What the judge will do if a person jumps bail on a $20,000 bond is likely issue a warrant for the person's arrest. The person will become a wanted fugitive and will be sent immediately to jail when caught. Their bail may also be revoked.
When the person named in the warrant is arrested, he will be held without bail.
You can get bail only if you have been arrested and arraigned or the judge who issued the arrest warrant set bail when the warrant was issued (however, arrest is still a prerequisite for making bail).
You become a fugitive from justice, and a warrant is issued for your arrest. Depending on the crime, bounty hunters may come after you... and law enforcement agencies are duty-bound to bring you in if they find you, in any case.
There is no such crime as 'bail jumping.' The crime is "absconding" or becoming a "Fugitive from Justice"
If you are being held for international extradition on an out of COUNTRY warrant - you cannot get bail, you are too great a flight risk - after all, you've already skipped on a warrant in one couontry already.
Unless you are a fugitive - or a warrant exists for your arrest - or you are under a court-imposed travel restriction - you may travel as you wish. NOTE: If, however, you are free on bail, I would certainly notify your bail bondsman of your travel plans or he might think you are going to skip on him.
First of all: Of course you were never prosecuted. If you skipped bail, YOU BECAME A FUGITIVE instead. I don't know who stood your bail money but it it's a bail bondsman - somewhere out there there's a skip tracer with yourname and you can bet there' no "SOL" on HIS looking for you. Second of all: you give no info on what offense you were charged with, so there is no way of knowing/guessing if there is an interstate warrant for your arrest.
Nothing
No, but you will become liable for the full amount of the bail jumpers bond.
Yes, that's exactly what it is. If you have a warrant out for your arrest, you are a "fugitive from justice."
A no-bail warrant means that when you are apprehended and presented to court for arraignment, you wil not be offered the opportunity to post bail. It sounds like you need the services of a defense attorney to advise you.