Yes. As long as you are not charged with same exact crime twice, you may be charged with as many offenses as they can attribute to you.
Define a "not active" warrant. If the warrant was witdrawn or quashed and it was not removed from "the system" due to clerical error you will be released. The officer or agency that arrested you will not be held liable but you may have a cause for action against the jurisdiction that failed to remove it from active status.
You can be detained and extradited back to Vermont.
A person can be arrested in another state if there is an active warrant in the system. It is not unusual for people to be arrested on out of state warrants.
No. If you have an active Minnesota warrant and are arrested in Tennessee, the arresting authorities will hold you for a period of time during which Minnesota decides whether to extradite, or bring you back. That determination is based on the cost to get you and the severity of the charges.
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.
Warrants don't expire: once one is issued it can be served or recalled. Until this happens the warrant stays active.
A warrant is a command from the court that a specific person be arrested and brought to the court. If the warrant is still active then the officer has little choice, he is probably required by law to arrest you.
If the accident is not your fault,I see no reason why you would get arrested for that, but forget the first part of your question, if you have an active bench warrant it's just that, active.The best thing you can do is take care of it,then no matter what happens,you won't have to worry about it.
Warrants never expire. It will remain active until it is canceled by the judge or you are arrested.
A warrant will be active until the conditions of the warrant are satisfied. It will also be active until the warrant is served.
Question isn't clear. An active (i.e.- unserved) warrant is not usually a "public' record. The fact that you may have been arrested on a warrant IS a public record. If that doesn't answer your question, reword and resubmit it.
They might be. It depends on the nature of the warrant. The U. S. Customs and Border Protection is the agency within the department of Homeland Security charged with keeping our borders secure. A records check at official points of entry would reveal certain outstanding US warrants, especially for federal charges. State charges may or may not be picked up depending on the seriousness of the charges and whether they have been entered into a national system.