Perhaps. It depends on what the warrant involves. For example, if it is for a serious felony (assault with bodily harm, robery, weapons violation, etc.), probation violation, fugitive flight, etc. the person can be taken into custody and held for extradition.
You can ALWAYS be arrested for an ARREST warrant regardless of issuing agency or the arresting agency.Additional: There is widespread mis-understanding of the term "extradite." Extradition refers only to removing a person from one STATE to another STATE.If you are wanted on a warrant and are arrested in the same state the warrant was issued in, no extradition is involved - only a county-to-county transfer.
Yes. If you are a fugitive from MO and your warrant appears on the National criminal information computer system (NCIC) you can be arrested wherever you happen to be found.
Unless the arrest warrant specifically states that the issuing agency will extradite then you can not be arrested for it.
An OUTSTANDING warrant is a legal document, ordering the arrest of a person, which has not yet been served on the person. In other words, they have not yet been arrested, but will be when found.
Yes
Kevin Gates was arrested in 2016 for a separate incident from an outstanding weapons warrant dating back to 2013. He was sentenced to 30 months in prison.
They already have a warrant for the arrest of a person so they do not need another one to entire the residence of the named person. However, they do need a search and seizure warrant to search the premises for anything or anyone not included in the "outstanding" warrant.
Yes. Every warrant specifies where it can be served, so the answer depends on what the judge ordered when the warrant was issued.
A person can be arrested in another state if there is an active warrant in the system. It is not unusual for people to be arrested on out of state warrants.
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.
You can be arrested in ANY country... all 196 of them.
If there is an outstanding warrant, you can be arrested on your deathbed. You better believe that they can still prosecute. The only hope on something like this is that the original complaintant no longer wants to pursue the case. Even then though, the state has to be the one to drop the case.