Yes.
I don't think so. Whether the lawyer does or not is the question. But the only way you can get a bench warrant is if you miss your court date.
Private citizens cannot apply for a "WARRANT" to be issued. That is a procedure that only law enforcement or the courts can use. However if you initiate a civil case against, or involving, someone you can use the power of "SUBPOENA" to summon them to court.
A bench warrant is issued by the Court. A private citizen or his attorney isn't the originating agent, the Court (the judge) is. The Court has sole discretion in this, and cannot be compelled to issue a bench warrant.
It depends on the amount the Illinois warrant is for and if it is for a criminal warrant or for a civil case. Depending on that, the arresting agency will contact the issuing agency and will determine if it is enough to go thorugh extradition.
No. A traffic warrant is issued for a specific code violation in this case - traffic. Whereas a "bench" warrant means that the warrant was issued on the authority of the judge for whatever reason.
In general, no. A lawsuit is a civil matter, NOT a criminal matter. However, if you commit a criminal act, such as concealing property owned by another, failure to obey a court order, etc, you can be arrested.
your case will stay on system till fines are paid if they are not paid by certain date they will issue a warrant for your arrest
A bench warrant can be issued for a person with a judgment if they fail to comply with the terms of the judgment, such as failing to pay fines or appear in court as required. The bench warrant allows law enforcement to arrest the person and bring them before the court to address the violation.
The jail should book you on the warrant and complete the return of service to clear the warrant. You will have to answer the new warrant before release.
A bench warrant is issued (from the bench) by a judge and their own initiative. . A 'regular' warrant is issued after presentation of sufficient proof (in an affidavit) to a judge who then signs the warrant.
Yes, depending on the circumstances there are different warrants for the different issues that arise for instance if you fail to comply with court ordered stipulations this can trigger a warrant issued by Judge. You also have probation warrants for failure to report as previously scheduled, failure to pass drug test and/or catching a new case while currently a probationer that causes a violation against the rules and regulations of probation. Look at it like this you have previously had a warrant you squared away however a new case was caught prior to old case completion than you don't show up for you new case or give or take old case a warrant will be issued and bail if any can be revoked.