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If you are in violation of court order in another state, possibly. You need to be talking to an attorney and not to WikiAnswers.
Every state in the union will extradite to another state depending on the severity of the crime committed. It only matters if the other state that wants you is actually willing to make the effort to extradite you and come pick you up.
No. If you are being held by another jurisdiction for something else they do not have to rush there to extradite you.
If they place the warrant info on the interstate system and say they will extradite you, yes they will.
probably not [add'l comments moved to discussion page]------------------------Another View: Be very careful - you NEVER know.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.
will texas extradite misdemeanor fugitives?
Yes, if you have violated the terms of your probation in one state, the state may issue a warrant for your arrest. Once arrested, they could extradite you to the state where the original offense occurred to address the probation violation.
Yes.
Unless the arrest warrant specifically states that the issuing agency will extradite then you can not be arrested for it.
To extradite a person means to give them up to the jurisdiction of another state/country - usually
yes and anywhere in the us
To extradite a person means to give them up to the jurisdiction of another state/country - usually to answer criminal charges.