When you are taken into custody and delivered to a judge of that county your right to a 'speedy trial' begins. Depending on the court's schedule you would be arraigned within 24-48 hours.
Until you appear before the issuing judge
The service area for an arrest warrant is specified by the court who issues the warrant. Some common 'service areas' are 'issuing and adjoining counties', 'statewide', and 'nationwide.' It really depends on how badly the judge wants to see you.
No, not unless the error was found and corrected by the issuing judge or magistrate BEFORE the warrant was executed. If the warrant was served at the wrong address, anything found and seized could be excluded as evidence.
Bench warrants do not expire and are active until the person is either taken into custody or the issuing judge withdraws it.
A warrant is sworn out because you failed to go before the judge at the correct time. This shows contempt for the judge. Going before hom for the offense fulfills the warrant.
By calling the local issuing authority or District Judge in your jurisdiction.
Yes a judge from one county can issue a search warrant for you in another county. Another view: Use caution with the first answer. If the two counties are within the same Judicial District - THEN a judge from one county can issue a warrant to be served in the other county. HOWEVER - if the counties and the judges are not part of the same judicial district they cannot issue valid warrants, cross-jurisdictionally, in the other county.
Failure to Appear (bench warrants) do not have a statute of limitations. They remain valid until the named person appears before the court and the matter in question is settled or until the issuing judge and/or a court of appeals revokes the warrant.
Usually 72 hours. This, like most parts of the warrant, can be changed by the Judge issuing the warrant, dependent on circumstances of course.
No. A warrant lasts until canceled by the judge or you are arrested.
Possible but extremely unlikely. It is more likely that the judge will issue a default judgment against you instead of issuing a warrant.
All warrants are indefinite until served or recalled by the issuing judge.