Don't know. . . a guess might be that it was withdrawn by the court or agency that issued it.
If NE enters the warrant into the interstate NCIC system and indicates they will extradite on it it, yes, WY will arrest you and hold you.
A notification to the issuing court/magistrate that the warrant has been served and can be withdrawn from the computer system.
If it is, in fact, the SAME warrant, it IS possible that, administratively, it was not cleared from the system. If the arresting officers acted"on good faith" that it existed the cour twill dismiss and nullify the second arrest.
No, most people fly to leave the county because of a arrest warrant.Another View: In this day-and-age it is entirely possible that you may be subject to a name search [especially on international flights] and if the warrant is in the NCIC system you would be detained.
Yes. If you have a warrant, it's in the police system, which can be accessed from any police station in the US. When they run a backround check on you, it will appear.
Call a police department in the state where you think the warrant is. I dont think its entirely possible to find out free without actually incriminating yourself. Theres a bunch of articles about it online. yahoo "free arrest warrant searches". You can check online for an arrest warrant with an arrest warrant search.
They don't actually "expire." After a number of years (usually ten) they fall out of the computer system. When that happens, the judge can either renew the warrant and keep it in the system so police can still access the information. If the judge decides to not reissue the warrant, then it is still active but police have no way of knowing about it.
an arrest warrant must be served within 30 days of the missed time of the appointed court date, but it depends on the charge and how many warrants you have in the system. The warrant is in effect when you do not make another appointment within the 30 days or turn yourself into the local police station, if not stay on the move. Do the right thing.
If the GA arrest warrant was entered into the NCIC system and your name shows up during any kind of check while in VA (or any other state), you can be arrested and extradited. All US States and possessions honor each other's requests for extradition.
Crimes of the past have time limits called statutes of limitation. Some have no limit. An arrest warrant for murder can be issued 80 years after the crime if the suspect is still alive (for instance).
(Answer is applicable to the USA only): No - A warrant is issued by a court as an order to a governmental authority (usually a Peace Officer) to seize a person, such that the person is entered into the judicial system to answer specific questions or charges, or perform a specific duty. An arrest warrant, in some cases, may be issued for a person who has not committed a crime and who may not even be charged with a crime, but who is ordered by the court to appear or to perform a specific duty.
If the warrant is entered into the "system" it will generate a 'hit' on you anytime your vital information is run.