Yes.
If there is a warrant issued, it stays open until resolved/you are arrested. Arrest warrants do not have time limit.
You would be arrested only if a court has issued a warrant for your arrest.
Pay your child support and provide proof to the court.
This is not stating the type of charge he/she has, this just means that the person was detained and arrested because there is an active warrant out for the person outside of the state that they were arrested in. Here is an example of your question. A man owes child support in Michigan, failed to make payments, and now there is a warrant out for him. He no longer lives in Michigan and moved to Tennessee. He got pulled over for speeding in Tennessee and the police officer checked to see if there were any warrants, and there was a warrant issued from Michigan for failure to pay child support. So, the Tennessee Officer arrested him, and the reason for his arrest was "fugitive from justice without a warrant."
yes Simply owing a debt is not a crime. Or, it's not suppose to be.
No, they just don't grant you your license
yes, see link
Perhaps not - there is no statute of limitations on collecting unpaid child support.
The warrant is issued if you don't appear in court to give a valid reason for the arrears.
Return to the court that issued the child support order.Return to the court that issued the child support order.Return to the court that issued the child support order.Return to the court that issued the child support order.
As an individual, you can't. Your local Department of Human Services will decide if a warrant for arrest is justified and will work with the courts to have one issued.
Not if you make arrangements with the court on repayment.