Across the Wide Missouri was created in 1947.
If thewarrant was not traffic related, it should not effect your ability to get a license. If your warrant specifies it will extradite you from California back to the state the crime occurred in, you will be arrested when you apply for the license as it will appear in the National Crime Information Center when your ID is checked. Generally, extradition from across state lines only occurrs when the crime you are suspected of is a felony.
No it does not! Sorry!
no
Missouri is bordered by Iowa to the north; Illinois, Kentucky, and Tennessee across the Mississippi River to the east; Arkansas to the south; and Nebraska across the Missouri River, Oklahoma, and Kansas to the west.
A warrant can be issued for you regardless of where you live. Residing in a different state does not prevent a warrant being issued for you in the state where you committed the offense.
Missouri is 240 miles across, about 1800 miles from Reno.
It is very likely to show up. A warrant is usually public knowledge and shared across jurisdictions.
The idea was to enable parties to initiate legal action in their home state and the responding state would decide if the obligor (the person owing the money) actually had a duty to provide support. If so, the responding state would extradite the obligor back to the initiating state.
In east-central Missouri, on the Mississippi River just south of the confluence with the Missouri River. It is about midway between Iowa and Arkansas, across the Mississippi River from Illinois.
Missouri is bordered by Illinois, Kentucky, and Tennessee across the Mississippi River to the east.
That is the correct spelling of Kansas City (a city in Missouri, and a city of the same name in Kansas, just across the Missouri River from its namesake).