The question is unclear. Let me illustrate what I think you are asking: You commit a crime in state "A" and then flee to state "B" - and while you're there you commit a crime in state "B." If the police in state "B" catch you and charge you - AND THEN - they find out that state "A" also wants you back - state "B" may refuse to release you (EVEN IF state "A" wants to extradite you) - because state "B" wants to send you to trial first, before state "A" gets a shot at you.
Then you could be extradited to the county that issued the warrant.
Yes, if a country has an extradition treaty with the country where the arrest warrant was issued, you can be arrested and extradited to that country to face the charges.
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.
Yes you can; it is usually enough to have an arrest warrant issued to be extradited.
Yes. Every warrant specifies where it can be served, so the answer depends on what the judge ordered when the warrant was issued.
yes, you can be arrested in NC for a warrant that was issued by the New Jersey courts.
Yes.
It would depend on what the warrant is issued for, the severity of the crime and if you can be located for the warrant to be served. Also, would it serve the common good of the citizens if the money was spent to be extradited. You will have to face the warrant. Even if the statutes of limitations was up on the crime, the warrant never goes away.
The term lookout notice is another word for a warrant. A warrant is a writ issued by the judge to have a person arrested for a crime or failure to appear in court.
If in another state has issued a warrant for an inmate, that inmate will be extradited to that state after he finishes his time in the state he is currently serving his sentence.
This doesn't make sense: a person who has been served a bench warrant is arrested and brought to the court that issued the warrant. However if the warrant has a bond amount specified, the person posts it, then doesn't show, then another bench warrant will be issued for a higher or no bond.
You will be arrested and brought before the judge that issued the warrant.