Yes, you just have to wait until they add your money to the books. But if you have the money on you why would you call the bondsmen?
Added: Re: the clarification that was added to the discussion page. The answer is yes, you can do it that way.
yes, a warrant is a warrant.
you're screwed
You can be arrested in ANY country... all 196 of them.
You will be arrested and brought before the judge that issued the warrant.
None. A warrant exists until you get arrested or contact the court to handle the problem.
Yes. Every warrant specifies where it can be served, so the answer depends on what the judge ordered when the warrant was issued.
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.
No. "Quashed" means invalidated. If a warrant is invalidated it cannot be used in an arrest.
YES.. a bench Warrant means there is a Judge that wants to see you. do to non compliance with court orders, failure to appear etc. Only a Judge can issue a Bench Warrant. this answer refers to California. i'm unsure about other states. :)
It all depends on what was the reason behind the issuance of the bench warrant. If it was a misdemeanor offense, yes, If it was af felony crime, it's a felony.
A Bench Warrant - if you fled out of state - when you are caught and arrested - you will be returned via a Writ of Extradition, sometimes called a Governor's Warrant.
Bench warrants don't expire. And if it actually is a bench warrant it means that you've already been charged, so there is no Statute Of Limitations for you. SOL's only apply if you've never been identified or arrested.