question to appear before the court and answer all the charges leveled against him. Arrest warrants become active warrants if the department authorized to carry it decides to implement the arrest warrant issued by the court. When the agency has served the warrant to the person in question, all that remain to do is to file appropriate charges and detain the subject until the case is heard in the court. If the arrest warrant remains unimplemented, then it will be added on the criminal record of the subject in question and it can be accessed on public database whenever a search is made. Search for arrest warrants can be made through online inquiry from online databanks established by various government agencies and other private third parties which host public record search in the internet. This particular record is accessible to the public since it also helps the law enforcement agencies to implement an outstanding warrant of arrest every time an individual is found to have a pending warrant against him.