Yes. All US states and possessions honor each other's warrants and requests for extradition and will hold a fugitive until notified.
You will be arrested.
If the warrant is issued for interstate service then you may be extradited according to the laws of the state in which you are arrested. If you get arrested in Michigan and Michigan lets you go, then yes. You can be taken back to Nevada to stand trial.
This is not stating the type of charge he/she has, this just means that the person was detained and arrested because there is an active warrant out for the person outside of the state that they were arrested in. Here is an example of your question. A man owes child support in Michigan, failed to make payments, and now there is a warrant out for him. He no longer lives in Michigan and moved to Tennessee. He got pulled over for speeding in Tennessee and the police officer checked to see if there were any warrants, and there was a warrant issued from Michigan for failure to pay child support. So, the Tennessee Officer arrested him, and the reason for his arrest was "fugitive from justice without a 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.
If the state of MI entered the warrant into the NCIC computer system, yes he could, and you would undoubtedly be arrested as a fugitive.
Michigan is east of Wisconsin, across Lake Michigan.
I would recommend talking to your Wisconsin parole officer.
Unless the arrest warrant specifically states that the issuing agency will extradite then you can not be arrested for it.
Michigan, Wisconson, Illinois and Indiana touch Which_states_touch_Lake_MichiganMichigan.Read more: Which_states_touch_Lake_Michigan
There isn't a kalamazoo in Wisconsin, but there is one in Michigan
yes, a warrant is a warrant.
No, they arresting officers do not have to have the warrant in their possession, only the knowledge that it exists.