Will my case be dismissed if I turn myself into a different county?

If I turn myself in, in my county of residence, on an out of county warrant and I stay the whole 5 days in jail and am not picked up by that county and transported, does that mean that the case will be dismissed and no further action is needed from me?
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Answered By: Cynthia Henley, Lawyer
Not at all. If you have a warrant and are arrested or turn yourself in to a different county, the county with the warrant will be notified. If they do not pick you up timely, you will be released BUT the warrant will still be active and you can be rearrested time and again until the case is prosecuted. Your best bet is to hire a lawyer in the county where you have a warrant and work with that lawyer to turn you and and get a bond or a deal arranged.

Answer Applies to: Texas
Replied: 9/8/2011

Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.

Answered By: D T Pham Associates, PLLC
Depends on the offense for which the warrant was issued.

Answer Applies to: Texas
Replied: 9/7/2011

Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.

Answered By: Mark Thiessen, Attorney at Law
Abolutely not! You need to turn yourself in and get bonded out and then fight the case. By no means will your case get DISMISSED just by turning yourself in. You can turn yourself in and sit out your time, but it will be on your record and who knows how much time you will do.

Answer Applies to: Texas
Replied: 9/6/2011

Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.

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