(in the US) There is no material difference in warrants issued by the judicial officers of the various states. Arrest warrants are issued for (usually) the purpose of authorizing law enforcement to make a "bodily attachment" (i.e.: arrest) of the subject named in the warrant, to compel their appearance before a judcial hearing. Warrants are not issued for civil law hearings. Warrants for other matters (i.e.: search/seizure warrants, etc.) fall into the same general description - in that they authorize law enforcement to take an action that has been pre-approved and authorized by a judicial officer PRIOR to their taking the action.
Yes, as a matter of fact is IS possible. If the 'wanting' state doesn't remove your warrant from the interstate NCIC system you could suffer a repeat of the same scenario. BTW: There is no such thing as an 'asylum' state. All US states and territories honor each other's requests for extradition.
No, you have to clear each warrant.
two senators from each state
Each state sets its own laws governing the issuance of search warrants; which means that for each state there are different laws/rules and the answer to this question really does depend on the state jurisdiction under which the warrant is being issued. In general, we are talking about including the name of the person against whom the warrant is being issued with the exact address/location subject to the search, and, most importantly, the specific objects or items that are being searched for. For example, a search warrant mentioning that the objects sought are laptops and documents, will not cover other items found such as furniture or foods.
Every state has a different standardized test, so each state is different.
No. Each state has its own laws, and nothing can happen if you are in a different state.Another View: NOT EXACTLY. It depends on what type of offense you are wanted for and whether MN put the warrant into the interstate criminal computer system (NCIC) - and whether IA routinely runs your name through their state criminal computer when you apply for a license. If MN will extradite you back for prosecution, IA will hold you for them based on the interstate warrant.
two from each state, regardless of state population numbers
All states and US possessions honor each other's extradition requests.
Each state sets its own laws governing the issuance of search warrants; which means that for each state there are different laws/rules and the answer to this question really does depend on the state jurisdiction under which the warrant is being issued. In general, we are talking about including the name of the person against whom the warrant is being issued with the exact address/location subject to the search, and, most importantly, the specific objects or items that are being searched for. For example, a search warrant mentioning that the objects sought are laptops and documents, will not cover other items found such as furniture or foods.
Yes they can and do differ from state to state as each state and local areas have each have different types and amounts of taxes that they add to different items.
ALL US states and possession honor each other extradition warrants.
All 50 states honor the extradition warrants of each other. However, it is up to the issuing state, which has only a certain amount of time to arrange for transportation of the prisoner. If that time expires than the person could be set free after the disposition of any cases that the apprehending state has against them.