If the amount of the check is large enough to make it a felony (for example, $300 or more in Kentucky) then there can be an extradition. Whether or not the authoities will opt to do it is another question that varies in every jurisdiction.
Yup! You could arrested on the spot and then be extradited back to AZ. You will not be extradited for a misdemeanor. Idiots on the internet just want to scare you.
Yes. An extradition happens because a person has an active warrant in one jurisdiction and is later taken into custody in another jurisdiction. If a person knows he/she has a warrant for a bad check in another state, they can avoid the issue of extradition by traveling to that state and clearing up the warrant before they are taken into custody elsewhere.
A traffic warrant is not likely to show up on a section 8 background check. A traffic warrant is not a felony, and it is not something that the person has been charged with.
If the warrant was entered into the interstate system (NCIC) yes, it will show up.
A warrant in debt is not an arrest warrant: it generally is a judgment against you and a notice that you are in debt to another person or an entity. You can never go to jail just for owing money to anyone or anyplace else, unless the debt was the result of a crime committed, such as a bad check.
Sure! If you are already incarcerated and you have another warrant, then that warrant will be served to you while you're in jail. When you are finally about to be released from jail they will do another warrants check before they release you.
If the GA arrest warrant was entered into the NCIC system and your name shows up during any kind of check while in VA (or any other state), you can be arrested and extradited. All US States and possessions honor each other's requests for extradition.
It is very likely to show up. A warrant is usually public knowledge and shared across jurisdictions.
A warrant can be issued for you regardless of where you live. Residing in a different state does not prevent a warrant being issued for you in the state where you committed the offense.
It can depend on the job you are trying for, how far back the check will go, and/or if the warrant is still active. If they check back for the 5 years you indicate, it IS possible (even probable) that the outstanding warrant will show up.
Yes, they can get a warrant. It is a crime.
It is very likely that a bench warrant will show up in a background check. A bench warrant shows a poor level of responsibility.