Hopefully not, but consult an attorney.
Not a felony , but yes, it is falsification of a government document.
In all probability, yes. All felony VOP's are extraditable.
True or False: The State of Florida will revoke your license if you are found guilty of committing a felony for drug possession.
If thewarrant was not traffic related, it should not effect your ability to get a license. If your warrant specifies it will extradite you from California back to the state the crime occurred in, you will be arrested when you apply for the license as it will appear in the National Crime Information Center when your ID is checked. Generally, extradition from across state lines only occurrs when the crime you are suspected of is a felony.
If the offense you were found guilty of when you received your probation sentence was a felony, then your violation will be a felony warrant.
Yes.
no it not a felony
It depends on the severity of the charges, but yes. They can, and in the case of a felony charge, probably will.
Probably, but you might get arrested in addition to obtaining the ID card. If the offense described in the Georgia arrest warrant is serious enough for the Georgia authorities to come and get you, the Florida Highway Patrol will be notified when you apply for the ID, and will arrest you on the spot if they can. Some state motor vehicle bureaus will not issue a drivers license or ID card to anyone with an outstanding arrest warrant, extraditable or otherwise.
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.
depending on the reason for the warrant, i.e.; misdemeanor/ felony, reciprocity agreements between states, and the cost of extradition, it is possible to be arrested.
said to be 3 to 5 years. that's all I've found.