More information is necessary.
Has the soldier ALREADY left for deployment and is out of the jurisdictional area of the court? If so, the soldier should contact his unit's JAG Officer and advise them, and ask for guidance. When the court that issued the BW is notified by the military that you are deployed the BW will probably be withdrawn.
However, if the soldier had not yet deployed by the court date and could have attended, the BW was issued properly. Although the BW can be served by the civil authorities, it also could have been delivered to the military authorities who would have compelled the soldier to appear.
Sure! If you are already incarcerated and you have another warrant, then that warrant will be served to you while you're in jail. When you are finally about to be released from jail they will do another warrants check before they release you.
Yes. HOWEVER in normal circumstances the dispatcher who finds the warrant in the computer will call the primary (or issuing) agency for verbal confirmation before you would be booked on the warrant. This will most often stop service of a warrant that is still in the computer by mistake.
No, you cannot get a TWIC card if you have an active warrant, including misdemeanors. It is important to resolve any legal issues before applying for a TWIC card.
If the question is whether the police need to speak with you or interview you prior to arresting you on a warrant, the answer is no. If it was a requirement that they speak with you, anyone could avoid being arrested on a warrant simply be refusing to speak with the police. Police have an obligation to make sure they are serving the correct person (i.e. - the person named on the warrant) and to do so they will often ask questions first. If they already have a warrant for your arrest, that means that a judge already decided there was probable cause to believe you committed a crime. You might be interviewed after the arrest but if they have probable cause already there is no requirement for them to interview you prior to serving a valid warrant.
Bench warrants do not expire and are active until the person is either taken into custody or the issuing judge withdraws it.
If you have an active warrant you may be arrested. However, you can minimize that possibility by hiring an attorney. An attorney can attempt to have the warrant recalled before you physically appear in the courtroom. If it is a domestice violence charge, you may have to personally appear regardless. Whether you are taken into custody will depend to some degree on the reason for the warrant.
Don't understand the question. How can a warrant "expire before it starts?"
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A warrant is sworn out because you failed to go before the judge at the correct time. This shows contempt for the judge. Going before hom for the offense fulfills the warrant.
You will be arrested and brought before the judge that issued the warrant.
The jail should book you on the warrant and complete the return of service to clear the warrant. You will have to answer the new warrant before release.
No. A warrant is not a "ticket" that you can out of by simply paying a fine. A warrant is issued for one purpose - to take you into custody - and bring you before the court.