It depends on if it is a Felony or a Misdemeanor. For a felony you can turn yourself in Arizona, but you will likely get stuck with a bill once you get out of jail to cover the cost of extraditing you back to Idaho. Either way, it would be in your best interest to go to the website for the County that issued the warrant and see what guidelines they have for turning yourself in. In Ada County, they list acceptable counties that you can turn yourself into and what will happen if you can or cannot afford bail.
Yes, but it may depend on what charge the bench warrant was issued for, and whether the state will extradite for the offense or not.
My "friend" has a bench warrant in Idaho for a felony probation violation. On the state issued, mailed copy of the warrant paperwork, it reads "Idaho Only" or "Extradite Idaho Only" (something to that effect, my apologies, I only caught a glimpse of it). Does this really mean that if she moves to a southern state (Mississippi, Alabama or Georgia) that even if she got stopped for a traffic violation or somehow attracted the attention of the police, that Idaho wouldn't waste the money to extradite her from there back? And also, will she be able to get a driver's license issued in her new resident state?
You would travel north from Arizona to Idaho.north
Arizona.
Idaho is north of Phoenix, Arizona.
Yes.
Idaho, Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Wyoming, and Nevada. To the north, Idaho and Wyoming; to the east Colorado; to the south Arizona; and to the west by Nevada
The state of Nevada is directly west of Utah.
California, idaho, Utah, Arizona, and Oregon.
California, Idaho, Utah, Oregon, and Arizona border Nevada.
No, it is in Arizona.
There are five states; California, Oregon, Idaho, Utah and Arizona