Do you mean.... someone who was wanted for a felony offense and fled arrest, or someone who was on bail, fled and failed to appear in court???? YES. Persons wanted on felony charges/warrants are entered into NCIC (National Crime Information Computer) and any time this persons name is run for a check, his name will appear and he will, eventually, be caught and arrested.
10 days from the issuance of the warrant.
A search warrant is NOT necessarily an arrest warrant. If some other violation comes to light during the search that supports your arrest, yes, you could be arrested, even if nothing was found during the search.
Normally TSA doesn't check for warrants, but the airlines themselves do.
If the warrant is actually being "served" on you then it's probably in your best interests not to resist its service. Afterwards you can determine if it was valid or not by contacting the Clerk of The Court, from which the warrant was issued to determine if it is on file, or not.
The time it takes to issue a warrant varies. It may take longer if the sheriff or cop serving the warrant can't find the individual.
Absolutely, if the police suspect criminal behaviour, they can get a search warrant and turn the place upside down and inside out!
Nope. he has to have a warrant or a good reason to. one way to let him have a good reason is by giving him lip about it and saying no. then he can get suspicious and find a way to search it.
It could be one. There are search warrants and arrest warrants. If you have a search warrant, the police are entitled to search your property. After executing the search warrant, if the police establish probable cause to believe that you committed a crime, they can arrest you. If you have an arrest warrant, it is only a matter of time before the police find you and execute the arrest warrant.
Absolutely not. They can only confiscate the types of items outlined in the search warrant, as long as nothing else criminally possessed was found while searching the house.
The question is framed INCORRECTLY. It is only necessary to ask for consent to search if the officers do NOT have a search warrant. In that instance, asking such permission would constitute a legal search and any illegal items they might find would be legally admissible in court. When they are armed WITH a search warrant, unless the officers simply feel like being polite (which we hope they always are) it is NOT required or necessary to ask permission of anyone to conduct the search.
The hospital would not know whether you have a warrant or not. However, they will probably call the police to come investigate the gunshot wound, and the police would then find out about the warrant.
Yes, all they have to do is have knowledge that the warrant was signed by a judge. There's really no reason to BS you. If they were, then their whole search would have been in vain, because anything they found would be inadmissible in court. If they never produce a search warrant, then they have indeed violated your rights under the 4th amendment, and anything they find CAN NOT be used against you, as stated above.