The rental company always retains ownership of the item, and would report the loss to the police as theft (Larceny After Trust).
The pawn dealer, who paid for the item would be out the value of the pawn. He could report being defrauded to the police andhe could sue you civilly for to recover the damages from his loss.
Whether or not it constitutes a felony is usually detemined by the monetary value of the item. This amount will vary from state-to-state or according to the elements of the crime and could be charged (according to state statutes) as either a misdemeanor or a felony.
An arrest warrant is an arrest warrant, they can kick your door down whether it's a misdemeanour or a felony.
If you were charged with a felony - appeared in court - the charge was reduced from a felony offense to a misdemeanor offense - and then you skipped out and it has been necessary to issue a warrant for your arrest; It means that by fleeing you failed to complete your part of the 'legal' bargain and the felony charge would quite likely be re-instituted and you could now be a fugitive felon.
The warrant doesn't include ANY of that information - only the crimnal charge you are accused of.
How the military will react depends on the type of warrant. If it is a warrant for a felony, then extradition is likely. For a lesser charge, adjucation by the military is a possibility, meaning that the charge will be handled by the military through NJP.
If the offense you were found guilty of when you received your probation sentence was a felony, then your violation will be a felony warrant.
no it not a felony
It depends on the severity of the charges, but yes. They can, and in the case of a felony charge, probably will.
You need to examine your release agreement and local law.
Anything involving a serious felony or murder related
Warrants don't "turn into" something different. When a warrant is issued it is either issued for a misdemeanor or a felony offense. It doesn't change.
is a bench warrant a felony
Violation of Probation Warrant