More information is needed. If the wife knows where the husband/fugitive is hiding and she can be locate him, but law enforcement can not, she could be charged with aiding and abetting.
Unable to give any concrete information. It all depends on what the warrants were for originally. Then, on top of those sentences, you will be charged with being an absconder/fugitive..
You will be charged with whatever offense you were arrested for and then be required to appear in court on theother two outstanding warrants. I strongly suspect that, based on your record for showing up for court, that you are looking at pre-trial jail time with no bail offered.
Yes. The crime is "Aiding and Abetting."
Warrants never expire. They exist until canceled by the judge.
If you have outstanding warrants and at least one "Fail to Appear" in regards to Court Dates, you're license will be suspended. If you are pulled over anytime after your license is suspended, you'll be charged with counts of "Fail to Appear" and "Aggravated Unlicensed Operation" for as many warrants as you have outstanding. Your vehicle will be impounded and you will be send to your county holding center until you see a Judge. In addition all of your traffic warrants will still be valid and the fines can be increased because of your failure to pay. At the end of the day depending on the originally charges you're looking at paying $4000 - $8000+ in fines and penalties (including bail) and/or spending some time in the holding center.
If it can be determined that you supplied support to the fugitive then you can be arrested and charged with aiding and abetting.
Fugitive from justice, unlawful flight to avoid prosecution, failure to appear, and so on.
This will depend on the background check that is performed by your employer. And if your employer does find out that there is an outstanding warrant then he can call the police and have you picked up. In many states if he does not do this, he could be charged with hindering justice or with harboring a fugitive.
The punishment for keeping an illegal person in the UK can vary depending on the circumstances. Possible consequences may include fines, imprisonment, or deportation for the illegal person. It is important to comply with immigration laws to avoid legal repercussions.
Yes, you may be charged. The fact that you allowed them in to search does not off set a crime.
The record of the fact that they were issued against you, yes. The warrants themselves will either become inactive when they are withdrawn or quashed, or the statute of limitations runs out on the offense you are charged with.
I can't address the specifics since I don't what new offenses you are referring to -HOWEVER - let me say this; the more offenses they have you charged with, and the more warrants they have outstanding on you, the more incentive they have, and the more likely they are, to come after you.