If the question refers to geographical boundaries, all U.S. states will take into custody and hold a person that has an active warrant. All U.S. states will extradite said person(s) by means of the required legal procedures. Persons with outstanding warrants are not allowed to legally leave the U.S.
That being the case, it doesn't matter if the person flees to another state to avoid prosecution. If (when) he or she is apprehended by authorities the authorities in the state where the warrant is valid will be notified and the extradition process will begin. The named individual will also face additional charges, so it is in his or her best interest to obtain legal counsel and present themselves to the authorities.
A search warrant can be executed in the state of North Carolina by an officer delivering the warrant to a person. Also, a search warrant can be mailed to a person to let them know that their property will be searched.
To serve a warrant is to to read it, and seize the person against whom it is issued. To execute a warrant is essentially the same.
A civil warrant hold is a civil arrest warrant. A civil warrant hold can be executed in several types of civil cases, for example child support.
Yes. The occupant/resident need not be present at the time the warrant is executed.
A nightcap warrant is a warrant signed by a judge that states a person can be arrested at any time. A non night capped warrant can only be executed if the person is on the highway or street.
The warrant will never expire. The only way to get it taken care of is if a judge will get rid of it.
Normally when a search warrant is signed, law-enforcement have up to ten days to execute that search warrant unless otherwise stated on the search warrant.
No. The warrant is their court approvedauthorization to enter and search.
"Capias return executed" refers to a legal document indicating that a law enforcement officer has successfully executed a capias, which is a type of arrest warrant. This means that the individual named in the capias has been apprehended and taken into custody. The return is typically filed with the court to inform it that the warrant has been carried out.
A search warrant must be approved by a judge or magistrate in order for it to be executed. The warrant must specify what is being searched for and the physical address of where the search will take place.
When a warrant is returned, it means that the person was not able to be located. In some states, the warrant is executed when the person is caught, and in other states, the warrant needs to be re-filed.
If they were arrested as a result of a search warrant being executed - it all depends on what the search warrant was for (what crime/offense) and whether the evidence being searched for was found (I'm assuming it was).