All US states and territories honor each other's requests for extradition - there are no 'safe-haven' states - It is impossible to know with certainty whether a particular state will choose to extradite you for a particular offense, or not, there are simply too many variables. It may depend, in part, on the offense and the seriousness of it, and/or how badly they want you returned - most states WILL extradite for felony offenses and crimes of violence.
Whether you'll be extradited from Utah for an Oregon class C felony warrant depends on whether the state wants to pay for it or not
You can be extradited on a class C felony anywhere in the United States. That's why you are not allowed a passport
When a US state has custody of a criminal who is wanted in another US state, the US Constitution demands that he/she be extradited (Article IV, Section 2, Clause 2).
Oregon labels a class D felony as an unclassified crime. Each unclassified crime in Oregon has its own fine and prison sentence.
A class U felony in Oregon is an unspecified felony. These felonies can range from aggravated murder to contempt of court. Most class U felonies come with a life in prison sentence, as they are commonly crimes that are very severe.
Yes they can, even a class D, at the states discretion. My Husband is a transport officer for the State of Indiana
In Oregon (as of 2016) the maximum penalty for a Class C Felony is 5 years / $125,000 fine.
Oregon does not recognize a Class D felony; they group crimes in Class A, B, or C only. A Class C felony carries a sentence of up to 5 years and a Class B felony carries a sentence of up to 10 years in prison. Class A is the most serious and carries up to 20 years in prison.
Yes. This depends on nature of the crime and the county in which it occured. Some counties will extradite from anywhere in the US. Others from neighboring states only. Call the jurisdiction where the warrant was issued and inquire.
I was extradited from Texas back to Missouri on a misdemeanor charge of passing a bad check so I would definitely say YES!!! Bad thing was the check wasn't even mine and even though charges were dropped once I got back, they let me out in the middle of Missouri with nothing around and no way to get back home.
In Oregon, a DUI becomes a Class C felony upon the fourth offense. Up until then, it should remain a misdemeanor unless it involved other elements such as endangerment of a child. The law article below goes into more detail on felony duis.
yes
It's my understanding that the US Constitution requires Oregon to let Nevada have the individual.