Want this question answered?
If they discover where you are, they will have you arrested in that state. Then you will be transported to Kentucky where you will be incarcerated. If you are arrested in the state you are in, your name will be in the system and the county in Kentucky where you have the warrant will be contacted.
A failure to appear warrant in Kentucky is for people who failed to show up for a scheduled court date. There is usually no bond for these types of warrants.
If I take out a " out of controller warrant" on my child will they get help and then get to come home
yes
If you are speaking of them holding a warrant for you but you have, so far, avoided arrest - - they can hold it until the warrant is withdrawn or until the statute of limitations for your particular offense expires (if it does). If you are speaking of being held for extradition by KY for a felony warrant - - they can hold you until the state that issued the warrant comes for you.
Generally, no. However, the Kentucky officer may be granted a governor's warrant or may be serving extradition, and is then given limited permission by the state of Illinois to take custody of you in that state and deliver you to Kentucky.
In order to know if you have a warrant you will need to go to the courthouse in your county and inquire with the circuit court clerk's office. They will be able to tell you how to proceed if you have a warrant.
Written agreements in Kentucky are long. They have 15 years to bring a case. And if it is a felony, there is no statute of limitations.
Our lawyer said they can't but the police did it and the police in a surrounding state said they can arrest for it.
Ask.a.police.officer.
If there is a warrant out for you and the police know where you are, they can arrest you.
yes they can Ky is a Commenwealth state and will aid outher states in warrentsAdded: The answer depends on whether or not the state issuing the warrant entered the information into the interstate system. Bench warrants often are NOT entered. You don't really want to chance it - 'Murphy's Law' is ALWAYS in full effect.