Need more information as to the circumstances in order to answer.
No. No warrant that has been issued ever expires until it has been served.
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.
A sheriff's return on a bench warrant means that a return notice has been filed stating that a warrant was served. It also means that if the person is in jail at the time the warrant is served when they are released, they are to be transferred to the jail in the jurisdiction where the warrant was issued.
None. Once a warrant has been issued, it must be served or recalled. Until this happens, it will remain active.
sense its a felony charge it will stay active on your record til you can try to get it over turned. An arrest warrant is valid until it is served or recalled. The warrant is valid ("effective") until the person named in it is arrested or they convince the court that issued it to quash or recall it. People have been arrested on warrants that were issued many years before they were served.
A BENCH WARRANT is issued by a judge on his own authority. A 'regular' warrant is applied for by law enforcement and then submitted to the court for its approval. The word "outstanding" merely refers to the fact that the warrant has not yet been served.
Warrants DON'T EXPIRE!! Once a warrant has been issued against a Defendant it stays active until served or recalled.
once the warrant has been issued it is active forever
Bench warrants are not 'served'. There is no requirement to notify the subject of the warrant that it has been issued. It is a general notification to law enforcement that the person should be arrested when found.
You can get bail only if you have been arrested and arraigned or the judge who issued the arrest warrant set bail when the warrant was issued (however, arrest is still a prerequisite for making bail).
It means exactly what it says. A warrant for your arrest has been issued by a judge and it has been assigned to an officer to serve on you and take you into custody. If you have knowledge that the ploice ARE holding a warrant for you, it is probably a good idea if you voluntarily turned yourself in. It looks 'better' to the court, if you do.
It is doubtful that a warrant was issued for a single ticket. Your driving privileges may have been revoked. And you might be in trouble if you get pulled over again.