Until said person is picked up in any state. A BW is associated with a parole violation of one form or another. Non-Reports, Dirty UA's and the list goes on. Basically said person has failed a stipulation of his/her parole and a warrant has been issued.
There are rumors that if you "outrun" you completion date of parole that the warrant will be terminated. Not so, when said person is caught they forfeit all credited "street time", time spent on the streets. You will then be returned to your county and await a parole revocation hearing and of course you will be violated with 3 options. 1. reinstate your parole, minus all the street time you acquired, 2. 90 day ISF program, 3. send your butt back to prison to complete your sentence.
In short don't expect to outrun your parole, come back to TX. to turn yourself in and be released because your have passed your discharge date. Street Time in TX. is something earned and when being released you sign a paper allowing TX. to terminate that credited time for a violation.
A blue warrant is a violation of probation/parole
24 hours
It depends on what kind of warrant it is. If it's a felony warrant then Texas will extradite but misdemeanors they don't.
No, but the court in Texas can ask that you be held for extradition as soon as the Georgia court is through with you. You would then be brought back to Texas to answer to the charges on the Texas warrant.
A "bench warrant" is a warrant issued by a judge on his sole authority. Only the judge who issued the warrant can vacate the warrant. If he had to issue one to get you to court to testify, you probably won't be released until after your necessity in the court action is ended.
Absolutely not! A "blue warrant" is issued when the individual has violated parole or probation, and the named person is not subject to being released on bail or under any other terms.
A search warrant in Texas must be executed within 72-hours, excluding the day on which it is issued.
No. No warrant that has been issued ever expires until it has been served.
No. But Tennessee will.
As soon as you don't show up for the court date mandated on your ticket, your ticket becomes a bench warrant. So the answer to your question is instantly.
Yes it can turn into a arrest warrant.
Yes, if you have an unpaid traffic ticket that has gone to a warrant in Texas you will be unable to get a drivers license in any other state.