Call your local bail bondsman in your area or have a friend do it. They will tell you.
(in the US) An outstanding arrest warrant can be good anywhere, and can be served by any law enforcement officer - interstate warrants can be posted and the 'wanting' state will even extradite the wanted subject. It is not clear what you mean by a 'transferred' warrant. Transferred by who - to who - for what purpose?
NO..my brother wanted to join and he has warrants and they told him no..
Fugitive warrants are sought when the wanted person refuses to sign a waiver of extradition from the state which holds that wanted person in custody for the state which the crime was originally committed.Because the wanted person refuses to sign the waiver of extradition a fugitive warrant and governors warrant must be obtained. The wanted person is then extradited without his signature of consent to be transported to the state that the original crime was committed.I would like to know who is responsible for obtaining the warrants.
No it's not illigal.
Any warrants bureau or section maintains files of active arrest warrants issued by the courts in the agency's jurisdiction. The people who work in this bureau enter these warrants into local, state and national wanted persons databases so that the existence of the warrant will be revealed if a wanted person is "run" by a law enforcement officer. When one of these inquires results in a "hit" for a warrant held by that warrants bureau, someone at the law enforcement agency that made the inquiry will call the warrants bureau on the phone. The warrants bureau employee will retrieve the original copy of the warrant and verify that it is still in force and that the information describing the wanted person matches the person held by the agency making the inquiry. If the warrant is valid and the information matches, the warrants bureau employee will check the file to see whether extradition from that location is authorized. Law enforcement agencies can't afford to send officers to retrieve fugitives on every warrant in every place where the fugitives may be found. The warrant file may indicate they will send officers to the adjacent county, or just that part of the state, or to adjoining states, or anywhere. If the file indicates extradition is authorized where the wanted person is being held, the person is jailed pending arrival of the officers. If not, the fugitive is released and the warrant goes back into the file. A warrants bureau may also have officers assigned to it who attempt to locate fugitives and have them arrested. For instance, a local informant in San Francisco may provide information tat a wanted fugitive is in Little Rock, Arkansas. If the information is reliable and specific enough, the officers may call the police in Little Rock and ask if they can go to the address and arrest the fugitive. It's up to the police in Little Rock to decide if they will assist. If they do and the fugitive is located, he is held until the SF officers can arrive. The warrants bureau officers may also try to serve arrest warrants locally. For example, if a person with a local address has several hundred dollars in unpaid traffic tickets, the officers may go to that address and try to arrest hm.
The Morris Code can be found anywhere online. You can learn everything you ever wanted to know about the Morris Code if you find the right website for you.
The same reason people settled anywhere else - because they either wanted to live there or they found work opportunities there.
There is no centralized state website which discloses this information. If you believe you are wanted on a warrant, simply try calling the sheriffs office or the court of the county you believe you are wanted in.
it can be found anywhere
Warrants are warrants. They do not "go away" just because you move or travel to another state. If the warrants are entered in the national criminal database and/or the originating jurisdiction indicates that they will extradite you, you cannot get away from them. If the airline checks your name against a database of wanted or suspect persons (more and more common these days), your name MAY generate a 'hit,' which could result in your being taken into custody by the airport police to be held for extradition.
If Texas placed the arrants on the interstate wanted files and indicates that they will extradite you, yes, you can be.
a hill can be found anywhere