A search warrant could be faulty if it has wrong information on it. Then it would make the search warrant void. This can be the wrong name or a mistake on the address. If there is not a reasonable suspicion it could also be faulty.
(in the US) Once a warrant is issued by a judicial officer, the law enforcement agency which serves the warrant is governed by the applicable provisions of the US Constitution and court rulings which define which practices are lawful in carrying out the warrant service.
search warrant
Define "bust" in. If they know you are in there, yes, they may enter - especially if it is what is known, in some jurisdictions, as a "forthwith" warrant.
Define a "not active" warrant. If the warrant was witdrawn or quashed and it was not removed from "the system" due to clerical error you will be released. The officer or agency that arrested you will not be held liable but you may have a cause for action against the jurisdiction that failed to remove it from active status.
By changing the constitution and eliminating the provision " The right to life, liberty and property and pursuit to happiness, otherwise, you can't. --- In other words, it can't. That's a faulty warrant and has no legal merit of effect. Trying to use such a warrant to gain entry may be interpreted by a court as any of a number of criminal offenses, not limited to trespass, fraud, breaking and entry, kidnapping (if you're taken into "custody"), etc. Make your lawyer's day -- show the faulty warrant to them.
Phones are only usually exchanged if the handset is faulty to the point that it would be more expensive to repair than replace. In the first instance - contact the place where the phone was purchased - and be guided by what they plan to do.
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.
Old or new, the warrant relates to an offense of some type and the offense is the ruling factor. NOT the age of the warrant.
How would you define a subtancebased on what you have obsrved
How would you define a subtancebased on what you have obsrved
Then the warrant is no good and any evidence obtained would be inadmissible.
Before a Customs agent would make an arrest for a warrant of any type, the agent would have to believe the agency holding the warrant would come to the port of entry where the arrest was made to pick up the person with the warrant. If the agency is adjacent to the port of entry (e.g. a San Diego warrant in San Ysidro), this is likely. If the agency holding the warrant was distant to the port of entry, it's unlikely they will expend the time and money to fetch someone with a misdemeanor warrant.