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Was issued two tickets in NJ- 1 for uninsured vehicle and the other for failing to show license and was scheduled to go to court. However court date was after my 90 day visa waiver and had no choice but to leave the country. Because I was unable to go to court, is there a warrant out for my arrest? Am afraid that there may be charges against my name at customs and be refused entry or be arrested. How do I go about this?

2006-10-17 23:57:17 · 6 answers · asked by moza 1 in Politics & Government Immigration

6 answers

Call the State you were ticketed in and find out what you need to do. If you still have the tickets the info should be on them.
Neither of those things is a felony so I seriously doubt you'll be arrested or denied access. You will probably have to pay a couple of fines.

2006-10-18 00:07:16 · answer #1 · answered by Steph 5 · 0 0

it may bypass to warrant if unpaid although, and ought to take place in the device. I take it you're talking of 10 miles over the value shrink and not DUI or something, which we evaluate extra beneficial than in ordinary terms a rushing value ticket. something could be utilized for denial. there is not any automatic appropriate to come again here. despite if, it in all probability heavily isn't as long as they're is somewhat.

2016-12-08 16:42:04 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

OK, yes, there probably is a warrant for your arrest. Typically that is standard after non-payment. All you generally have to do to get rid of it is pay a fine, though. Still, I'd take care of it before trying to get in to the US, because all sorts of stuff is linked to our security computers now, and I wouldn't want to bet this isn't. Even if they don't 'deny you entry', could you imagine trying to deal with this 'in transit'?

2006-10-18 01:01:08 · answer #3 · answered by DAR 7 · 0 0

You should write to the jurisdiction where you should have appeared and explain the facts and ask them what you should do. As they are not serious charges and you seem to want to do the right thing, the court will advise you. You may be asked to pay a fine and a penalty.

2006-10-18 00:10:08 · answer #4 · answered by Joe M 2 · 0 0

In most states if you have a bench warrant such as these you only need to have cash enough in your pocket to pay fines and you can walk free immediately.

2006-10-18 00:12:11 · answer #5 · answered by Rick 7 · 0 0

Both

2006-10-18 00:02:50 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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