No
ALL states WILL EXTRADITE if the crime is severe enough to warrant such or, in most cases, failure to appear in court.
Contact the court.
If there is a warrant issued for your arrest regarding the missed appearance, yes.
Yeah. It happened to me. I was issued bench probation in Lane County, Oregon and picked up on a violation for unpaid court fees in Multnomah County, Oregon. Oh, maybe you owe them money too? Good luck!
The court will issue a warrant and recall your bond. Depending on the charges, they may seek to serve the warrant and extradite you. If you used a bondsman to get out of jail, the bondsman may send a bounty hunter for you. If a person put up cash or property, that will be forfeited.
In the state of Oregon, there is no statute of limitations on bench warrants. Bench warrants remain valid until the person it is issued for is arrested.
A default warrant is a criminal arrest warrant like any other, even if the original offense was minor, the default on the court appearance is a serious issue. Like for any other arrest warrant, all states will arrest you on it and contact Massachusetts (or whatever state issued the warrant) for extradition. You will need to work with a criminal attorney in Massachusetts to cure the default.
Where the law is concerned - ANYTHING is possible. Realistically, they might simply place a warrant on file for you and if you appear again in VT, and come to the attention of the authorities, you will just be arrested then.
A court warrant is valid until the warrant is served or the conditions requiring the warrant are satisfied. The warrant is valid indefinitely until these things occur.
No. A warrant is issued by a court.
A bench warrant is a bench warrant whether it is issued by a criminal court judge or a civil court judge.