This would depend on whether the court or law enforcement agency holding the warrant entered it into NCIC, which contains the national wanted persons index. If they did, and your fingerprints are on file with that court or agency, then yes, a live scan of your fingerprints is going to reveal the existence of the warrant. Whether or not you are arrested immediately depends on whether the court or LE agency holding the warrant wants you badly enough to send someone to bring you back.
Arrest warrants are valid until served or recalled. There is no "statute of limitations" on a warrant.
There is no statutes of limitations on a felony possession drug warrant. It forever stays active.
No. A warrant lasts until canceled by the judge or you are arrested.
No. If you have been identified by name as the perpetrator/defendant and a warrant issued for you, the warrant (especially for a felony) will not expire unless withdrawn by the judge.
Arrest Warrants never expire. They exist until canceled by the judge.
Written agreements in Kentucky are long. They have 15 years to bring a case. And if it is a felony, there is no statute of limitations.
There would not be any limitation on the resulting warrant. The warrant will be active until you are arrested or it is canceled by the judge.
It will depend on the statute of limitations for the state and crime. Yes, it is certainly possible.
There is no limitation on the life of a warrant. It's there until you get arrested or make arrangements to resolve the matter with the issuing court.
None. Once a warrant has been issued, it must be served or recalled. Until this happens, it will remain active.
Alabama has a long list of felonies, including felony drug charges, with no set statute of limitations. For those that do it is set at 3 years. The statute is met once an indictment or warrant is issued, regardless of whether it can be served immediately or not.
In Alabama Arson is a felony. As such there is no statute of limitations.
Depends on the specific felony. Some crimes do not have a statute of limitations (e.g., murder).