Yes, provided the warrant doesn't involve a serious crime and you don't have to land on the United States. If your crime is too serious, most probably your name will be on Interpol "blacklists", and as such, you will be detained by the authorities on Mexico or at your destination. If the flight reaches the US, you will also might be arrested upon landing.
No, you cannot leave the country with an active warrant for your arrest.
A warrant will be active until the conditions of the warrant are satisfied. It will also be active until the warrant is served.
The warrant will remain active until you return to the court issuing it and get it recalled. If you cross the border or attempt to leave the country, you may find that the authorities discover the warrant and arrest you on it.
It is entirely possible that the warrant you refer to hasn't been entered into the system, for one reason or another, many are not. BTW: WHAT active warrants list? There are no publicly accessible websites or databases that show a comprehensive listing of active warrants.
Arrest warrants are valid until served or recalled. A warrant can remain active indefinitely.
once the warrant has been issued it is active forever
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Define a "not active" warrant. If the warrant was witdrawn or quashed and it was not removed from "the system" due to clerical error you will be released. The officer or agency that arrested you will not be held liable but you may have a cause for action against the jurisdiction that failed to remove it from active status.
It means the warrant is current and that the subject of the warrant can be arrested.Added; It means that the warrant is active and has not yet been served on the wanted individual.
A judge must sign a warrant for it to be active!
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.
yes you can