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If the institution runs a background check on you and a warrant is in "the system" the odds are that you will be arrested.
When you have served your period of incarceration in the first county, before they release you they should check to see if there are any other "criminal holds" on you. When they find the bench warrant they will hold you for the other county to come get you and return you to the court that issued the bench warrant.
They could if you moved to that county and they check your record. But mostly, the answer is a no.
Turn yourself in. If the warrant is not still outstanding, walk away.
Generally you can't check a database to see if someone has an arrest warrant active: you can only do this for yourself, and must call the Warrants bureau of the Sheriff's Office of the jurisdiction you think the warrant has been issued from. In Florida, if you have a felony warrant issued against you then you may be able to check a database at http://pas.fdle.state.fl.us/pas/pashome.a, a database of wanted and missing persons.
Before you are released from the county jail, a national warrant check (NCIC) is always conducted as part of the release process, even if you've stayed in jail for a length of time.
You could check church and county records.
There are NO public access websites that contain this information. Best thing would be to call the County Sheriff's Office or the Clerk of The Court for that county.
My sister recently started dating someone new and quite frankly, he's shady. Where can I find a free arrest warrant check? I want to make sure she's not endangering herself by spending time with him.
How do you KNOW that the statute of limitations has passed? - AND - Are you CERTAIN? My adivce would be: Call the law enforcement agency in the county where you think the warrant was issued and ask.
Many states have a "wanted or missing persons" database within their state police website; you can check there, but you can't check an NCIC database (only cops can). You can check the court sites for the state or county you think the problem occurred in. Check the individual's name; any outstanding cases with warrants are usually flagged with a "W" or "in warrant".
Yes, they can get a warrant. It is a crime.