A specified time span will be indicated on the warrant or if not stated it is presumed to be the time span that is provided by existing jurisdictional laws.
No. Usually the defense and prosecution will run background checks on the jurors appearing on their cases. If you are caught, you will be arrested on the warrant. I do not know if there is specific law in California that deals with this situation.
a search warrant is valid for 10 days from date signed by judge.But since there are several different types of warrants for varying situations and offenses, please be more specific with your question and please specify what kind of warrant you are asking about.
No, California cannot arrest someone solely based on a statewide warrant from Alabama. The person would need to be located within California's jurisdiction and be subject to a specific arrest warrant issued by a California court or law enforcement agency. In order for California to take action, Alabama would need to seek extradition and follow the necessary legal process.
Yes, all warrants may be served nationally. A person who is the subject of a warrant can be arrested on that warrant in any state.
Please be more specific. Not all surveillance requires a warrant, only certain specific types.
It depends on what kind of warrant it is. If it's a felony warrant then Texas will extradite but misdemeanors they don't.
It depends on the wording of the specific warrant.
No. A traffic warrant is issued for a specific code violation in this case - traffic. Whereas a "bench" warrant means that the warrant was issued on the authority of the judge for whatever reason.
7 years
You really need a lawyer
Ask any California law enforcement officer. You should know that if you do have a warrant, he will probably arrest you on the spot.
No. An arrest warrant is valid until it is served or cancelled by the court.