Warrants never expire. They exist until canceled by the judge.
You can be held until the violation is resolved.
4 days
Don't understand the question. If the authotrities do not have a warrant, then WHAT are they holding you on? If the 'wanting' jurisdiction has teletyped a "hoild" order until a warrant can be issued, that is sufficient to hold you. If it is an 'in-state violation,' mere knowledge that you are wanted is sufficient.
It depends on the probation charge and the violation.
4-6 weeks
The PO doesn't grant or arrange hearings. They report the violation(s) to their office which notifies the court. The court THEN arranges a hearing, or issues a warrant for your re-arrest, whichever is more appropriate.
Depends on the "JUDGE"......
There is no statute. you should be able to call any lawyer and ask. But from personal experience I was arrested on a 12 yr old warrant, and still sentenced.
THERE SAFE AS LONG AS THERE NOT IN THE STATE THEY RECIEVED THE DUI
Yes, you will have the opportunity, but you should have notified the court ASAP of your inability rather than let it run on so long.
That depends on the circumstances. When the judge places you on probation, he or she should say exactly how long the probation will last.
You will receive what is called a "page two" while in jail. So you will have to wait another cycle in jail to then see a judge on the new charge of probation violation, after you've already seen the judge for the assault charge. So if you see a judge every 24 hours for every violation, it'd be two days.