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Shreveport City Jail Active Warrants

Myth 1: "Warrants expire after 7 years."
False. In Louisiana, warrants do not expire. A warrant from 1990 is still valid and enforceable.

Myth 2: "The police won't come to my house for a minor warrant."
False. Shreveport police routinely serve misdemeanor warrants, especially during "Operation Clean Sweep" initiatives.

Myth 3: "If I move out of state, they won't extradite."
Partially false. For felonies, Louisiana will extradite from anywhere in the US. For minor municipal offenses, extradition is rare, but the warrant will remain active indefinitely—meaning you can never safely return to Louisiana.

A local attorney can:

Local firms specializing in Shreveport warrants include the Tommy Fischer Law Firm, Sherrer & Shanklin, or the Caddo Parish Public Defender’s Office (if indigent).

If law enforcement executes a warrant on you—whether at home, work, or during a traffic stop—you will be transported to the Shreveport City Jail, located at 410 Texas Street.

Ignoring a warrant does not make it go away. In Shreveport, law enforcement actively cross-references databases. An active warrant can result in: shreveport city jail active warrants

SHREVEPORT, La. – Every day, dozens of names are entered into a digital ledger at the Shreveport City Jail. They aren’t new inmates. They are the wanted.

With an estimated 6,000 to 8,000 active warrants floating through Caddo Parish at any given time—ranging from unpaid traffic tickets to felony assault—the Shreveport Police Department (SPD) maintains a critical, often misunderstood tool: the public warrant database.

But for residents, business owners, and even the accused, knowing how that list works is the difference between a voluntary surrender and a 3 a.m. wake-up call. Myth 1: "Warrants expire after 7 years

Leaving a warrant untouched carries escalating risks:

The Shreveport City Marshal’s Office provides an online public portal for warrant searches. To use this: