No. The phrase"pocket warrant" generally means that the warrant is being held locally (i.e.: "in the Sheriffs pocket") and not entered into the nationwide system.
If FL entered the warrant into the NCIC computer, you will probably eventually be found out and you will be held by AR for extradition to FL.
Any warrant regardless of what it is can be entered into NCIC. Just shows that if the subjects named is run in CA and the warrant is issued in NC it will show CA that the person is wanted and if extradition is granted then the suspect can be extradited back to NC/\.
On civil arrests - whether an actual warrant gets placed into the NCIC will depend on how thorough the local jursticition is. Most times - yes.
If OH entered the warrant into the interstate system (NCIC) yes, it will.
Warrants never expire. They exist until canceled by the judge. Of course every case is different. Providing a additional details will help. Include the degree misdemeanor or felony, jurisdiction, and failure to appear or capias warrant. Most law enforcement agencies will send felony warrants to the NCIC, however their not required to send the warrant to the NCIC.
If the warrant was entered into the interstate system (NCIC) yes, it will show up.
If the warrant was entered into the interstate law enforcement computer system (NCIC) it does.
Alias warrant - defendant fails to show up for initial appearance after a citation is issuedBench warrant - defendant fails to show up for a scheduled court dateCapias warrant - defendant fails to pay fine after guilty verdict or plea Parole revocation (aka blue warrant) - self explanatoryAlso, whatever state you are in there are regions and if a unpaid citations turns into a warrant it will be in that region it was issued but will not show up in other regions. And then there are state warrants, for example: Texas state warrant is a TCIC which will show up on a check throughout the state, unlike a NCIC which--as you guessed--will show up over the country. Then there are International warrants that (I do not remember the abbreviation) mean when issued you are wanted by INTERPOL--which is not very good.
If you have been identified and a warrant issued, the type of crime you are wanted for may make a difference in whether OH will put it in the national crime computer system (NCIC) or not. If they do, ANY law enforcement agency anywhere in the country could have access to the information.
If NE enters the warrant into the interstate NCIC system and indicates they will extradite on it it, yes, WY will arrest you and hold you.
required as continuing education in Texas
Forget about why the warrant was issued: whenever a warrant is issued for someone's arrest it remains as such until the charges are answered (i.e., the warrant is served). That warrant is entered into the National Criminal Information Computer, or NCIC. If law-enforcement sees that warrant it will make an arrest and hold the person in jail. Next there is the issue of whether the issuing state is willing to extradite. The arresting state doesn't do the extradition, the issuing state does. So if that state wants the fugitive it will arrange to pick the fugitive up, if the charges are serious enough. If the state is not willing to extradite then the fugitive is freed-- for now: at any time the warrant is in effect and has not been served, the fugitive will continue to be arrested until eventually he is brought to justice.