If the person being held does not "waive" extradition it will take longer because of the detaining state having to hold an extradition hearing to satisfy their law that the extradition is being done 'legally.' There ARE legal pprocedures that must be followed and adhered to (i.e.- filing of papers - court hearing - arranging transportation, etc, etc) A 'reasonable' length of time by the jurisdiction issuing the warrant is expected. However it will seldom be as short as 24 hours, or even a week, but it should not take up to months either. If the delay seems unreasonably long a writ demanding action, or release can be filed with the detaining jurisdiction.
I have a failure to appear for a bad check that was a felony in Jax, Fla ... Can I still get a passport and travel to london? It was a felony by 76 dollars ,,, but still a felony???
It is not a felony, but you will have a warrant put out for your arrest if you continue to ignore the ticket. Below is a link about failure to appear.
no it's a mesdomenor
Misdemeanor.
No. Not under "all or any circumstances."
In Alabama, there is no statue of limitation on failure to appear in court. In case of minor offences, it will not be a major felony. However if a warrant is obtained by the police, avoiding arrest is not possible.
A felony failure to appear means that a person did not show up at a scheduled court appearance. This causes a warrant to issued for the offender so they may be picked up and held for court. There is typically a fine that has to be paid to be released and the court may require some jail time for this as well.
sense its a felony charge it will stay active on your record til you can try to get it over turned. An arrest warrant is valid until it is served or recalled. The warrant is valid ("effective") until the person named in it is arrested or they convince the court that issued it to quash or recall it. People have been arrested on warrants that were issued many years before they were served.
It depends on if you were arrested for a felony or not.
All US states and possession honor each other's requests for extradition.
A capias is a type of arrest warrant issued by a court typically for a failure to appear or comply with a court order. When it is related to a felony, it is usually issued to apprehend a person accused of a serious crime.
Generally not. A misdemeanor is possible, but a felony charge would be considered extreme in most jurisdictions (unless there were felonious charges on top of the speeding ticket).