Yes, they can. Bench warrants are usually served by Marshalls or Constables not regular police. See Discussion page
a cop and/or a judge out of his/her files
yes, but only after they arrest you
If they are acting under the authority of a Governor's Warrant (aka: Extradition Order), yes they can.
No - EXCEPT - unless you are being held in NV on an extradition warrant and the UT officer has come to take you into custody and return you to UT.
If you have a warrant out there, they ( police ) can do pretty much whatever they want ( within reason & depending on where you live ) to arrest you.
The time it takes to issue a warrant varies. It may take longer if the sheriff or cop serving the warrant can't find the individual.
Not to my knopwledge, why not ask a local cop? A cop wouldn't necessarily know. He just serves warrants and doesn't have to know how or why they can be issued. Ask a lawyer or judge.
I would think that if they knew that person was there......yes.
Arrest and Trial - 2000 Cop's Son Kills Cop was released on: USA: 2001
good luck.
It depends on why he is entering. Was he called to the residence? Is he or she doing a 'welfare check'? What type of call history has there been at that residence? If the police officer has an arrest warrant, and knows the person named in the warrant is in the residence, then in the state of NC, the answer is yes.
As is often the case with analyzing the legality of an action taken by a cop, whether the cop can "just open your door" depends on the specific circumstances. For example, a cop can open your door when the cop has observed a felony in progress by seeing it through a window. Or when the cop is in hot pursuit of someone the cop has observed entering the dwelling. Otherwise, the general rule is that the cop must have a warrant before entering a dwelling without permission, and even with a warrant the cop usually must knock first and request admission (although not if the cop has a "no knock" warrant).