The answer to this question cannot be known."Bonding" of an employee is done by independent insurance companies that issue such 'bonds.' What criteria they, or your employer, use to screen an employee is entirely up to them.
No they do not. Once a defendant is charged the statute of limitations is no longer relevant and failing to appear in court will not create a timeline to invoke it.
You will lose the case, and may be charged with failing to appear or contempt of court.
A probation warrant is issued when a person violates the terms of their probation. The warrant is issued by the court and the person must appear to explain their actions to the judge.
Impossible to know the answer to this. You will more than likely have your probation revoked and be remanded to serve the remainder of your sentence behind bars PLUS you may alos be charged with a separate VOP charge, an FTA charge, plus they issued a warrant for you so you were also a Fugitive. You do the math.
You would be a probation violator and if you fail to appear at court, a capias or arrest warrant can issue.
Yes. If you are "charged" it will appear on your record.
Almost anything from failing to appear on traffic tickets to murder.
Yes
Disciplinary probation may or may not appear on your transcript, depending on the policies of your school or institution. It is best to check with your school's administration or registrar's office for specific information regarding how disciplinary actions are recorded on transcripts.
a probation warrant or a failure to appear warrant would be state wide and it could be valid in other states, depending the extradtion limits put into the system
Statewide
In the US, yes. To even be charged, the accused must be arraigned and appear (or waive appearance) in a preliminary hearing.