Question isn't clear. An active (i.e.- unserved) warrant is not usually a "public' record. The fact that you may have been arrested on a warrant IS a public record. If that doesn't answer your question, reword and resubmit it.
In Pennsylvania, civil judgments typically remain on public record for five years after they are entered by the court. However, creditors can renew the judgment for additional periods of time if they choose to do so.
The key phrase is "PUBLIC records." All public records are always just that: Always available to the public for scrutiny.
The time a DUI conviction stays on a public record varies between states. In some states it is on one's record forever. In other states it will remain on record for at least 5 years.
A DUI conviction or any felony conviction becomes a permanent part of the convicted person's criminal record.
Most warrants are FOREVER, or until the defendant dies.
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.
In what respect? If a ticket was issued there is no statute of limitations. How long does it remain on your record? Some states never remove them.
If you were arrested, charged, and convicted of that offense it will ALWAYS remain on your criminal record. That is why it is called a criminal HISTORY.
The documents that are on file with the local recorders office are permanent, so it will always remain "public record" in that sense. On the other hand, most negative information on your credit report must drop after 7 years and that is probably the question you intended to ask.
No. In most cases, public record will remain. That is why many BK attorneys, credit counselors, etc. inform you that a bankruptcy never really "goes away".
Once a probate proceeding is filed in court the file will remain a public record forever.
Points are effective for 2 years from the date of offense. They remain itemized on your public motor vehicle record for 7 years.