You will be arrested.
Yes, all warrants may be served nationally. A person who is the subject of a warrant can be arrested on that warrant in any state.
He'll be extradited to the state with the warrant and prosecuted there.
Yes. Every warrant specifies where it can be served, so the answer depends on what the judge ordered when the warrant was issued.
None. A warrant is valid until served or canceled by the court. Save the hassle and deal with it.
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.
No, a warrant issued by one jurisdiction in Georgia can be served anywhere in the state. BTW: Extradition only applies to out-of-state removals.
A warrent lasts 6 months in the state of North Carolina.
I am not sure how it is for each state, but I do know that in the state of Tennessee it is a Class E felony and warrants can be served if everything meets the criteria of "Hindering a Secured Creditor".
As an individual, you can't. Your local Department of Human Services will decide if a warrant for arrest is justified and will work with the courts to have one issued.
You will get a warrant issued for your infraction in the state where you committed the offense.
No. Arrest warrants are valid until served or recalled.
If the state of MI entered the warrant into the NCIC computer system, yes he could, and you would undoubtedly be arrested as a fugitive.