Generally no, you cannot. Most County Courts are set up seperately and apart from one another and the fines paid in one jurisdiction cannot be applied in another.
no bail
Traffic warrants stay active until they are served or satisfied. You may need to bail yourself out to avoid being taken in on a warrant.
Call your local bail bondsman in your area or have a friend do it. They will tell you.
If you have outstanding warrants and at least one "Fail to Appear" in regards to Court Dates, you're license will be suspended. If you are pulled over anytime after your license is suspended, you'll be charged with counts of "Fail to Appear" and "Aggravated Unlicensed Operation" for as many warrants as you have outstanding. Your vehicle will be impounded and you will be send to your county holding center until you see a Judge. In addition all of your traffic warrants will still be valid and the fines can be increased because of your failure to pay. At the end of the day depending on the originally charges you're looking at paying $4000 - $8000+ in fines and penalties (including bail) and/or spending some time in the holding center.
you would have to pay all three bails, you can usually get a bondsman and meet in the county where the person is held and pay all three bonds right there (so you wont have to run to the other 2 counties)
Its $235 total bail and $290 with traffic school! Sucks.
Any law enforcement agency may enforce FTA warrants. If a bonding company posted bail on the case then the bondsman or any appointed fugitive recovery agents may make apprehension on the FTA warrant.
A white warrant is a legal document issued by a court authorizing law enforcement to arrest an individual. It is typically issued when a person fails to appear in court or violates the terms of their bail or probation. The white color is used to distinguish it from other types of warrants, such as red warrants for serious crimes or blue warrants for parole violations.
Absolutely. However the actual reason for extradition would be beause you jumped bail as opposed to the nature of the original charges. Allso, as with warrants, once you leave the state it becomes a federal crime.
Arrest warrants don't go away when they're "paid." An arrest warrant is an order by a judge for a defendant to be arrested and brough before the judge to answer charges. If the charges involve money owed then bail is often set to that amount.
Enjoy jail time until Judge grants bail.
Depends upon whether this was a first offense or not. 1st offense usually carries a bond of $200 to $1000 while multiple offenders would receive a higher amount."The bail in these kinds of arrests is just similar to the other criminal cases. Depending on the nature of offense, some counties have a bail schedule. A number of counties free the suspects at just a personal security, without any need for posting a bail. Although a large number of counties free the accused on the personal security and few ask to post a bail. The drivers, who refuse a chemical test, with a blood or breath alcohol level of 0.20% or more, or who did an accident are always set to post a bail. The drunk drivers will be required to post a bail, which would be generally of $100,000 or even more. A bond for such a bail typically requires a 10% down payment of the amount in order to get the driver released."