Yes. The authorities do not have to extradite the suspect just because he is in custody in another jurisdiction. It is the responsibility of the suspect to show up to face the charges in Florida.
There are no SOL's relating to warrants. A warrant will remain active and valid until the named individual voluntarily surrenders or is taken into custody by authorities.
what is the punishment for harboring someone with a warrant
No. When the state detects that there is a warrant for your arrest, you will be arrested.
A warrant is a warrant. If you happen to be one those who gets randomly screened and your name is run through the criminal information computer AND the warrants are on file you COULD be taken into custody by the airport police.
If there is a warrant issued, it stays open until resolved/you are arrested. Arrest warrants do not have time limit.
Arrest warrants in Florida do not expire. Once the warrant is issued, it is valid until you are caught unless the court dismisses it.
If NC has entered the warrant into the interstate law enforcement system, yes, FL can serve the warrant - take you into custody - and hold you for extradition to NC.
Generally warrants do not carry an SOL, they remain valid and active until the named person voluntarily surrenders or is taken into custody by authorities.
No. Arrest warrants are valid until served or recalled by the court that issued them.
Bench warrants do not expire and are active until the person is either taken into custody or the issuing judge withdraws it.
Generally you can't check a database to see if someone has an arrest warrant active: you can only do this for yourself, and must call the Warrants bureau of the Sheriff's Office of the jurisdiction you think the warrant has been issued from. In Florida, if you have a felony warrant issued against you then you may be able to check a database at http://pas.fdle.state.fl.us/pas/pashome.a, a database of wanted and missing persons.
Yes.