In the United States, The State of Georgia can request extradition of an individual from The State of Colorado. It will usually happen. Any state can request the extradition of an individual from any other state. Extradition is almost never turned down. It has happened. One state refused to extradite a person because the specific action was not a crime in that particular state. Another state refused to extradite an adopted child because the adoption was legal in that state even though a technicality had suddenly made it illegal in the other state. If it is a situation like robbery, etc. Extradition is likely.
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.
Extradition laws do not apply WITHIN the same state. Extradition ONLY applies when moving a prisoner from one state to another state.
Since every person within Georgia is subject to the same state laws, it is simply a matter of transferring the prisoner from one county to another within the same state. The law enforcement agencies themselves usually handle all such routine transfers within the state.
Depends on the severity of the crime they want to extradite for.
absolutly.
Yes, Colorado will extradite for felonies, and especially for violent crimes.
how many days does colorado have to extradite an individual from Utah before Utah has to release them
Indiana has 10 days to extradite. If it is for child support they will pick him or her up and extradite also.
ALL states WILL EXTRADITE if the crime is severe enough to warrant such or, in most cases, failure to appear in court.
Yes.
Yes
Yes.
Yes, they can extradite you for this.
yes
A "reasonable" amount of time.