If it is, in fact, the SAME warrant, it IS possible that, administratively, it was not cleared from the system. If the arresting officers acted"on good faith" that it existed the cour twill dismiss and nullify the second arrest.
There is none. The warrant will not go away until it is served (person arrested).
A warrant never expires unless the warrant is served & returned (you're arrested) or a judge revokes the warrant.
Probation is a sentence for having been found guilty. If you have failed to complete your sentence it means that you haven't served your entire time and if you are evading your PO or the police you have absconded and are a fugitive. If you have a warrant out for you for probation violation, it means that you it won't go away.
If you have two felony cases that are being ran concurrent,and have had a bench warrant issued for violation of probation,yet probation end date has past after warrant was issued yet you have not turned yourself in or been arrested,why would they close the non controlling case and expire your probation,yet keep the controlling case that had a lower conviction charge and showing less time served on open? It was basically a crime bail crime..OR'd on the first two felony charges then arrested again given the same two felony charges in another county.
You will be arrested.
No, a warrant issued by one jurisdiction in Georgia can be served anywhere in the state. BTW: Extradition only applies to out-of-state removals.
That depends upon the laws of the state in which the incident occurred, prior criminal convictions and so forth. The sentence that was imposed an then suspended relating to the terms of probation will have to be served now that the probation has been violated.
Yes, all warrants may be served nationally. A person who is the subject of a warrant can be arrested on that warrant in any state.
Yes. Every warrant specifies where it can be served, so the answer depends on what the judge ordered when the warrant was issued.
Yes he/she can
The concept of a statute of limitations does not apply to probation violations. A statute of limitations is a time period that begins when a criminal act is committed, and ends when charges are brought, or in some cases if the accused leaves the jurisdiction where the offense took place. In the case of a probation violation, the charge is brought as soon as the probationer has absconded from supervision and a warrant is issued. Arrest warrants have no statute of limitations. They are valid until served or recalled. People are routinely arrested on warrants that are decades old.
This doesn't make sense: a person who has been served a bench warrant is arrested and brought to the court that issued the warrant. However if the warrant has a bond amount specified, the person posts it, then doesn't show, then another bench warrant will be issued for a higher or no bond.