You should go and see an attorney to get this sorted out.
Oh, yes.
Yes. If you are a fugitive from MO and your warrant appears on the National criminal information computer system (NCIC) you can be arrested wherever you happen to be found.
If the state of MI entered the warrant into the NCIC computer system, yes he could, and you would undoubtedly be arrested as a fugitive.
This is not stating the type of charge he/she has, this just means that the person was detained and arrested because there is an active warrant out for the person outside of the state that they were arrested in. Here is an example of your question. A man owes child support in Michigan, failed to make payments, and now there is a warrant out for him. He no longer lives in Michigan and moved to Tennessee. He got pulled over for speeding in Tennessee and the police officer checked to see if there were any warrants, and there was a warrant issued from Michigan for failure to pay child support. So, the Tennessee Officer arrested him, and the reason for his arrest was "fugitive from justice without a warrant."
A fugitive bond is really just like a normal bond. When one state has a warrant out for your arrest, that is entered into NCIC, and you are arrested in another state.....then the arresting state can post a bond for you, referred to as a fugitive bond. They basically give you a set number of days to head back to the State that issued the warrant and handle your business or they put you back in jail and revoke the 'fugitive bond'.
You don't have a legal obligation to turn someone in, even if you know they have a warrant for their arrest. However, if you allow that person to live with you and purposely hide them from the police, you can be arrested for harboring a fugitive.
Yes. As long as you are not charged with same exact crime twice, you may be charged with as many offenses as they can attribute to you.
Yes, If they received a search warrant for your home after you were arrested then any evidence found as a result of the search warrant is valid. Your attorney maybe able to have an argument however you as the resident / home owner are responsible for anything inside your home.
Yes, you can be re-arrested and charged with the same crime. It is only double-jeapordy if you are TRIED twice for the same crime.
Yes. All US states and possessions honor each other's warrants and requests for extradition and will hold a fugitive until notified.
A person can always be always be arrested and charged with a crime if there is sufficient evidence to warrant the arrest.
You get arrested, charged, and tried. Sorta like how it works anywhere else.