Most likely - some arrest warrants may well be part of a national database.no they wont An arrest warrant is an order to arrest someone or search for them.
If the warrant is for a misdemeanor offense, you will not normally be arrested unless you are stopped for a traffic violation or if the police are called to a scene, where you may be. If it's a felony warrant, for a serious violation, such as murder, you will be tracked down, even in another state, and be arrested and extradited.
In California, a warrant related to a traffic violation may be issued by the Superior Court. Each county has a Superior Court that handles various cases, including traffic matters. When a person fails to appear for a traffic citation or does not pay fines, the traffic court within the Superior Court can issue a bench warrant for their arrest.
A Body Attachment is, in effect, a warrant for arrest for a civil violation (usually contempt of a civil court order), whereas an Arrest Warrant is a criminal writ to take someone into custody.
No
No most traffic is not even a misdemeanor
It means that a court threw out the violation warrant as being invalid or against your rights. Many times, courts make a mistake by not processing paperwork fast enough and then realize all the requirements were met after issuing an arrest warrant. This means the judge would have to void the violation warrant.
yes, you might, it depends on what kind of violations, sometimes a person didn't pay for the citation, so the judge might issued a arrest warrant, or somethings the driver did not cooperate with the officer, which eventually might lead to the arrest.
What is your definition of "non-serious?" The answer to the question is yes. A traffic violation is a misdemeanor offense for which the officer, in their judgement, can make a summary arrest - IF it occurred in his presence..... and most moving traffic violations DO occur in the officers presence.
The officer can ticket you for the traffic violation, he or she can arrest you if there are mitigating circumstances.
A search warrant is NOT necessarily an arrest warrant. If some other violation comes to light during the search that supports your arrest, yes, you could be arrested, even if nothing was found during the search.
Question is unclear - but - are you asking what will happen if you are on probation and commit another offense for which an arrest warrant is issued (???) - It most likely will result in your violating your probation for the original sentence and very probably mean that you could be remanded to jail for violation of parole (VOP).
Don't understand the question. If the authotrities do not have a warrant, then WHAT are they holding you on? If the 'wanting' jurisdiction has teletyped a "hoild" order until a warrant can be issued, that is sufficient to hold you. If it is an 'in-state violation,' mere knowledge that you are wanted is sufficient.