I presume you mean a bench warrant, not a beach warrant. You can remain in jail either until a new bail is set and is posted, or until the case is resolved.
Whether the person named in an arrest warrant is in jail or not is irrelevant. A warrant can be issued whenever the issuing court sees fit to sign it.
If no one raises your bail money you will remain in jail until your trial.
A sheriff's return on a bench warrant means that a return notice has been filed stating that a warrant was served. It also means that if the person is in jail at the time the warrant is served when they are released, they are to be transferred to the jail in the jurisdiction where the warrant was issued.
When a person is being held in a county jail on warrant from another county, then a bail bond cannot be posted until that person has been transported to the county which issued the warrant.
a person can, whether they should or if its legal is another matter.
No, the warrant has to be satisfied. YOU HAVE TO GO TO JAIL.
A warrant in debt is not an arrest warrant: it generally is a judgment against you and a notice that you are in debt to another person or an entity. You can never go to jail just for owing money to anyone or anyplace else, unless the debt was the result of a crime committed, such as a bad check.
The jail should book you on the warrant and complete the return of service to clear the warrant. You will have to answer the new warrant before release.
Depends on what the warrant is for
A warrant will be issued for your arrest. They will show up to your residence and your place of work to arrest you. You will remain in jail until the tickets are paid.
A "bench warrant" is a warrant issued by a judge on his sole authority. Only the judge who issued the warrant can vacate the warrant. If he had to issue one to get you to court to testify, you probably won't be released until after your necessity in the court action is ended.
Yes. A "white warrant" means a warrant issued for a parole/probation revocation.