After it has been served; or it has been quashed by a judge; if it is withdrawn by the agency that requested it; or the need for it no longer exists.
Unless the arrest warrant specifically states that the issuing agency will extradite then you can not be arrested for it.
It depends on the amount the Illinois warrant is for and if it is for a criminal warrant or for a civil case. Depending on that, the arresting agency will contact the issuing agency and will determine if it is enough to go thorugh extradition.
A search warrant has a time limit set by the issuing court, often a week or less. An arrest warrant is valid until served or cancelled. Many last for years.
It means that the issuing agency or court has withdrawn it, it is no longer in effect, and the person is no longer wanted.
Yes. HOWEVER in normal circumstances the dispatcher who finds the warrant in the computer will call the primary (or issuing) agency for verbal confirmation before you would be booked on the warrant. This will most often stop service of a warrant that is still in the computer by mistake.
OFFICERS UPON CONTACT, WILL VERIFIEY IDENTITY THROUGH IDENTIFICATION OR IF NO ID THROUGH FINGERPRINTS. THE OFFICER WILL THEN CALL THE LOCAL AGENCY AND "CONFIRM" WITH WHATEVER AGENCY IS ISSUING THE WARRANT. ONCE CONFIRMATION IS MADE AND THE WARRANT IS VERIFIED AS GOOD THE PERSON IS PLACED UNDER ARREST AND TAKEN TO THE LOCAL JAIL OR TRANSPORTED TO THE AGENCY WITH THE WARRANT. Being booked on the warrant is not a given as many police agencies will set a court date and release on a notrice to appear citation. This is normally the case with misdemeanor warrants.
A warrant lives until it's served or quashed by the issuing authority.
Warrants may be cancelled by petitioning the court that issued the warrant.
You can ALWAYS be arrested for an ARREST warrant regardless of issuing agency or the arresting agency.Additional: There is widespread mis-understanding of the term "extradite." Extradition refers only to removing a person from one STATE to another STATE.If you are wanted on a warrant and are arrested in the same state the warrant was issued in, no extradition is involved - only a county-to-county transfer.
A notification to the issuing court/magistrate that the warrant has been served and can be withdrawn from the computer system.
Yes.
It is an order from a judge to do away with a warrant, normally a bench warrant issued for a person who has failed to appear in court or failed to pay a fine. A capias would be vacated if a fine, previously ordered by the court but unpaid, was paid.