Yes, you can be arrested.
That being said, most prosecutors (and judges) would be willing to drop the charge once discovering this. The best course of action is to inform your attorney of the situation. Your attorney is capable of obtaining the adequate jail logs and booking information that show you were incarcerated, giving you a better chance of having the charges dismissed.
If they discover where you are, they will have you arrested in that state. Then you will be transported to Kentucky where you will be incarcerated. If you are arrested in the state you are in, your name will be in the system and the county in Kentucky where you have the warrant will be contacted.
"Jailed" as incarcerated in a police holding cell or a county jail? No. However, you can be "detained" in an institution or facility for medical or psychiatric evaluation.
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
If the institution runs a background check on you and a warrant is in "the system" the odds are that you will be arrested.
Fulton county,ga
Cheatham county
Gary E Beers Sr. Author was incarcerated for 4 days. He was arrested for forgery with other charges pending. According to his rap sheet he is 6'3",brown hair, blue eyes and weighs 240lbs.
Yes, he was arrested by authorities.
There is not any law against getting married while you are incarcerated. You will not be able to leave jail while you get married.
He was arrested and booked into the Horry County jail when he was in Myrtle Beach, SC.
Then you could be extradited to the county that issued the warrant.