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11 answers

don't worry about it. this is mayberry and it's the early sixties and without sarah the operator these police agencies can't even communicate with each other. good luck to ya...

2007-03-05 03:23:29 · answer #1 · answered by conx-the-dots 5 · 1 0

They won't come after you because of the expense (not like a felony) but if you get stopped ANYWHERE the warrant will appear on the national data base and you will be arrested, jailed, then extradited if that specific state wants to pursue the warrant!
Best thing is to contact the municipality and make a just effort to resolve your situation in a timely and good faith manner! Unless those offenses are "serious" and not driving infractions you would be throwing your money away on a lawyer! Once the court receives the fines the warrant will be removed by the court. People panic with a warrant and there's no reason to do so. It's the courts way of assuring your presence to face your responsibilities. As long as you are in contact and making a just effort to resolve your dilemna, the court doesn't want to spend taxpayers money extraditing you- they just want the "MONEY"!!!!

2007-03-05 03:23:37 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Are you sure they are your traffic tickets? Now, I am NOT a lawyer, but the first thing you should do, is to write to the County that the tickets were issued in and request a copy of the tickets. With this you can dispute the fact of whether or not the tickets are yours. Second, if they are yours, try to find an attorney in that area that can help you. Tell him, or her, that you want to pay off the tickets, but you need to make clear that you no longer live in the area. OR, you can request of the Clerk of the Circuit Court on the total amount. Then mail them a Cashier's Check to clear it. But since you have a warrant, you best bet to go with the lawyer. It's going to cost you, but if you ever go driving and get stopped, that warrant is going to come up and you will be screwed. Good Luck!

2007-03-05 03:21:11 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Call or write the court in question (the warrant issuing court) if it is only traffic tickets and say you have 3 tickets not paid, you then have 6 warrants. 3 for the violations and 3 for Failure To Appear warrants, then there are fees imposed for court costs. They want their money, not you. You may even be set up on a payment plan.

2007-03-05 03:28:51 · answer #4 · answered by dude0795 4 · 1 0

The state is not going to have somone stake out your door waiting for you. Matter of fact, unless your in that state and you get stopped for a violation will you have to face those traffic charges.
But, if you want to resolve the tickets and warrant I would suggest a lawyer. Doing it by yourself will require you to go to the PD to be jailed (due to the warrant), then you'll have to bail yourself out and get a court date (usually 3 weeks later).

2007-03-05 03:24:00 · answer #5 · answered by j s 4 · 1 0

sure you are able to properly be. Your warrant went into what's termed the NCIC. it is a equipment regulation enforcement makes use of to envision and see if someone has a warrant (between different issues). usually, you're detained until eventually the jurisdiction that issued the warrant makes a call even if or not they are going to extradite you. contained with regards to trespassing, it truly is noticeably uncertain. i could contact the courtroom that issued the warrant and see what they say or contact an legal professional it truly is qualified contained in the state the offense became dedicated. you'll discover listings on-line. until eventually you're taking care of the warrant, it is going to proceed to be on document.

2016-12-05 06:40:43 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

What Hyperion Monk said. They want you to pay up, not go to jail. Get a lawyer who can help you in your old state - might be through his own practice or through a colleague in your old state or through multi-state practice of his firm. I guess you could try on your own, but the bureacracy of doing it might not be worth it... I'd see if a lawyer could manage it.

2007-03-05 03:18:42 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Get a lawyer.Pay the tickets.

2007-03-05 03:15:44 · answer #8 · answered by Zapatta McFrench 5 · 1 0

the best way is to go to your local court and explain to the that you want to resolve it if you hide from it or ignore it not good but the courts will see that you went to them and it looks good they might even wipe it away or you might pay a fine

2007-03-05 03:18:17 · answer #9 · answered by Fergie 4 · 0 1

Get a lawyer.

2007-03-05 03:20:09 · answer #10 · answered by Kevin C. 1 · 1 0

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