Yeah. It happened to me. I was issued bench probation in Lane County, Oregon and picked up on a violation for unpaid court fees in Multnomah County, Oregon. Oh, maybe you owe them money too? Good luck!
Yes. Each country has agreements with the other so they can extradite people back to their home country to stand trial.
no
You can be arrested in ANY country... all 196 of them.
Pray to God that you get a solo cell.
Yes. Every warrant specifies where it can be served, so the answer depends on what the judge ordered when the warrant was issued.
When you have served your period of incarceration in the first county, before they release you they should check to see if there are any other "criminal holds" on you. When they find the bench warrant they will hold you for the other county to come get you and return you to the court that issued the bench warrant.
yes, a warrant is a warrant.
This doesn't make sense: a person who has been served a bench warrant is arrested and brought to the court that issued the warrant. However if the warrant has a bond amount specified, the person posts it, then doesn't show, then another bench warrant will be issued for a higher or no bond.
you're screwed
You will be arrested and brought before the judge that issued the warrant.
None. A warrant exists until you get arrested or contact the court to handle the problem.
No. "Quashed" means invalidated. If a warrant is invalidated it cannot be used in an arrest.
Yes.
YES.. a bench Warrant means there is a Judge that wants to see you. do to non compliance with court orders, failure to appear etc. Only a Judge can issue a Bench Warrant. this answer refers to California. i'm unsure about other states. :)