No, they arresting officers do not have to have the warrant in their possession, only the knowledge that it exists.
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.
Any law enforcement agency can effect an arrest if they find out you have a warrant out for your arrest. The arresting agency would hold you and notify the location who issued the warrant of the arrest. At this point the agency who issued the warrant would make arrangements to collect the prisoner, take custody, and transport them back to the jurisdiction where the warrant was issued.
The maximum imprisonment for a warrant prisoner is life in prison. This type of imprisonment varies greatly depending on the type of warrant issued.
Not necessarily. If the county holding the warrant could respond quickly, the jail having the prisoner in custody might just keep them in a waiting area until the officers from the other county arrived. When the prisoner was taken back to the county with the warrant, this would not be a "extradition." Extradition occurs only between states.
PT warrant is a warrant issued for production of an Accused. P.T. warrant means Prisoner's Transit Warrant.
Its C. The police get warrant before arresting a suspect
How do you clear a warrant up in state of Florida and Georgia
A bench warrant
If it is, in fact, the SAME warrant, it IS possible that, administratively, it was not cleared from the system. If the arresting officers acted"on good faith" that it existed the cour twill dismiss and nullify the second arrest.
It would depend on what you are asking this for. To get a drivers license, yes. Florida will issue a license to you if you have a Wisconsin license and don't have a suspention pending. As far as a warrant, that depends on the severity of the charges. Florida will arrest on warrants from any state, and allow the issuing state time to act on the warrant. After the time has elapsed, if the issuing state doesn't respond, or delays it's responce, Florida will release the person from custody, and the issuing state will have to re-issue the warrant if the statuts of limitations haven't been exceeded. (in the case of a misdemeanor) Felony warrants are different. Florida is a state that can hold a person for 21 days with out any formal charges. Every 21 days, they can re-new the request to the issuing state for disposition of the prisoner. But still, after a certain amount of "hold-overs" they will release the person from custody. It all boils down to what the issuing state wants to, or does do when notified of capture. In either case. once a warrant has been executed, it no longer remains on the books.
When he has probable cause to believe that the person he is arresting has committed, or is about to commit, a criminal offense.